Pubdate: Fri, 3 Dec 1999
Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Copyright: 1999 San Jose Mercury News
Contact:  750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190
Fax: (408) 271-3792
Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/
Author: Richard Cohen
Note: Richard Cohen is a Washington Post columnist

ZERO TOLERANCE DOESN'T ADD UP

I ran into Jesse Jackson here the other night and was tempted to ask him --
really -- if he had lost his mind. What had he been doing in Decatur, Ill.,
championing the case of six students who had been kicked out of high school
after a brawl? But before I could pose my question, Jackson uttered the two
words that ought to make any American stop and think: Zero tolerance. Maybe
it's the rest of us, not Jackson, who are out of our minds. 

Jackson is on to something. Zero tolerance is everywhere, particularly in
schools. If not a formal policy, it is a mind-set. In Arlington, Va.,
recently, two fifth-graders were charged with a felony after they allegedly
put soap in their teacher's water bottle. At that, they got away cheap. In
other parts of the country, they'd be held without bail -- as was done to a
10-year-old in Colorado accused of incest. (He may have gotten inquisitive
about his younger sister -- hardly rape and not really incest.) 

Zero tolerance too often amounts to zero thinking, the imposing of
Draconian penalties after even the mildest of infractions. The
justification is that things are going to hell in a handbasket. There is
almost a bipartisan consensus about how bad a problem school violence has
become. 

George W. Bush mentioned school shootings in his recent ``Meet the Press''
interview with Tim Russert. ``Listen, there's something wrong with a
society where life is so devalued that people think they can walk into a
school and blow people away,'' he observed. Bush, as it turned out, knew
the cause of all this violence: abortion. This at once put to rest any
doubt that he is not a methodical thinker. 

The New Republic, hardly a conservative journal, agrees -- not on abortion,
mind you, but on school violence: It is ``the greatest crisis in public
education today,'' the magazine intoned in a recent editorial. 

But a crisis it isn't. Politicians may proclaim it and the media may
endorse it, but the numbers say otherwise. In fact, juvenile crime has been
declining for the last four years and is now about where it was in 1987.
This is true for all categories, including murder and weapons violations. 

As for school shootings -- even those Bush credits to liberal abortion laws
- -- there were about 55 fatalities in the 1992-1993 school year and about
half as many last year, the 12 victims of Columbine included. Writing in
the Los Angeles Times, Vincent Schiraldi of the Justice Policy Institute
put matters in perspective: The chances of a kid getting shot in school are
about the same as he or she getting hit by lighting. 

You are excused for not knowing any of this. A vast (mostly) right-wing
conspiracy of pandering politicians and their journalistic fellow-travelers
continues to insist that your average school and your average maximum
security prison have many of the same sort of people. Conservatives in
particular say that abortion, pornography, divorce and idiotic exhibitions
at the Brooklyn Museum have contributed to a precipitous moral decay and --
as day follows night -- carnage in the classroom. The remedy? I'm glad you
asked: A zero tolerance of distinctions among kids and increasingly between
children and adults. 

And so in state after state, 44 of them since 1992, laws have been amended
so that children can be tried as adults in certain circumstances. In
Pontiac, Mich., recently, Nathaniel Abraham was tried for a murder he
committed when he was 11. He could have received a life sentence without
the possibility of parole but was convicted, instead, of second-degree
murder which will mean a lesser -- but still severe -- sentence. 

In many of these cases, the murderers are kids who should have been treated
or institutionalized before they became violent. Kip Kinkel, who killed his
parents and two of his schoolmates at the age of 15, said he had been
hearing voices ordering him to kill since he was 12. He was sentenced to
112 years in prison with no chance of parole -- a medieval approach to
mental illness, what could be called zero tolerance of psychiatric
knowledge. 

Back to Jackson. Some of the kids at Decatur were no angels, but some of
them, it turned out, were pretty good students. Yet they were all treated
the same -- initially just kicked out of school. They all deserved
punishment and Jackson, as sometimes happens, sounded silly downplaying
what they had done. But he was right about zero tolerance and how it
obliterates individual differences and relieves adults of their
responsibility to make wise, but difficult, distinctions. When it comes to
children, the punishment has to do more than fit the crime. It has to fit
the kid as well.
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