Today marks exactly three months since our last blog, during this period we have been carefully monitoring events and have been facing a number of challenges brought on as a result of the current economic climate. Nevertheless, we would like to assure our readers and users that we are still here and are still active in supporting students.
On the issue of students, it was with dismay that we watched the events of the past week, in which many young people, most of whom would no doubt be students; took to the streets of Tottenham in North London. This act was followed closely thereafter in other parts of the London and major towns throughout the UK, including Manchester, Wolverhampton and Birmingham, to name a few. The problems unearthed during these riots were one of sheer anger and resent with showed itself in the infuriating behaviour of the young people, as they went on the rampage on the high streets, looting shops, burning building and destroying, not only their image and possible career chances, but also the fabric of their communities. We now see politicians gathering to comment and offer solutions to the problem. But in our opinion, the problem stems from a much deeper social ill.
For quite a while, we have been watching while many of the lofty values of the society went into social decay. We have seen a gradual erosion of discipline in the schools and colleges, coupled with a lack of respect for authority and a sense of gloom amongst many young people who have seen their life chances slowly evaporate. This is especially true, for those children and young people who feel as if they are ‘trapped’ in a state of constant need and yes, we would go as far as to say ‘poverty’ as it should be remembered that the UK still has one of the highest child poverty rate in the developed world. Many young people feel as if their schools and colleges are not meeting their needs, some complain that they cannot relate to their teachers, others complain of a lack of positive role models, both in the education system and in the wider community. Many young people also have low self-esteem, confidence and low aspiration levels. There are others who are totally opposite, they are the ones who are willing to patiently persevere in the midst of all the hardships and who are willing to overcome whatever obstacles that is placed in their way in order to fulfil their dreams. Young people are like any one of us, they are some who are clear about what they want to do in life and others who are not entirely sure. They are some who feel as if the entire system is against them and others who feel as if they can do whatever they want.
But, amidst all these complexities, the need for self-improvement, the constant struggle against the system, the constant feeling of harassment, victimisation and oppression and the need for positive expression, there is an end point. A point in which many young people feel as if it all builds up, it all becomes too much and in such a case, frustration can easily set in and we strongly believe that many children, young people and even adults saw the recent riots as a way of releasing this frustration. They seem to gain somewhat of a sense of release a sense of pleasure, like the rush of a shocking drug, they became mobilised and propelled forward by the prospect of ‘going to get some’, to get some of what they can only often times; dream of having. The chance for a ‘grab’ and to have a ‘go’ at the authorities especially their number one enemy, the police, was an opportunity not to be missed and so it went on and we saw the results before our very eyes. The world watched in astonishment, bewilderment and some parts even watched in ridicule, as Syria and Iran offered to send help to London to deal with the riots?!
This is the stage that we have come to, once again. A stage in which the need to maintain law and order in the midst of one of the greatest social and economic times that the UK and many parts of the world have ever faced. No one should ignore the underlying causes, poverty, lack of opportunity, police harassment and brutality and a feeling of hopelessness, in which children and young people and their parents, feel as if their is no way out. In this state, life begins to feel like a trap and many people are trying to find a way out of that trap. Trapped by the system, work, pay the bills and struggle to get by, work, pay the bills and struggle to get by, for many families this has become a repetitive theme in the UK and it is a theme that many are simply ‘fed up of’. There is no pleasure to be gained from living within such a routine. This coupled with poor housing, poor diet and the need to ‘keep up’ ones social status is an overwhelming experience for many children and young people in London and other parts of the UK.
The solution, cannot be one of using brute force otherwise it will be as foolish as thinking that you can use force to fight against terrorism! After all the bombings in Afghanistan, the Tallibans are still there, likewise after locking away all the youths who took part in the riots, even if we were to empower the police to beat them with batons or shoot them with plastic bullets or water cannons, this in our view will still not get rid of the underlying causes. So as London and other areas of the UK slowly rise from the ashes of destruction that poured down on it over the past week, our word of advice to the politicians and the leaders of society is to remember the causes of the problem, tackle the causes and you may just find a way of preventing such behaviour from repeating themselves in the future; ignore the causes of these riots and you may be embarrassed once again, at a time that you least want or expect it; such as in the midst of the London 2012 Olympics! To avoid this, the leaders will need to focus on social investment and empowerment in the heart of the community, to increase the life chances of the children and young people and to help them to regain the trust, respect and value for authority that has been lacking for so many years. These are all starting points that the government needs to work on. They represent basic human needs. They are the needs of many who were on the streets recently, if they were offered with legitimate opportunities, such as the opportunity to gain employment, to live in good housing, to attend good schools, to enjoy a balanced lifestyle, you can guarantee that they would not see the need to go looking for anything else. So it is time for not just fancy words from the leaders that be, but for swift action, just they acted swiftly to send in fighter jets with bombs to fight against Gadafi in Libya; similarly they must act swiftly and with the same vigour and determination to create greater opportunities and life chances for the children, young people and their families so that the need to go looting and destroying their local area, would be the last thing on their minds.
Filed under: Review4Students Views & Updates | Leave a Comment »



