Imagine you are hog-tied and placed in
a body bag or wooden cagewrap mat. You have already been drugged
and subjected to brainwashing, sensory deprivation, hypnosis and
electric shock treatment. You are forced to eat your own vomit,
or, in the alternative, you are starved and dehydrated. A sandbag
is placed around your neck as a cure for your dehydration. Some
of your
companions have died from these practices and you know you could be
pushing daisies soon. Thinking of human beings going through this
treatment makes a person want to tell George W. Bush off about Iraq and
his torture camps. If, this very minute, Bush stopped all
the mistreatment of the foreign detainees and all the renditions, it
would have no effect upon the abuses mentioned above. They could
continue and more would die. Why? As this is being read,
these abuses continue to be committed against teenagers in the United
States of America in what have become known as Gulag Schools, also
called military boot camps, behavior modification schools, Christian
military schools or "boarding schools."
What happened to the land of the free and the home of the
brave? Where is the freedom in being sent to a
behavior modification facility for failing to follow the social
norms?
There are two standards. There is one standard for those above 18
and another for those under 18. Torture is bad, as long as
the recipient is over 18. If the individual is below 18, torture
and abuse are justified as long as it is done by some type of school or
facility. This is why young people have no political
rights. If they did, Gulag Schools wouldn't exist. If anyone
cared about the young, they would have a chance to vote before they
died in Iraq for a war older Americans created. If the youth had
rights, they would not be dragged across a street for holding a sign,
off school property, that contained the joke, "Bong Hits for
Jesus." At the 2007 California State Bar Convention, Kenneth
Starr stated that the ultimate Supreme Court decision in the
Frederick v.
Morris case turned on sympathy for the principal, Deborah
Morris, who
dragged student Joseph Frederick across the street and suspended him
for his harmless joke sign. She couldn't really have believed he
planned to track Jesus down and give him a bong pipe. Nobody
would suggest dragging the Deborah Morrises of the world off to Gulag
Schools. Gulags are reserved for secondary and elementary school
students. You don't torture adults in the United States of
America.
Gulag Schools have been called the second fastest growth industry next
to the building of prisons. This is a $1.2 billion unregulated
industry that serves 10,000 to 20,000 children and adolescents
annually. What makes them different from prisons is that they are
filled with rich white kids and are given nice nicknames, such as
"boarding schools." The general rule is that the more money the
parents have, the worse the abuse. Based on referrals from
friends or "experts," parents blindly place their kids into these
schools in the hopes that their kids will emerge as solid, respectable
citizens. The parents generally have no idea that they just
turned their kids over to modern day versions of Josef Mengele.
Across America, teenagers are dying in Gulag Schools. The
Democratic Party has sometimes taken stances against the mistreatment
of prisoners in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. Why are Iraqis more
worthy of freedom and rights than American teenagers? Torture is
torture. Torture looks and feels the same, whether it is
happening in America or Iraq. Why is torture more acceptable to
government leaders, American political leaders and activists if the
victim is an American teenager with no rights than if the victim
is an adult who has never stepped foot on American soil? Why are
torturers in this country trusted to know what is best for a
child? Why haven't both major parties adopted resolutions
condemning this practice? Why hasn't there been
legislation? Why aren't the human rights of young Americans being
enforced?
Under
Hope
v. Pelzer, 122 S.
Ct. 2508, 2514, 2518
(2002), the use of restraints without penological justification is
cruel and unusual punishment. Unfortunately, since some
feel the 8th Amendment of the Constitution does not apply to those
under 18, use of these restraints hasn't stopped in Gulag
Schools. Hundreds of children and people have died from
restraints. In fact, use of restraints is a common practice
in these schools, where the goal is to turn kids into well-behaving
future adults, or at least that's what they claim. In Texas,
17-year-old Chase Moody chest-down, pinned to the ground by three camp
counselors, died from choking on his own vomit. At schools in
Mississippi, students,
ages 10 to 18, have been routinely hit,
shackled to poles, sprayed with pepper spray while in restraints, and
hog-tied in cells known as the "dark rooms." These are just a
few of the thousands of examples of a nationwide problem.
Schools that engage in such practices rarely close down. When
they do, they generally reopen under another name and continue their
practices.
One common practice involves stripping girls and placing them in a
"dark room" for acting out. The "dark room" contains nothing but
a
drain on the floor for use as a toilet. If they
object, they are sprayed in the face with pepper spray.
Sometimes, girls are hog-tied and left in bare cells for more than a
week at a time. One girl was left in a bare cell for 114
days.
