a) Children in the USA
Every day in America |
|
3 |
young people under age 25 die from HIV
infection. |
|
6 |
children commit suicide. |
|
13 |
children are homicide victims. |
|
14 |
children are killed by firearms. |
|
81 |
babies die. |
|
280 |
children are arrested for violent crimes. |
|
443 |
babies are born to mothers who had late or no
prenatal care. |
|
781 |
babies are born at low birth-weight. |
|
1,403 |
babies are born to teen mothers. |
|
1,827 |
babies are born without health insurance. |
|
2,430 |
babies are born into poverty. |
|
2,756 |
children drop out of high school every school
day. |
|
3,436 |
babies are born to unmarried mothers. |
|
5,753 |
children are arrested. |
|
8.470 |
children are reported abused or negleted. |
|
11.3 million |
children are without health insurance. |
|
14.5 million |
children live in poverty. |
(taken from
Children in the States Data Book 1998 (CDF): 2) |
|
|
|
Where America Stands
Among industrialized countries, the United States ran |
|
1st |
in gross domestic product |
|
1st |
in the number of millionaires and billionaires |
|
1st |
in health technology |
|
1st |
in military technology |
|
1st |
in military experts |
|
1st |
in defense spending |
|
10th |
in eighth-grade science scores |
|
16th |
in living standards |
|
17th |
in rates of low-birth-weight births |
|
18th |
in the income gap between rich and poor children |
|
18th |
in infant mortality |
|
21st |
in eighth-grade math scores |
|
Last |
in protecting our children against gun violence |
|
|
|
According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention,
U.S. children under age 15 are: |
|
12 |
times more likely to die from gunfire, |
|
16 |
times more likely to be murdered by a gun, |
|
11 |
times more likely to commit suicide with a gun,
and |
|
9 |
times more likely to die in a firearm accident. |
than children in 25 other industrialized countries combined.
|
|
|
|
Children's
Defense Fund 1998 Priorities |
- Ensuring every -- not every other -- American child a Healthy
Start in life. We seek to ensure effective state implementation of the recently
enacted $48 billion State children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), to educate families
about CHIP and Medicaid, and to enroll all eligible children.
- Ensuring every child a Head Start in life by providing parents
quality, affordable child care options for all preschool and school-age children, with the
assistance of employers, community institutions, and federal, state, and local
governments.
- Ensuring every child a Fair Start in life by educating the
public and policy makers about the unacceptable moral, human, and economic costs of
permitting 14.5 million children to grow up poor and by mobilizing the nation to end child
poverty as we know it. Jobs with decent wages, community economic development, and
a quality education for every child must become overarching national priorities.
- Ensuring every child a Safe Start in life by preventing
violence against and by children. Every community must be safe from violent adult
and youth offenders. But we oppose the growing criminalization of youths,
especially minority youths, and the detention of nonviolent youth offenders and children
who are truants and runaways in adult jails, a practice forbidden by current law. We
support more effective community-based prevention and interventions like after-school and
summer programs, mentoring, and parent training.
- Ensuring every child a Moral Start in life through creative
leadership development and community capacity building to ensure an intergenerational
cadre of effective servant-leaders committed to building and sustaining a movement to
Leave No Child Behind.
|
(taken from
The State of America's Children Yearbook 1998 Washington DC: Children's Defense Fund,
1998) pp. xx, xxi) |
Five Questions
All American Citizens Should Ask Ourselves and Our Political Leaders About National
Priorities |
| 1. Why is our nation
continuing to spend $265 billion a year, $5.1 billion a week, $727 million a day,
and $30 million an hour on "National Defense" in a post-Cold War era with no
towering external enemies? |
Our military budget exceeds the
total military expenditures of the 12 next - largest spenders - including Russia, France,
Great Britain, Germany, and China - combined. Congress gave the Pentagon $9 billion
more than it requested in 1996, while cutting $54 billion from child nutrition programs
for poor and legal immigrant children and families. The military plans to purchase
three new tactical fighter systems that will cost $355 billion -- systems the US General
Accounting Office says we don't need and can't afford -- at a time when millions of
struggling parents left behind in the global economy need better-paying jobs and millions
of children need health care, quality child care, education and housing.
- Every 14 hours we spend more on the military than we do
annually on programs to prevent and treat child abuse.
- Every 29 hours we spend more on the military than we do
annually on summer jobs for unemployed youths.
- Every six days we spend more on military than we do annually
on the Child Care and Development Block Grant for child care for low-income working
parents.
- Every 11 days we spend more on the military than we do
annually on Title I compensatory education for disadvantaged children.
|
| 2. Why, with over 200
million guns in circulation already killing a child every hour and a half, does our
country manufacture or import a new gun every eight seconds? |
| American children under age 15 are
12 times more likely to die from gunfire than children in 25 other industrialized nations
combined. Virtually all violent youth crime is gun-driven...Why seek to protect
guns rather than protect children from guns. When
the polio virus killed 2,700 children and adults in its peak year - 7 a day - we declared
a national emergency. Why don't we declare a national emergency to stop the deadly
gun virus that kills almost twice as many children - 5,285 a year, 14 a day - in their
homes, neighborhoods, schools, and parks? |
| 3. How much do we
truly value children and families when we don't put our money and respect behind our
words? |
| 4. Why should every 66
year old in the United States be guaranteed health coverage and not every 6 year old or 16
year old? |
| 5. Why is the United
States, save Somalia (which lacks a legally constitued government to act), alone among
nations in failing to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child? |
| (taken from the State of
America's Children Yearbook 1998 (Washington DC: Children's Defense Fund) |
Child
Murders: Nearly 3/4 of all murders of children in the industrialized world
occur in the United States of America.
