Growing into naiveté

George W. Knox, director of the National Gang Crime Research Center, said he has trained hundreds of police officials in how to cull intelligence on gang membership, rivalries, territory and lingo from these Web pages.

“In order to understand any subculture, be it al Qaeda, witches, devil worshippers or gangs, you have to be able to know their own language,” Knox said.

Associated Press, Street gangs get Web-savvy

During high school, I knew a good number of witches, mostly adherents of “eclectic” Wicca, oft-misunderstood as evil merely for not being Christian. Of course, they were actually the most harmless and loving teenagers you could hope to find, but we did wear a lot of black, and could sometimes even be found engaging in small rituals honoring nature, without a copy of the Bible in sight to lend legitimacy.

There was a particular detective-turned-pundit, I believe hailing from St. Ann but given pass to investigate throughout St. Louis County, who had decided the most effective use of law enforcement resources was tracking every move these kids made and harassing their families and employers with incessant questioning. He was certain if they turned their back for a moment these gothic misfits would be sacrificing their suburban neighbors’ babies in the park.

As my life distanced me from that subculture, I’ve grown into a naiveté that this was a local and temporary phenomenon. It brings wisdom to be reminded that witchhunting never goes out of style.

2 Comments

  1. Posted July 7, 2006 at 1:25 pm | Permalink
    Have you ever heard of Blue Springs, MO’s Youth Outreach Unit? They were given a $275,000 grant a few years ago to study fighting the Goth Problem. You know, the Goth Problem? The problem with all those Goths? They were going to identify goths and give them therapy so they stopped… I don’t know. Listening to the Smiths and buying up all the Manic Panic.

    Anyway, they had to return the grant money because the portion they spent on finding the Goth Problem suggested that it did not, as such, exist.

    http://www.dccc.org/stakeholder/archives/000309.html

    Do devil worshippers actually exist? Are there communities dealing with a Satan problem on an ongoing, regular basis? It was my understanding that any time anyone actually investigates the claims of ritualistic child abuse and animal sacrifice at the day care center, it turns out to be some cousin of mass hysteria.

    As for gangs on the web, the article Newsweek did on this topic many months ago (sorry to wake you, AP!) was, I thought, hi-freakin’-larious, suggesting that putting up Youtube video of your crimes along with Mapquest directions to where you can be arrested might not be a nuanced recruiting plan.

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11675822/site/newsweek/

  2. Posted July 7, 2006 at 3:03 pm | Permalink
    Shame on Newsweek for reporting on the techniques of law enforcement. If we tell the criminals that we know how to use a web browser, they might change their tactics and conceal their activities!

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