Some schools believe in making sure the kids do their daily
exercises. One boy was sprayed with pepper spray for failing to
do exercises. After being sprayed, he was forced to do 100 squat
thrusts, 100 push ups, and 100 jumping jacks. In some instances,
girls are forced to eat their own vomit if they throw-up while
exercising in the hot sun.
Representative George Miller had the courage to hold a hearing on the
issue. Miller had the strength of character to use the word
"torture" to refer to practices occurring at these
facilities. Congressman Howard McKeon, the ranking
Republican on the House Committee on Education and Labor, pointed out,
"...if a parent just were reported abusing the child, the child would
be
taken away and the parents would go to jail." George
Miller spoke of the need for official action. So far, no action
has been taken on the information acquired in the hearing. The
hearing can be viewed at
http://edworkforce.house.gov/hearings/fc101007.shtml.
Among the youth, teens and younger, who have died at Gulag
Schools are Lorenzo Johnson, Tammy Edmiston, Carlos Ruiz, Mario
Cano, John Vincent Garrison, Bernard Reefer, Robert Zimmerman,
Charles Lucas, James Lamb, Leon Anger, Leroy
Prinkley, Joshua Ferarini, Wauketta Wallace, Roxanna Gray, Danny Lewis,
Diane Harris, Michelle Lynn Sutton, Kristen Chase, Anthony Green,
Geoffrey Alan Vorhies, Paul Choy, Christy
Scheck, Dawn Renay Perry, Jason Tallman, Casey Collier, Aaron Wright
Bacon, Thomas Mapes, Jamar Griffiths, Shinaul McGraw, Jonathon Avila,
Jeffrey Bogrett, Earl Smith, Dawnne
Takeuchi, Eric Roberts, Will Futrelle, Bobby Sue Thomas, Eric David
Schibley, Rochelle Clayborne, Melissa Neyman, Jimmy Kanda, Chris
Campbell, Robert Rollins, Sakena Dorsey, Jeffrey Demetrius, Kelly
Young, Dustin E. Phelps, Laura Hanson,Mark Draheim, Nicholas Contreras,
Matt Tappi, Chris Brown, Ashley Shaddox, Andrew McClain, Tristan
Sovern, Mark Soares, Edith Campos, Chad Andrew Franza, Kristel
Mayon-Ceniceros, Jerry McLaurin, Joshua Sharpe, Michael Ibarra-Witsie,
Sabrina E. Day, Randy Steele, Wilie Wright, Candace Newmaker,
William "Eddie" Lee" , Diane Pickens, Tanner Wilson, Stephanie
Duffield, Ryan Lewis, Angela Miller, Robert Doyle Erwin, Lyle
Foodroy, Valerie Ann Heron, Aaron Albert Grey, Katherine Lank, LaTasha
Bush, Matthew Goodman, Erica Harvey, Ian August, Isiah
Simmons,
Anthony Haynes, Charles "Chase" Moody, Jarnal Odum, Orlena
Parker, Carey Baines, Daniel "Danny" Jack Matthews, Omar Paisley, Maria
Mendoza, Karlye Newman, Roberto Reyes, Garrett Halsey, Travis Parker,
Linda Harris, Shirley Arciszewski, Kathy Warner, Willie Durden,
Christening "Mikie" Garcia, James White, Martin Lee Anderson,
Joey (Giovanni) Alteriz, Angela Arndt, Lenny Ortega, Natalynndria Lucy
Slim, Dillon Peak, Elisa Santry, Rocco D. Magliozzi, Alex Cllinane,
Caleb Jensen, and Brendan James Blum. You can see pictures
of some of these kids at
http://www.teenadvocatesusa.homestead.com/INMEMORIAM.html.
The Democratic and Republican Parties have failed to protect these and
other young Americans who have died as a result of the paternalistic
approach American society has regarding youth rights. Nothing
will bring back those who have died. Nothing will undo the damage
done by those society has trusted to take care of the youth.
Could those who died have done any worse a job of taking care of
themselves?
What does this say about our society, its beliefs about youth and its
insistence on preventing those without rights from protecting
themselves? What does this say about a political system in which
youth have no rights - except the right to be mistreated, tortured and
killed? Will we sit back, oblivious to the children who are being
tortured and killed in our country, or will we act by closing these
schools and declaring that that all humans of all ages are entitled to
human rights and equal protection of the laws?
Those, wishing to do something about these abuses help to bring about
change, have the power to act.. They can call their legislators
and demand action. They can get organizations to which they
belong to adopt resolutions and demand actions from legislators.
They can join or contribute to organizations, like the National Youth
Rights Assoc iation, that are working to end age-related
discrimination.
When someone above 18 speaks of inferior minds and the need to protect
children from themselves, they can stand up and say, "enough."
Copyright © 2007 by
Natasha H. and creativeyouth.net. All rights reserved.
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