The Establishment's Zero-Tolerance War on Boys and Men

Written by Jack Kerwick on Friday, 08 February 2013. Posted in Opinion, Kerwick, Jack

Zero-tolerance polices are all the rage in the nation's so-called schools. They amount to pernicious mental and emotional abuse of male children.

The Establishment's Zero-Tolerance War on Boys and Men

Alex Evans is a seven year-old second grader at Mary Blair Elementary School in Colorado. Recently, he was suspended for throwing an imaginary grenade while pretending to “rescue the world” from “pretend evil forces.”

Little Alex, it turns out, violated his school’s “absolutes” against fighting and weapons, “real or imaginary.”  

So-called “zero tolerance” policies of the sort on display at Mary Blair have long been in place in public schools throughout the country. Alex’s mother said that she thought that they were “unrealistic” for kids her son’s age. She is right as far as she goes. The problem is that she doesn’t go nearly far enough.

Such policies are indeed unrealistic, yet they are unrealistic for people of all ages. Moreover, they aren’t just unrealistic. They are at once idiotic and outrageous: rather than enable children to become responsible adults, zero tolerance policies threaten to retard this developmental process. 

Boys are particularly harmed by it. Alex Evans is a case in point. Here is a seven year-old child whose only infraction is that he possesses an imagination that is both lively and heroic. Think about it: he delights in envisioning himself as a self-sworn enemy of all that is evil, a world savior. 

The kid dreams, not about harming the world, but rescuing it. He longs to be more like Superman, not Stalin.

Yet for this, the childish adults at his school punish him.

Speaking as one who was once a boy, I can assure you that the sort of play in which Alex Evans and a gazillion other boys engage in is not at all atypical. When I was a kid, my cousin Wade and I would regularly pretend to be superheroes: Superman, Batman, and Spiderman were our crime fighters of choice. We would also not infrequently imagine ourselves as characters from Star Wars. But Wade and I were especially creative: we would essentially play out our self-assigned roles as if we were enacting or—in the case of Star Wars—reenacting films. 

Of course, since there was only two of us, and since no hero is complete without a nemesis, we also had to pretend to be villains. Unlike Alex Evans, however, we didn’t just hurl imaginary weapons at one another; we also really wrestled. If the rules of Mary Blair Elementary School been our family’s rules, had our family a “zero-tolerance” policy, we would have been in some serious trouble. 

The value of these imaginative exercises to a boy’s intellectual and moral development is sorely underappreciated. They expand his mind’s horizons, awakening him to possibilities to which his counterparts of duller sensibilities will remain oblivious. And inasmuch as it is the hero that he plays and replays, they serve as the means by which he cultivates those excellences of character that will make him into a virtuous man.

This is no new insight. Prior to our generation, it went without saying—though it was often repeated—that the key to maintaining and strengthening civilization lies in heroic men showing young boys how to become heroic men. And it was as well obvious that the virtuous would not infrequently have to deploy force against the vicious.

Those commentators who see in the case of Alex Evans but the latest battle in the so-called “War on Boys” are only partially correct. If “zero-tolerance” policies like those at Mary Blair are the proverbial shots fired in any kind of “war,” it is a war against men, for in stifling the intellectual and moral growth of boys, they produce men with neither heads nor hearts. 

But if it is a war on men that is being waged here, then, ultimately, it is a war on civilization.

Image Credit: CC BY-NC 2.0 (Flickr)/jovike    

 

About the Author

Jack Kerwick

Jack Kerwick

Jack Kerwick, Ph.D. blogs at The Philosopher's Fortress:  www.jackkerwick.com; and “At the Intersection of Faith and Culture” through Beliefnet.com

Copyright © Jack Kerwick. Used with Permission.

Comments (3)

  • Jack Kerwick

    Jack Kerwick

    09 February 2013 at 19:26 |
    Thanks again Lynn! I don't know how old your sons are, but I will be 41 in June. I attended public school in the late '70's, early 80's and I can recall teachers physically shaking unruly students by their arms, grabbing some by the backs of their necks, and, in one instance, a female teacher beloved by everyone washing out a kid's mouth with soap. Imagine that occuring today!
  • Lynn Atherton Bloxham

    Lynn Atherton Bloxham

    08 February 2013 at 17:51 |
    I raised four sons and cannot begin to even recall the various imaginary scenarios they developed as they covered the woods and creek, pond and tree house., They also were tender hearted toward animals and younger children. Their toy guns, swords, capes and masks were all a part of growing up. What is not easy to imagine, in fact I could not have, is the extremely harmful and ridiculous attitude that has developed in the public schools. Great article.
    • Lynn Atherton Bloxham

      Lynn Atherton Bloxham

      10 February 2013 at 08:33 |
      My youngest of the four is closer to 50 than 40 :-)
      For Christmas we bought the 7 year old Grandson a BB gun. Wow, bet that would cause an uproar among some people. Of course he will use it with supervision at first.My idea on the over reach in public schools is that as upsetting as it is, it is time for the parents to re-gain the position of the ultimate decision maker for their child. I think we are seeing the implosion of the public schools. Cannot come too soon. In the meantime, boys particularly are being forced into an unhealthy mold by teachers and administrators either ignorant or hostile to all things make.

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