tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29373297.post7485448065103291234..comments2024-03-23T18:50:32.902-04:00Comments on Telling Secrets: Help Wanted: STOP THE KILLINGS IN NEWARK NOW!Elizabeth Kaetonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06787552280232329081noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29373297.post-52363067433048506402007-03-28T15:10:00.000-04:002007-03-28T15:10:00.000-04:00Inner cities have always been violent places. Wha...Inner cities have always been violent places. What has changed is that now the people in them are not able to see a way out. Here in the midwest, folks in NW Indiana used to refer to "the ladder." The ladder is what your family climed when it started at the least skilled jobs in the steel mills but saw grandsons who became plant foremen, engineers, school teachers and the like.<BR/><BR/>My great grandfather did that in one generation, he started as as "sweeper" about the lowest gig there was in a mill, and ended up the founding mayor of East Chicago, Ind. He would tell you if he were here, he was lucky and the ladder was there for him.<BR/><BR/>No one needs sweepers now. The manual jobs are in the far East. Where that old gypsy ancestor of mine looking to get out of poverty in Indianna today, there is no ladder to climb.<BR/><BR/>I am not suggesting we need to bring back that sort of work. What we need to do is find an analog for the ladder. A way that an inner city mom can get a job, provide at least a de minimus level of decent living and tell her children, convincingly, that they <I>can</I> do better.<BR/><BR/>For openers, how about TEC committing to invest its available cash funds in CMA's that are orriented towards bringing real jobs and real opportunities into the cities? Not the pension money, that has its own board and imperatives. But huge amounts of cash pass through the church. If we, the Presby's, Methodists and Lutherans simply said our CMA accounts must be orriented towards inner city opportunities, a lot of business would find a way to <B>become</B> inner city opportunities.<BR/><BR/>FWIW<BR/>jimBJimBhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17312606954135884910noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29373297.post-20639982692704348862007-03-27T09:58:00.000-04:002007-03-27T09:58:00.000-04:00There’s no quick fix for something like this. But...There’s no quick fix for something like this. But, you have to stop it before it becomes another Camden. You can’t turn it into a police state, that just backfires on you. You really have to fix this at the root cause. Hopelessness breeds apathy, despair and violence. If you have no hope, and nothing to live for, who cares if you die. We have to find a way to give the youth a reason to live, a reason to hope. We have to find a way for them to break out of this cycle of violence and death. <BR/><BR/>People tend to get side-tracked in looking for one grand fix-it-all plan. We’re going to throw a switch and everything will be ok. We’ll put more cops on the street. So what, the kids will just find another street. We’ll pour more money into the schools. It won’t help, the kids don’t see a future in schools. <BR/><BR/>The signs may be a good thing. If this is going to work at all, it has to be a “grass roots effort” (how’s that for a name). Every mom and dad and aunt and uncle have to become involved. Every priest, minister and rabbi, need to go all out. This requires a full-court press or it will never work. <BR/><BR/>I don’t have the answers but if I’ve learned one thing over the years, it’s that there usually is an answer. All we have to do is find it. These kids need a reason. We have to build self-esteem. They need to be told that they are worth something, that people care and that people will help them if only they give it a shot.<BR/><BR/>Ok, let me get down off the soap-box now, without tripping.Billhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05623709712119761741noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-29373297.post-88454203268535764252007-03-27T09:06:00.000-04:002007-03-27T09:06:00.000-04:00I work in Newark. I love this city. Who can say ...I work in Newark. I love this city. Who can say that? There is the shoe repairman on Academy St. (and his attiude) who looks like he's been in that shop for 100 years, unbelievable Portugese restaurants, NJPAC, and people ready to smile back on the street.<BR/><BR/>Unfortunately, the shrines pictured are becoming more and more commonplace. They snap me back to the reality of the violence that the people of Newark live with every day. I pass three of them on my way home. They are painful reminders of what I take for granted and what others long for... safety for their families.JimMollohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15569109219280693846noreply@blogger.com