|
The
advantages of social apartheid - Charles
Murray - Sunday Times, April 03, 2005
Introduction by Roger Eldridge, NMCI:
Below is an important article reprinted from last
week's Sunday Times. The author, Charles Murray first
made headlines 25 years ago when he dared to name the
burgeoning sector of society that suffered as a result
of Fatherlessness. He called them the "underclass".
His expertise was founded in the USA but he predicted
with near perfect accuracy that the disastrous consequences
of state policy intent on creating fatherless families
over there would create the same ghettoes and anti-social
behaviour in societies in the British Isles.
This has, as we all know, become reality. In Limerick
in Ireland there is a 58% rate of births outside of
marriage and lawlessness is overt. It is known as the
gangland of the west and the police are struggling for
control of the streets.
Charles Murray's frustration is visible in this article.
His warnings have been ignored by the state. Indeed
their policy goes on unabated by any criticisms, especially
when the media quickly drowns it out with pro-state
policy propaganda.
In his first articles he repeatedly made calls for
there to be a change in state policy to bring fathering
back to its respectful position for the sake of the
common good.
The state however needs to destroy more and more
marriages to increase its power and enlarge its bureaucracy.
Through political correctness and by cynically manipulating
women's inclinations it has effectively destroyed all
opposition. We have almost reached the point where there
is no dividing line between political parties in their
approaches to state engorgement through the destruction
of Marriage - the last threshold of privacy and liberty
from the clutches of the totalitarian state.
Having seen that the machinery of the state is never
going to give up on destroying Marriages because of
the benefits to its own power lust Murray presents people
the only alternative and the one the USA have arrived
at - social apartheid - which means forcibly keeping
separate "decent" people from the underclass
of people who have no knowledge of social discipline
because their father, who tends to be the instructor
to his children of what is right and wrong, is absent
from their lives or they have been forced to disrespect
him if he is present.
That is what they have done in America.
In an article published in "The Irish Family"
recently I wrote about the vital importance of stigma
as a self-regulating force for the common good in order
to sustain a decent civilised society. I was talking
about the stigma of bastardy as a lot of women in the
media here had called for the mere utterance of the
word to be considered an act of criminal 'hate language'.
The editor of even that great pro-family newspaper saw
fit to 'tone down' my statements under pressure to comply
with his readers perceived delicate sensibilities.
I ended the article by asking a simple question.
What do women want - a civilised society controlled
by the common moral position, the customs of the people
where Marriage is honoured and as a consequence of its
corollary one that creates a stigma in order to regulate
peoples behaviour for the common good when they dishonour
Marriage or social apartheid and a totalitarian state
with martial law.
No-one answered to support the need for a stigma
so I suppose Murray is echoing the position of the silent
majority when he gives us his solution. If people are
not courageous enough to stand against something as
pathetic and irrational as political correctness they
have no moral backbone at all and are just fodder for
the state's propaganda machine.
The National Mens Council of Ireland though will
never accept social apartheid as a solution. We sincerely
believe that our children deserve a better future than
that and we will continue our fight for their right
to have a Married mother and father in their life and
for the Common Good.
Roger Eldridge, Chairman. National Men's Council
of Ireland
The advantages of social apartheid
US experience shows Britain what to do with its underclass
- get it off the streets, says Charles Murray Sunday
Times, April 03, 2005
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2092-1551824_1,00.html
Underclass is an ugly word, and we live in an
age that abhors ugly words, so it is good to hear that
the Blair government has devised a cheerier label: Neet,
an acronym for "not in education, employment or
training".
Once a government has given a problem a name it must
develop effective new strategies for dealing with it.
That too is in train, The Sunday Times told us last
week, replete with urgent cabinet meetings, study groups
roaming about the country and even a "Neet target"
to reduce the Neet population by 20% by 2010.
You may use whatever euphemism the government adopts,
but it's still the underclass. Its numbers are not going
to be reduced by 20% by 2010. Its numbers will increase.
The good news is that the rate of increase will probably
begin to slow in a few years and in another decade or
two Britain will have learnt to manage the problem -
meaning you will have learnt how to keep the underclass
from getting underfoot, even though its numbers are
undiminished.
When The Sunday Times first asked me to look at the
British underclass in 1989, the American underclass
was about 15 to 20 years ahead of Britain's. You were
tracking the American experience with remarkable fidelity
then and you are still tracking it.
From the beginning I have used the simple-minded
assumption that Britain 16 years on would look like
America did when I was writing, and that's more or less
the way things have worked out. Nothing about the underclass
is rocket science. It's all basic, the kind of thing
our grandparents took for granted. It just has to be
rephrased to accommodate today's delicate sensibilities.