(UNICEF 'UN Convention
on the Rights of the Child Frequently Asked Questions' 1997 p.5) |
| Death Penalty for (Black)
Kids: The United States is the world-leader in sentencing children to
death. Since 1990, only Iran, Pakistan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria and the USA are
known to have executed persons for crimes they committed as children. Of these, the
US has executed more juvenile offenders than any other nation. In the US 75% of all
juvenile offenders executed this century were African American. 2/3s of all persons
executed this decade for juvenile crimes were African American. There are currently
nearly 60 persons on death row in the USA who were sentenced to death as juveniles.
The USA remains the only industrialized country with the death penalty. (National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty, 1997 Annual Report; NCADP "Stop Killing Kids' p.1,2) |
| Militarism in Schools:
"Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC), a military run
training program for high school students, is now found in more than 2,600 US schools.
More than 330,000 students are enrolled in JROTC classes nationwide. Most
JROTC programs are in big-city schools, in rural areas with below average college
attendance rates. As part of an academic
curriculum, Junior ROTC falls short. The program brings retired military personnel
into high school classrooms to teach a military curriculum. According to a federal
regulation (32 Code of Federal Regulations 542.5:3c), the "educational" goal of
the JROTC program is to "create favorable attitudes and impressions toward the
Services and toward careers in the Armed Forces."
"The expansion of JROTC in high schools runs counter to
the current national trend towards higher academic standards. College admission
policies in states requiring a core curriculum for graduation indicate that students are
not likely to receive credit for JROTC when they apply for college. JROTC may in
fact divert students from taking the courses they need for college admission or skills for
a career and a full, satisfying life."
(Newletter of the Greater Kansas City
Committee on Militarism in Schools Spring, 1998 p.1) |
| b.) Children Globally Malnutrition. 'Over 200 million children in
developing countries under the age of five are malnourished...Malnutrition contributes to
more than half of the nearly 12 million under-five deaths in developing countries each
year. Malnourished children often suffer the loss of precious mental
capacities. They fall ill more often. If they survive, they may grow up with
lasting mental or physical disabilities... It undermines the struggle of the United
Nations for peace, equity and justice. It is an egregious violation of child rights
that undermines virtually every aspect of UNICEF's work for the survival, protection and
full development of the world's children...More attention is lavished on the gyrations of
the world stock markets than on malnutrition's vast destructive potential -- or on the
equally powerful benefits of sound nutrition.'
(Carol Bellamy, The State of the
Worlds Children 1998 (NY:UNICEF/Oxford University Press) p.6,9) |
| Child Labour. 'Intolerable
forms of child labour are so grave an abuse of human rights that the world must come to
regard them in the way it does slavery -- as something unjustifiable under any
circumstances.' (Carol
Bellamy, The State of the Worlds Children 1997 (NY:UNICEF/Oxford University Press) p.46)
Around 1 billion people -- one out of every six
on the planet -- are between 10 and 19 years of age, 85% in developing countries.
And they face profound obstacles:
Around the globe, 73 million children age 10
to 14 are working -- not counting the tens of millions, mostly girls, believed to be in
domestic service.
In developing countries, 59 percent of girls
and 48 percent of boys are not enrolled in secondary school.'
Carol Bellamy 'The Progress of
Nations 1998' (NY:UNICEF) p.21 |
Children in war. 'Recent
developments in warfare have significantly heightened the dangers for children.
During the last decade, it is estimated...that child victims have included:
- 2 million killed;
- 4-5 million disabled;
- 12 million left homeless;
- more than 1 million orphaned or separated from their parents;
- some 10 million psychologically traumatized.
The increasing number of child victims is primarily explained
by the higher porportion of civilian deaths in recent conflicts. In the wars of the
18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, only about half of the victims were civilians.
In the later decades of this century the proportion of
civilian victims has been rising steadily; in World War II it was two thirds, and the end
of the 1980's it was almost 90 pecent...'
'When ethnic loyalties prevail, a perilous logic clicks in.
The escalation from ethnic superiority to ethnic cleansing to genocide, as we have
seen, can become an irreversible process. Killing adults is then not enough; future
generations of the enemy -- their children must also be eliminated. As one political
commentator expressed it in a 1994 radio broadcast before violence erupted in Rwanda,
"To kill the big rats, you have to kill the little rats."...Sexual violence is
particularly common in ethnic conflicts.'
'...One of the most deplorable developments in recent years
has been the increasing use of young children as soldiers...Recently, in 25 countries,
thousands of children under the age of 16 have fought in wars. In 1988 alone, they
numbered as many as 200,000.'
(Carol Bellamy, The State of the
Worlds Children 1996 (NY:UNICEF/Oxford University Press) p.13-14) |
| UN Sanctions in Irag. 'For
children under age five the increase in deaths exceeds a multiple of eight, from 7,100 in
1989 to 57,000 in 1996. For persons over age five the death rate has increased more
than four times, from 20,200 to 83,200... The total cost in lives directly resulting from
UN sanctions is now 1,500,000 deaths over the normal death rate.' p.24-5 [In theGulf War
itself 150,000 Iraqis were killed outright by bombing. Total US casualties were 148,
37 of whom were killed by 'friendly fire.' p.20] (Ramsey Clark et al. Challenge to Genocide (NY: International Action Center,
1998) |