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In an anti-abuse training session, a martial arts instructor gives suggestions on how to cope with threatening adult behaviors. From the back row comes the plaintive question: “What do you do when the person bothering you is your father?”

THE SITUATION

These few relatively commonplace examples from only one person’s experience and knowledge illustrate the increasingly vicious world surrounding a large percentage of American children today, and the apparent inability of authorities to cope with this situation. The schools, the streets, the shopping malls, and even the once sacrosanct home, abound with threats to our nation’s most important resource — our children. Law enforcement seems to be blind, or hobbled by courts, and standards of right and wrong seem infinitely negotiable. There is no indication that this world is going to miraculously change for the better at any time soon!

CRIME STATISTICS

Examples similar to those above, and worse, are everywhere. The real magnitude of the problem is unfortunately quite difficult to estimate, because of numerous problems with crime statistics produced by government, academic, and advocacy groups. These problems result to a large degree from inaccurate or incomplete reporting. It is estimated, for example, that 46% of all violent crimes, 44% of all rapes, and 36% of all crimes are never reported (and these estimates may not be valid either!). Further, there are differences between the ways that states define and report various kinds of crimes that make them difficult to summarize. There is also a tendency not to collect data on crimes committed by members of lower age groups (e.g., below age 12), in which children and youths are victims or perpetrators. There is also the lamentable tendency for all federal statistics to be intentionally altered to support requests for increased departmental funding, or to support the political agenda of political parties or administrations. This tendency is matched by non-government advocacy groups’ practices of grossly exaggerating the frequency of certain types of crimes to justify their own existence as advocates. Data on missing children, for example, gives the impression that these children are all victims of unknown kidnappers, when, in fact, many have gone willingly with family members fighting custody battles in increasingly capricious courts, or are voluntary runaways. Statistics summarized at national, state, or local levels also blur significant differences in types and frequencies of crimes between states or cities and their suburbs.

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