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- <text id=93TT2304>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Reviews:Books
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS
- BOOKS, Page 58
- Death in the 'Hood
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>TITLE: BABY INSANE AND THE BUDDHA</l>
- <l>AUTHOR: Bob Sipchen</l>
- <l>PUBLISHER: Doubleday; 370 pages; $20</l>
- </qt>
- <p> THE BOTTOM LINE: Children gun one another down for fancied
- slights to a gang's code of honor.
- </p>
- <p> Subtract drugs from the bloody San Diego gang scene that
- reporter Bob Sipchen describes--go ahead, wave a wand--and
- the festering urban mess still would stink of hopelessness.
- Sipchen, who writes for the Los Angeles Times, uses an African
- proverb for an epigraph: "It takes a whole village to raise a
- child." If there is no village of strong adults, only warring
- teenage street gangs controlling a few blocks of city turf, then
- the gangs may do the child rearing. Kevin Glass was 10, a
- clever, skinny black kid already moving from mischief to
- larceny, when he began to ape the swagger of a 15-year-old
- member of the Neighborhood Crips gang, whose street name was
- Insane. Among older kids, Kevin had noticed already, it was the
- "gangstas" who always had money, guns, girls, the wary enmity
- of cops and the fearful respect of "chumps," or civilian
- noncombatants.
- </p>
- <p> Kevin became Baby Insane, and a Crip. As such, his totem
- color was blue, and his mortal enemies, who wore red, were
- Bloods, and in particular a nearby Bloods subset called the
- Skyline Pirus. (Black Crips and Bloods gangs, now nationwide,
- got their start in Los Angeles in the early '70s.) The bonding
- ritual was a subadolescent mumbo jumbo of slogans and hand
- signs, like those used by adult fraternal groups. Car theft,
- drug selling and smash-and-grab robbery (smash a storefront with
- a car, wait for the glass to settle, and grab the goods) were
- agreeable moneymakers, but what gave the Crips their legends and
- their heroes were drive-by shootings in Bloods ter ritory, to
- avenge real or fancied dissing--slights to the gang's code of
- honor.
- </p>
- <p> Baby Insane earned his name. He dodged automatic weapons
- fire successfully, against considerable odds, but his repeated
- collisions with the law eventually forced him to choose between
- doing heavy prison time and turning informer. A shrewd detective
- named Patrick Birse--called Buddha because he looked like one--persuaded him to turn. The author's tough, believable account
- of their edgily trustful relationship offers no solutions at all
- to the gang problem facing most of the nation's cities. But it
- does suggest why a restless man might become a detective, and
- why a bright, rootless boy might take shelter with a tribe of
- homicidal children.
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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