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Where do gangs come from?
BY DORIS DEPAZ
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PHOTO: ELMER ROMERO
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In Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Texas, New York
and Washington, DC, gangs have taken over whole
neighborhoods, committing all sorts of crimes. The whole
country is alert to the social instability caused by these
destructive elements. Human rights activist Guadalupe Rodriguez
talked with Voice Newspapers about this growing problem.
According to Rodriguez, researching gang origins in the United
States would lead to an analysis of the roots of poverty in
America, a continent stretching from Tierra del Fuego in Chile
all the way to the snowy mountains of Alaska. Various newspapers
have already written about the origins of gangs: some say
it's the lack of parental discipline, an emotional distancing
between generations or even a product of the Cold War.
One thing the newspapers seem to agree on, says Rodriguez,
is that tougher laws need to be written to deal with juvenile
delinquents who threaten social stability on a daily basis.
However, they don't realize that the exorbitant sums
that this country spends in creating violence in other countries
forces thousands of families to leave their homes and seek
"refuge" in this great "democracy."
Rodriguez speaks of the hundreds of U.S. corporations that
have invaded poor countries looking for cheap labor without
contributing to the economic development of these countries.
With low wages, families cannot afford to live in humane conditions.
Corrupt local politicians along with their shameless supporters
leave the majority of the population at the mercy of foreigners
who plunder the country's natural resources. Resources
that would be better used to benefit local inhabitants. Media
here in the U.S. tends to ignore the dreams of low income
immigrants to escape from poverty.
The media doesn't recognize the gangs of multinationals
committing crimes in so called third world countries, gangs
with origins in the U.S., the richest country in the world.
The countries of Central and South America, Rodriguez points
out, have suffered wars financed and orchestrated by the same
country that looks down on the immigrants arriving here in
poverty and ignorance. All they know is the suffering they
have experienced. Suffering, says Rodriguez, that no human
being should have to endure. Nobody wants to leave their land,
their relatives, their culture, but many are forced to because
of the economic measures supposedly taken to improve social
conditions. The worst part, says Rodriguez, is when fellow
Latinos look down on the new arrivals and shun them.
Today the United States is faced with the destruction within
that arises from social injustice, greed and corruption, says
Rodriguez. Here Congress debates what country to invade next,
what social services to cut here for lack of funds.
Rodriguez calls on journalists to look at gang members and
analyze what has been denied to them since before birth. Pregnant
women in maquiladoras (factories), markets, countrysides devastated
by wars.
Instead of seeing gang members merely as delinquents, try
seeing them as victims, she says. U.S. society has an enormous
debt to the well-being of the desperate young arriving here
from other countries.
One local high school student from Central America, Ernesto
Pineda, calls on all parents to protect and guide their children
away from gangs.
Familiar with gang activity in Silver Spring, Pineda encourages
young people to seek constructive activities. "Dance,
draw, sing, write, take pictures," he says.
He believes this country does offer opportunities through
community centers, but parents and young people have to make
the effort to seek out a better future.
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