By
now everyone has seen the videotape of the melee that was titled a
powder-puff football game in Northbrook, Illinois. In times passed senior
and junior girls would gather to compete in a game of football, usually
around homecoming, in an attempt to highlight a time during the year when
tradition and inclusion became a right of passage. In times passed
participating in such an event was an almost certain guarantee of fond
memories to come. Today, this right of passage has taken on a much different
tone and disturbingly the memories being made are those most often found in
the files of police departments, social workers and the producers of The
Jerry Springer Show.
The viciousness to which the junior girls of Glenbrook North High School
were subjected was nothing less than brutal. The videotapes of the event
show senior girls trying to pry the hands of their quarry away from their
faces so they could be punched and kicked, senior girls pulling the victim’s
hair in an effort to drag them from a position of defense so that they could
be beaten further and even depicts some male attendees cheering this
activity on and in some cases joining in pummeling of these young girls.
Such actions are more likely to be attributed to the gang controlled mean
streets of the inner city rather than an affluent neighborhood where
privilege and opportunity abound.
One has to ask what went through the minds of those who were beating and
kicking the younger girls. Are their lives so devoid of a definition for
what is right and wrong that they couldn’t find it in their consciences to
understand the brutality of their actions? Or is it that they are so filled
with anger for all of their dysfunction that it all came to a boil on a
forest preserve field late in a year that would be the last under the
protection and privilege provided by their parents? Or perhaps it is just an
imprudent self-absorption, a misguided sense of elitism provided by an
unexamined sense of being that allowed them all to believe that they were
better than those who they were brutalizing? No matter what the root cause
of this behavior, behavior that cannot ever be accepted by society, the
ultimate responsibility rests with the parents of each of these broken
children. They have failed their children by allowing them to become the
people who would do such a thing. By not being involved in their children’s
lives enough to have been able to see the lack of morality, the unbridled
anger or the absolute arrogance that raged inside their own children they
became responsible for their children’s actions, if not legally then
morally.
What is truly disturbing here are the actions taken after the brutality
ended. If the beatings and humiliation weren’t bad enough, if the failure of
the parents in their parenting isn’t failure enough, some of those who are
responsible for the brutality are now objecting to the punishment that is
being doled out by the school administration in the belief that what they
did shouldn’t warrant a swift and serious response. The arrogance and the
denial are maddening.
The school administration at Glenbrook North High School has imposed its
penalties on those who were so vicious. The administration has suspended
those involved for ten days (the maximum allowed) and is considering banning
them from the prom and graduation, a consequence of their expulsions from
school, which is being recommended by school officials. In light of the fact
that five junior girls were sent to hospitals in the area with injuries that
ranged from lacerations requiring stitches to broken bones one could see
their way clear to view the punishment imposed as warranted if not lenient.
Usually, when one human being punches, kicks, lacerates the skin or breaks
the bones of another human being in a deliberate manner assault charges are
filed. And when the perpetrators are stupid enough to have videotaped the
incident the courts are pretty swift to place the guilt where it belongs. In
this case, especially because of the videotapes, there is no question as to
who is guilty or to the extent of their brutality. The only question is why
formal charges have not been filed but that is a completely different
matter.
Now comes the revelation that the parents of one of the girls who felt
compelled to beat, kick and injure her schoolmates, 18-year old Marnie
Holz, retained an attorney who has filed a lawsuit seeking a
temporary restraining order to keep the school from suspending her. "You are
entitled to an education so when someone takes that right away from you
without giving you due process, they have violated (your) due process
rights,” said Naomi Valas, the Holz’s attorney.
What about the girls who received lacerations, broken bones and bruises from
this little beast? Where is their due process? I can tell you where it is;
it is in the suspension and possible expulsion, which I truly hope comes to
pass along with criminal charges.
The gall of the Holz family to try and defer the punishment so that their
"little darling” can still be included in the ceremonies usually reserved
for those who have completed their years in secondary school with honor is
of an appalling extreme. It can be argued that through this simple action by
the parents, the action of retaining a lawyer to "get Marnie out of this”,
they are once again failing their child. It can be argued that the action of
trying to say "it’s-not-my-child’s-fault” is enabling their daughter in her
dysfunction of believing that she is better than the rest. The simple action
of not taking responsibility for the actions of their poor parenting and the
actions of their daughter stands testament to a false belief that bad
actions should be rewarded with oversight and denial. It is a cancer that
our society is rife with and one that needs to be eliminated before our
society decays any further.
What happened at the forest preserve field in Cook County, Illinois was an
amazing affront to acceptable public behavior by any standard. Illegal acts
were committed, laws were broken and certain penalties have been imposed on
those who perpetrated these crimes. The possibility of future legal action
against those who acted so brutally remains, but for now the penalties are
just. However, this should not be the end of it all. We as a society have to
examine why such things can happen within our communities, affluent or not.
The contempt that some feel for others, no matter what the reason, and to
the extent that it fosters violence as a response is unacceptable and needs
to be addressed. We dare not drop the ball on this one.
As for the Holz’s, it is amazing to believe that some people can be so
arrogant in their elitism. One would have thought that the actions of their
daughter would have brought a bit of shame onto the family, instead they
stand defiant in the courts of law making sure their little angel doesn’t
miss out on any of the fun. Mr. & Mrs. Holz, you have a very warped
definition of what is right and wrong. I pity your daughter.
Frank Salvato
is a political media consultant and the managing editor for The New Media Journal.us. He
is a contributing writer for The Washington Dispatch, GOPUSA,
OpinionEditorials, Men’s News Daily, Canada Free Press & AmericanDaily. His
pieces are regularly featured in Townhall.com. He has appeared as a guest on
The O’Reilly Factor, The Kevin Matthews Radio Show (Chicago) and The Brad
Messer Radio Show (San Antonio). His pieces have been recognized by the
Japan Center for Conflict Prevention and are occasionally featured in The
Washington Times and The London Morning Paper as well as other national and
international publications.
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