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A New Visions Commentary paper published July 2000 by The
National Center
for Public Policy Research, 777 N. Capitol St.
NE #803, Washington, DC 20002, 202/371-1400, Fax 202-408-7773,
E-Mail Project21@nationalcenter.org,
Web
http://www.nationalcenter.org/.
Reprints permitted provided source
is
credited.
for Public Policy Research, 777 N. Capitol St. NE #803, Washington, DC 20002, 202/371-1400, Fax 202-408-7773, E-Mail Project21@nationalcenter.org, Web
http://www.nationalcenter.org/. Reprints permitted provided source
is credited.
Earlier this year, a six-year-old boy pulled out a gun at school
and killed one of his classmates at a school in Mount Morris
Township, Michigan. Her name was Kayla Rolland. She was a cute,
rosy-cheeked blond girl with intelligent eyes. She came from an
apparently normal, loving family.
Her killer did not.
No, little Dedrick Owens's family could be called a lot of
things, but normal wasn't one of them. The family's collective
police record reads like something out of an Iceberg Slim or Donald
Goines novel. His 28-year-old father is in jail - again - and his
mother has demons that prevent her from coping with the pressures of
keeping a job, paying rent and raising her three children. She left
her two boys with an uncle. That's when a sad story turned sordid.
The uncle was a drug dealer whose home was a crack house.
A
lot of foolish people tried to turn this story into a gun control
issue and babbled about trigger locks for handguns. They don't live
in neighborhoods like the one that trapped Dedrick, and they know
little about drug dealers.
A drug dealer, to survive in the
"profession," must be totally ruthless. He must be willing and able
to kill at a second's notice. There are no trigger locks in a crack
house. You won't find tenderness, mercy or morals, either. Frankly,
the safety and well being of his nephews was probably the last thing
on the uncle's mind.
A crack house is a vile place. Words
cannot describe the filth and squalor. Neighbors, out of fear, did
not call the authorities to rescue these children. They told
reporters they saw the children, sad-faced and forlorn, sitting in
front of the house as crackheads staggered in and out.
Teachers and parents also rushed to tell their stories.
Dedrick, they said, was a problem child. He was hostile and bullying
and once stabbed another classmate with a pencil. But no one cared
enough to take the time to really look and ask what was wrong with
Dedrick's life. When the boys came to school unkempt and tired, no
one called child protective services. His father knew that something
was wrong, but what could he do? He was in jail.
A time bomb
was left ticking. When it exploded, little Kayla died.
Kayla's mother was one of several hundred thousand women who
spent Mother's Day in Washington, DC at the so-called Million Mom
March. With all due respect andsympathy to a grieving mother, I wish
I could tell her that it wasn't a lack of unbending gun control that
killed her daughter - it was lack of child control. Raising decent,
moral children is hard and sometimes thankless work, but Kayla would
be alive today if the Owens children had at least one real
parent.
Years ago, my father told me children who were not
reared by strong parents who possessed a guiding hand and watchful
eyes were dangerous to themselves and to the entire neighborhood.
Dedrick Owens and the two monsters of Columbine High School in
Colorado are perfect examples.
There are those who hesitate
to place any blame at the feet of the parents of Columbine killers
Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, but not me. When I was ten years old,
someone gave a copy of Mandingo. It was an extravagantly trashy
novel, part Southern Gothic and part sex romp. I didn't understand a
lot of the words, but I knew it was something my parents wouldn't
approve of.
I read it in secret, and hid the offending book
in my toy chest. It took my mother, who I swear would've made a fine
FBI agent, only two days to find it. The parents of Klebold and
Harris were unaware their sons had an arsenal in their rooms. That
is parenting set on the autopilot, and it leads to tragedies big and
small.
There may, however, be a happy ending for the Owens
children. The authorities stepped in to try to save this family.
They don't live in a crack house anymore. The kids are living with
an aunt. They will attend a private school at the state's expense.
Their mother, in exchange for admitting her parental ineptitude and
taking a parenting class, may regain custody and get another chance
to do right by her kids. There is a tiny glimmer of hope for this
family. It's just such as shame that Kayla Rolland had to die to
give it to them.
The line between a good kid and a troubled
one is not wide. Many times, the only thing standing between a child
and disaster is Mom and Dad. So don't be afraid of what your
sophisticated friends or even what your child thinks. Guide your
child. Be there. Teach them with fairness, kindness and firmness,
and don't hesitate to exercise your right to control their
actions.
Practice child control. You may not get a thank you,
at least not until your child has children of his or her own, but
you may save a life.
###
(Kimberley Jane Wilson is a member of Project 21's National
Advisory Board and a conservative writer living in
Virginia.)
Note: New Visions Commentaries
reflect the views of their author, and not necessarily those of
Project 21.
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