Youth Culture
Three teenagers were found guilty yesterday of murdering Mr Newlove, a 47-year-old sales manager, who was punched and kicked to the ground when he left his home, barefoot and in pyjama bottoms, to see who had vandalised his wife’s car.
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Frail Susan Collins was blinded in one eye after she was battered by a thug who had been freed early from jail for killing a man in a copycat attack.
Drunk Nicholas Hague kicked Susan, 60, to the ground then stamped on her after she refused to give him a cigarette – inflicting multiple skull fractures.
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Stories like this give people of my generation a bad name. I often feel like a spokesperson at work trying to retain the Youth of Today’s dignity and say that we’re not all like that. When I’m doing afternoon shifts, we have bar open in the evening, social gathering, let their hair down and people sit in the lounge having a good natter, the news is often the subject of conversation and stories like this come up regularly (as well as stories such as Vera Duckworth leaving Coronation Street yesterday evening). Last night, the tenants were really laying into the teenagers saying how bad they are etc and I was like, “wow, wow, wooooow…. I’m 19 and I’m certainly not a thug – responsible, trusting teenagers out there do exist, you’re sitting next to one”.
I see their point, and it is sad. This country does need to toughen up because when I was going through school, every year, the new people entering comprehensive were getting more defiant and thugish, the teachers were gradually losing their control and the way things are going… I really dread to think how things will be in 10 years time.
aye, it’s not good, something needs to be done about the way people are during their teenage years, I don’t think it should be the case that people rebel in their school years. The liberal rules at school certainly don’t help, I’d certainly never be a schoolteacher at secondary school, kids get away with murder these days. And drink does play a part in a lot of violence aswell, unfortunately. People like yourself need to stand up and make a difference where you can.