Our grandparents thought bastardy was a problem to
be avoided at any cost. Today's translation: children
who grow up without being nurtured by two biological
parents are at risk. Poverty isn't the problem. Inadequate
educational opportunities aren't the problem. Social
exclusion isn't the problem.
Throughout history, societies around the world have
been poor, with inadequate educational opportunities
and with socially excluded people. Those same societies
have been remarkably successful at ensuring that almost
all children came into the world with two biological
parents committed to their care. That's the difference
between societies with small underclasses (for every
society has had an underclass) and with large ones.
Children today usually still have a mother with them.
The problem is the growing number of children who have
no father and who live in areas where hardly anyone
has a father. Girls without fathers tend to be emotionally
damaged.
Among other things, they tend to search for father
substitutes among young males, which in turn increases
the likelihood of repeating their mother's experience.
Boys without fathers tend to grow up unsocialised. They
tend to have poor impulse control, to be sexual predators,
to be unable to get up at the same time every morning
and go to a job. They tend to disappear shortly after
the baby is born. These are not the complaints of a
conservative lamenting the lost good old days. They
are social science findings that are as robust and unambiguous
as social science findings get.
I use the word "tend" because none of these
outcomes is carved in stone for any particular child.
But we can't deny a problem exists because some children
of single women do well. Of course, there are many exceptions
but the statistical tendencies are pronounced, and tendencies
produce a large and problematic underclass.
Our grandparents thought you couldn't "do"
with a youngster who wasn't brought up right. Today's
translation: social programmes for intervening with
children at risk have consistently meagre results. This
finding has even longer shelves of analysis than the
literature on the children of single parents.
During the 1960s and 1970s, the Americans tried everything:
pre-school socialisation programmes, enrichment programmes
in elementary schools, programmes that provided guaranteed
jobs for young people without skills, ones that provided
on-the-job training, programmes that sent young people
without skills to residential centres for extended skills
training and psychological preparation for the world
of work, programmes to prevent school dropout, and so
on. These are just the efforts aimed at individuals.
I won't even try to list the varieties of programmes
that went under the heading of "community development".
They were also the most notorious failures.
We know the programmes didn't work because all of
them were accompanied by evaluations. I was a programme
evaluator from 1968 to 1981. The most eminent of America's
experts on programme evaluation - a liberal sociologist
named Peter Rossi - distilled this vast experience into
what he called the Iron Law of Evaluation: "The
expected value of any net impact assessment of any large-scale
social programme is zero." The Iron Law has not
been overturned by subsequent experience.
I should add a corollary to it, however: "The
initial media accounts of social programmes that ultimately
fail are always positive." Every training programme
for young men or parenting programme for young women
can produce a heart-warming success story for the evening
news. None produces long-term group results that survive
scrutiny.
None of this experience crosses the Atlantic. When
the Blair government began its ambitious job-training
programmes, I wondered whether anyone within the bowels
of the appropriate ministries said: "You know,
the Americans tried lots of these things years ago.
I wonder how they worked?" But apparently nobody
did or nobody listened. Now the government seems ready
to admit that the results of the training programmes
have been dismal. But as it sets off on the next round
of bright ideas, I still don't hear anyone saying: "You
know, the Americans tried those programmes too . . ."
The bottom line for this accumulation of experience
in America is that it is impossible to make up for parenting
deficits through outside interventions. I realise this
is still an intellectually unacceptable thing to say
in Britain. It used to be intellectually unacceptable
in the United States as well. No longer. We've been
there, done that.
Our grandparents' most basic taken-for-granted understanding,
which today's intellectual and political elites find
it hardest to accept, is this: make it easier to behave
irresponsibly and more people will behave irresponsibly.
The welfare state makes it easier for men to impregnate
women without taking responsibility for them, easier
for women to raise a baby without the help of a man
and easier for men and women to get by without working.
There is no changing that situation without reintroducing
penalties for irresponsible behaviour.
This is the sticking point for every political figure
in Britain, Labour or Tory. Frank Field has been miles
ahead of other politicians in recognising the growing
problem of the underclass and in speaking out, but last
week even he was saying: "Surely we can say that
the traditional family unit is the best way to nurture
children without making it a campaign to beat up single
mums."
With respect: you cannot. If you want to reduce the
number of single mums you have to be ready to say that
to bring a child into the world without a father committed
to its care is wrong.
The government need not sponsor publicity campaigns
to beat up single mums. Put the cost of irresponsible
behaviour back where it belongs - on the man and the
woman, their families and their community - and the
recognition that the behaviour is wrong will revive
instantly, along with powerful social pressures to make
sure it happens as seldom as possible.
Some of those pressures will be positive, celebrating
marriage as a uniquely valuable institution and bestowing
social approval on the bride and groom. Some of those
pressures will be negative, consisting of various forms
of stigma. This is good. Stigma is one of society's
most efficient methods for controlling destructive behaviour.
