Sarnia
JaneJudge
We have Prevent but I wonder if it is effective enough (it seems not?)
Prevent seem blinkered on judging a troubled youngster's behaviour by using terrorism as a yardstick.
If they show no signs of it then they are allowed to roam freely in the community and we have seen the devastating results that can have.
No matter what age they are these young boys, known to so many agencies and the Police, need to be in a secure unit under medication, for the safety of others.
The purpose of Prevent is to stop youngsters being drawn into supporting violent extremist political groups. This includes girls as well as boys.
The problem is Sarnia that many of these boys do not come from troubled backgrounds and are not known to any of the agencies, have no history of violence. but suddenly erupt into acts of savagery.
What we are seeing with these boys is something very different, some change in adolescence that sees them retreating to their bedrooms and disappesring into a dystopian world of violence and horror, thanks to a small device on their bedside table. As school they become loners.
Many children who go through a period of retreat into themselves in adolescence, are not obsessed with violence and come out the other end. I can remember a period of my adolscence when i spent an awful lot of time in my bedroom, lying on my bed and just thinking.
I think dealing with this starts in the home with parents exercising much more supervision over what their children are looking at on screen. This is something children need to grow up with, accepting without thinking, for example, that generally computers and phones live downstairs. I have seen my grandchildren growing up in a home where access to screens was limited in younger years, and all the computers were in the living room. less easy now with so many handheld devices, but if parents are actively involved from the start it is easier to see what is happening in teenage years.
Then teachers need to be alert to children that are not mixing with other children, are happier in their own company, there should be some way of picking them up through the pastoral system. The majority will have no inclination to violence at all, some will have other problems, but it would offer an opportunity to situations where children are disapparing down violent rabbit holds.
The problem is that, although more frequent, only one in a million children is going to behave like this - and we have had incidents like this in the past: Dunblane and Hungerford - when someone disaffected with the world goes out to get even with it.