STEVE SMITH -- What’s up
It’s a bad time to be a kid.
Hollywood has just admitted that for years it has been systematically
marketing violent images to our children to sell more of their product.
Many of us remember the violent images of our youth as the Road Runner
flattening Wile E. Coyote with a steamroller or flipping the cannon over
to fire the ammunition into Wile E.’s head, which, after the smoke
cleared, resembled a strip of cooked bacon. No matter: four seconds
later, the coyote was back, opening his next shipment from the Acme Corp.
A couple of weeks ago, I took my son, Roy, to the office of Steve
Dunn, the creative director for Perspective, a magazine I am editing.
Steve was working on the images for a story reporting the Federal Trade
Commission’s children and violence study, while I was proofreading the
copy. In the next room, we had put Roy, who is 7, to work on a computer
game called “Bonkers,” in which a gnome was trying to blow up or pound
the living daylights out of furry animals.
Bonkers is a lot different than the real-life violence that has been
foisted upon our children. Still, as despicable as this conspiracy is, it
cannot be executed (no pun intended) without parental complicity. Parents
are not doing an adequate job of screening the TV, movies and video games
seen by their children.
It’s a bad time to be a kid if your parents want to put you in
full-time day care. County funding for one day-care program was just cut
off, affecting a center in Costa Mesa; and the Southcoast Early Childhood
Learning Center has just closed too. The center is the Costa Mesa
day-care center where murderer Steven Abrams ran over two children. There
is a lawsuit pending against the center, which is accused of negligence
in the children’s death. And despite the attorney-speak to the contrary,
the lawsuit is only about money and its toll has forced the center’s
closure. Steven Abrams, not the center, was responsible for the deaths of
those children.
I must admit, however, that these day-care center closings may be a
good thing for some of the kids. Day care used to be a safety net for
parents, now it’s a crutch. Perhaps now a few of the displaced kids will
get to stay home with mom or dad.
It’s a bad time to be a kid if you live on the West Side of Costa
Mesa. There, the Shalimar Learning Center has been closed. The center is
a good idea that should continue for the benefit of these kids. These are
the same kids whose schools reported shockingly low test scores three
years in a row. Those scores were revealed almost three months ago, and
at that time we heard some outrage from board member Martha Fluor, but
nothing has happened since. The Shalimar Learning Center may reopen soon
to help the teens who have fallen behind, but once again the evidence is
clear: The West Side kids don’t matter to the string-pullers in
Newport-Mesa. And I’d love to be proven wrong on this point.
It’s a bad time to be a kid if you play soccer too. At the Farm Sports
Complex on Fairview (an interesting name considering that the only sport
played there is soccer), neighbors have already started complaining about
the noise after less than a month of operation. The noise comes from the
cheering of the teams and crowds, especially at night when the neighbors
are trying to settle in. Let’s see . . . six soccer fields with crowds,
right next to private homes. Welcome to College Park north.
Kids always get the shaft in these situations. They trust adults to
present movies, games and TV shows that are not harmful to their
upbringing, and we cheat them. They trust us to stay home with them after
they’re born, but too many parents choose material possessions instead
and stick kids in full-time day care. Kids become the footballs in our
political and fiscal debates, and because they have no real power, they
are at the mercy of adults who often do not act in their best interest.
There was a time when the best interests of children took precedence
over profits, politics and pettiness. But what we see happening far too
often these days is our kids suffering because adults act like children.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
can leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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