What makes people gangster




















Identity or recognition problems. Because of low self-worth and self-esteem, some youth join gangs seeking the status they lack due to unemployment or academic failure at school. If young people do not see themselves as intelligent, leaders, or star athletes, they join other groups where they feel they can excel. Gang family history. Many street gang members carry on a family tradition established by siblings, parents, grandparents, uncles, aunts, or cousins who they see as role models.

Lack of alternatives. Few job opportunities, no positive recreational choices, or lack of effective responses to peer pressure can create a climate favouring gang membership. Few recreational opportunities. Many teens and youngsters do not have any interests outside of school. Joining a gang provides friends with whom they can share their free time. Need for money.

The monetary allure of gang membership is difficult to counteract. Gang members share profits from drug trafficking and other illegal activities. To a teen, money translates into social status. Since and the onset of austerity , many disenfranchised young people have felt the effect of cutbacks to youth services , which have in turn affected where and how they spend their time.

Faced with the banality of routine existence and limited opportunity, risk-taking behaviour can, for some, become highly alluring and exciting. The status of identifying as a gang member and adopting an all black dress-code; the anticipation of meeting up with the other members and planning antisocial or criminal acts; the exhilaration of the act itself and the thrill of getting way with it — all these elements combine to create a high-intensity emotional experience, according to my respondents, which can be further enhanced when there is some degree of success through material gain, after a drug deal, car theft or robbery.

The theory suggests that people who dress the same, or cover their faces, may act more aggressively and show less self awareness and inhibition than they would otherwise. Put simply, people feel a sense of liberation when running with a mob or being involved with a known street gang. At other times, the response is immediate. More often than not, gang violence erupts as a result of a chance encounter between rival gangs.

An ongoing rivalry between gangs turns violent after they accidentally meet at a mall, movie theater, school, restaurant or amusement park. Even when gang members are socializing they are ready and prepared to protect themselves.

Because of ongoing rivalries and the concept of pay back, rival gangs that accidentally meet often fight it out. Unfortunately, the gangs seldom, if ever, worry about the venue where they meet. Being prepared often means that some of the gang members are armed. A shooting can happen and innocent people can end up hurt, or killed.

Belonging to a gang requires members to help their fellow gang members. The manager did not give an order or direct the players to run out and fight.

They did it on their own, to back up their fellow ball player and to let the other team know that they are not intimidated or scared. This same behavior occurs within the gang culture.

Gang members help each other in the commission of crime and protecting each other. There are no written rules or orders. It is understood that one gang member helps the other. In the gang sub-culture, a member could be disciplined for this. Most street gangs have no formal leadership structure. Ben Davis February 26, What makes a person a gangster? What do real gangsters wear? Why do Crips wear blue? Which is more dangerous Crips or Bloods? Why are Crips called Crips? What are some Crip names?

What does mean to Bloods? What are Bloods known for?



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