How can the government realise this desirable state
of affairs? By ending all government programmes that
subsidise having babies. But this moves us into the
realm of solutions that haven't a prayer of becoming
reality. They haven't in the United States, where the
total package of benefits for single mothers has not
been diminished despite the hoopla about welfare reform,
and there is no reason to think Britain will act any
differently in the foreseeable future.
Now for the good news, if you want to call it that.
You don't need to reduce the underclass to reduce the
problems the underclass creates for the rest of us.
As evidence, I point to a dog that no longer barks.
The underclass, the most important domestic policy issue
of the 1980s, is no longer even a topic of conversation
in the United States.
The American underclass isn't any smaller. The three
indicators of an underclass - the proportion of children
born to single women, criminality among young men and
young men who have dropped out of the labour force -
have all grown or remained steady during the past 15
years. The underclass is no longer an issue because
we successfully put it out of sight and out of mind.
Consider the presence of the underclass in American
cities. Fifteen or 20 years ago, the homeless, panhandlers
and street hustlers were everywhere. Today they are
virtually gone in most cities (San Francisco remains
the exception). Graffiti used to be everywhere in American
cities. Today it is rare in the better parts of town.
You have no idea how depressing graffiti is until you've
lived without it and then encounter it again, as you
do in cities throughout Europe.
The social segregation of the underclass has been
nearly perfected. We have not learnt how to compensate
for the parenting deficits that cripple the lives of
children of the underclass, but we have learnt how to
avoid dealing with the consequences.
American children of the middle and upper classes
no longer go to school with the children of the underclass.
For a number of years, progressive American educators
managed to dilute the old principle that a school drew
only from a restricted geographic area. That principle
has been reinstated so parents can be sure that if they
move to the right neighbourhood their children won't
have large numbers of disruptive, foul-mouthed, sexually
precocious and sometimes violent classmates. Middle
and upper-class parents who remain within large cities
commonly send their children to private schools.
Increased geographic segregation of the underclass
has facilitated social segregation. In many large cities,
urban renovation has reclaimed deteriorating downtown
areas for glitzy shops and gleaming offices. Gentrification
has retrieved much of the urban housing stock that had
fallen into disrepair. The "inner city" is
seldom literally located in the inner city but in decrepit
neighbourhoods on the periphery that need not be on
the travel route of the rest of us.
Most importantly, America has dealt with its crime
problem. The crime rate has dropped by about one-third
since the early 1990s. It has dropped even more in the
better parts of town. People walk the streets of New
York and Chicago without taking the precautions they
used to take. Triple-locked doors and bars on the windows
are not as necessary as they used to be. People feel
safer and are safer.
We didn't solve the crime problem by learning how
to get tough on the causes of crime nor by rehabilitating
criminals. We just took them off the streets. As of
2005, more than 2m Americans are incarcerated. That
number is inefficiently large - it includes many minor
drug offenders - but it responds to the question "Does
prison work?".
If you are willing to pay the price - a price that
would amount to a British prison population of roughly
250,000 if your sentencing followed the American model
- you can reduce crime dramatically.
All of these are policies that the British political
establishment may come to accept in another decade or
so. If London were to get a mayor who decided to take
the homeless off the streets, scrub away the graffiti
and adopt a zero-tolerance policing policy, I suspect
he would find the same surge in popularity that Rudy
Giuliani experienced in New York.
British parents are increasingly vocal about their
dissatisfaction with schools, and especially with their
spinelessness in dealing with disruptive children. In
every area of life that the underclass affects, the
public mood is shifting towards support of the American
solution. Politicians who covet votes will come around
eventually.
Hence my prediction that in 15 years, perhaps less,
the underclass/Neet will no longer be a political issue
in Britain and urban life for most of you will be more
pleasant than it is now. The price will have been a
great deal of money spent on prisons and, in effect,
the writing-off of a portion of the population as unfit
for civil society.
In the United States I have called this the coming
of custodial democracy - literally custodial for criminals,
figuratively custodial for the neighbourhoods we seal
away from the rest of us. Custodial democracy is probably
headed your way.
It is not a happy solution. On the contrary, it means
abandoning a central tenet of a free society - that
everyone can exercise equal responsibility for his or
her own life. But Britain, like the United States and
western Europe, is locked into a welfare state that
by its nature generates large numbers of feckless people.
If we are unwilling to prevent an underclass by giving
responsibility for behaviour back to individuals, their
families, and communities, custodial democracy is the
only option left.
Charles Murray is best known for Losing Ground, his
1984 book about welfare reform, and for The Bell Curve
of 1994
[Return
to Top]
|