Valuing Childhood The
value of childhood is easily blurred (变得模糊不清) in today’s world. Consider some
recent developments. The child, murderers in the Jonesboro schoolyard shooting
case were convicted and sentenced. Two boys, 7 and 8, were charged in the murder
of an 11-year-old girl in Chicago. Children who commit horrible
crimes appear to act of their own will. Yet, as legal proceedings in Jonesboro
showed, the one boy who was able to address the court couldn’t begin to explain
his acts, though he tried to apologize. There may have been a motive—youthful
jealousy (嫉妒) and resentment. But a deeper question remains: Why did these boys
and others in similar trouble apparently lack any inner, moral
restraint That question echoes for the accused in Chicago,
young as they are. They wanted the girl’s bicycle, a selfish impulse common
enough among kids. Redemption (拯救) is a practical necessity.
How can value be restored to young lives distorted by acts of violence The boys
in Jonesboro and in Chicago will be confined in institutions for a relatively
short time. Despite horror at what was done, children are not—cannot be—dealt
with as adults, not if a people wants to consider itself civilized. That’s why
politicians’ cries for adult treatment of youthful criminals ultimately miss the
point. But the moral void (真空) that invites violence has many
sources. Family instability contributes, so does economic stress. That void,
however, can be filled. The work starts with parents, who have to ask themselves
whether they’re doing enough to give their children a firm sense of fight and
wrong. Are they really monitoring their activities and their developing
processes of thought Schools, too, have a role in building
character. So do youth organizations. So do youth enforcement agencies, which
can do more to inform the young about laws, their meaning, and their observance
(遵守). The goal, ultimately, is to allow all children a normal
passage from childhood to adulthood (成年), so that tragic gaps in moral judgement
are less likely to occur. The relative few who fill such gaps with acts of
violence hint at many others who don’t go that far, but who lack the moral
foundations childhood should provide—and which progressive human society relies
on. According to politicians, when children commit crimes, they should be
treated in the same way as ______.