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accepts purchase orders from municipalities too! 240 Sturbridge Road Charlton, MA 01507hoodie fosA rather curious paradox has recently arisen in the portrayal of British youth. hoodie crazy mofosWe hear unrelentingly of the debauched hooliganism of the ''yoof of today'', smashing, burning, looting and drinking everything they (or indeed we – I will be celebrating the big two-zero in a few months) can get their hands on. Yet at the same time there are the ever-improving exam results, the 130,000 students unable to find university places through clearing, and the Student Loans Company unable to cope with the volume of demand. The results of a survey published yesterday may help to clear things up. The National Young Volunteers Service – or ''V'' – found that the overwhelming majority of young people do not deserve their negative stereotype.
Of the 16-25-year-olds questioned, 85 per cent do not carry knives or have friends who do, 69 per cent do not think that drugs are acceptable for recreational use and 75 per cent consider that they have a happy relationship with their family. Most surprisingly, 78 per cent admitted to respecting their elders, and only 1 per cent said that they did not. It would be a step too far to try to claim that the teenagers you pass in the street are longing to carry your shopping, or that the reason the girl at the supermarket checkout didn't say "hello" back is because she knows that children should be seen and not heard. The whole point of being a teenager is to give the impression that you don't respect anyone. But this statistic suggests that, more often than not, adults are wrong to perceive young people as a threat: in plenty of areas, the ''gang'' of teenagers loitering on your street corner are more likely to be trying to avoid going home because they will be nagged about their homework than they are to be plotting to steal your car.
The survey lays a portion of the blame for the negative perception of young people on the much-maligned ''hoodie''. A quick glance into my wardrobe reveals no fewer than 8 such garments; two from my university, three from my school, and three which were given to members of the cast of plays in which I performed during my sixth form. My hoodies, in fact, define me as the polar opposite of a truanting, knife-wielding ''hoodie''. And as for a life of juvenile crime, I know one or two individuals who have been sternly asked by the Oxford constabulary to dismount from their swerving bicycles in the early hours of the morning, but that is as far as it goes. It is an age-old phenomenon that the older generations despair of the younger ones. Around 2,400 years ago, Socrates is said to have ranted, "Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households... They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannise their teachers."
Apart, perhaps, from the leg-crossing part, this comes fairly close to a description of most of my friends. I have no wish to trivialise the situation of children from dysfunctional and deprived homes who understandably generate a certain fear and suspicion of youth. But the reason that horrendous stories, such as the two boys in Edlington who tortured their young victims, feature so prominently in newspapers is that they are still, fortunately, newsworthy – examples of a shocking deviation from the norm. V, the organisation which conducted the survey, boasts the impressive statistic that it has inspired 420,000 teenagers to do voluntary work. The trend for gap years is also indicative of a generous and adventurous mindset amongst the young. For teenagers of any era, the transition into adulthood is not easy. Given that it is now increasingly difficult to win places at the top universities and to find jobs, for society to give the impression that it disapproves may be the final straw that prevents many from bothering to fulfil their potential.