There have always been ignorant people, there will always be ignorant people. Violence has been a part of society since the get go.
However much you might worry about the neds and chavs, rest assured that we (the sensible ones) will always be the ones in power. They don't care about running the country, they're only in it for themselves; we'll end up as the leaders in business, culture, politics, and most importantly the police force.
Calling them 'coral' is very harsh. They're not all bad, and they're individual. Following the crowd is human nature, and if you look beyond that you see that neds are, in their own way, people. You can talk to them if you try. Most people make the mistake of being standoffish with them as soon as one approaches them, and this is what creates the 'them and us' mentality that is so prevalent in our youth. Even I am part of it, because while I recognise their validity, I also recognise their difference. They will be the cleaners, we the managers; the rub is that both are essential. The 'them and us' mentality is one of the single biggest problems in our class-based society - when I left for university, I was ostracised on my street. In our country, the middle-class child who doesn't want to go to university is brave, while the working class child who wants that degree is seen as brave, because they know what will happen to their reputation.
When they see you they probably think exactly the same. I know my ned cousins used to think that of me - 'Why'd all you moshers dress the same and listen to the same shit music?'.
The problem with them is getting them to recognise that they matter in the world. They will work, or sell drugs, for money. But on the whole they're not to keen on recycling or energy preservation, which is a problem.
Teenage pregnancies are also a huge problem. The only solution is a massive shift in our culture, away from drink and machismo 'I won't shag you with a jonny, I'm a real man'. That will require the effort of everyone, for while I was part of the 'other' crowd, we still started drinking quite young (about 14-15). It was a mistake.
Another big part of the solution is limiting the availability of drugs to young people (by young I mean below the age of 18). We could get pot anywhere; so could the neds, but they liked it more because their parents and society had told them from the start that they weren't going to achieve anything.
That's where the problem really lies. If they're going to change, they need to understand that they can do whatever they want in life. They need to understand that a degree is an accolade, not a mark of class transition.
But in the meantime, don't worry about them. They don't have any interest in ruining the country. We have been running welfare for years, and there is no great expansion in their numbers to stretch that system; besides which, the vast majority of them work (something people never seem to recognise), at least in Scotland. The working class have never been part of the power structure, and they never will be. As you've probably picked up, I am working class; or at least I used to be, because I made the choice to leave the estate as soon as I could. And then I got up here and felt completely out of place because everyone else had money from their parents, and 80% of my first loan payment was eaten by paying my deposit, and I had to spend a good chunk of Fresher's Month looking for a job.
But seriously, don't worry. Start viewing them as people, not as coral, and you can see how well they know the place our society has deemed to give them, and how scared they are of trying to change it.
Also, to answer your question, I don't see much changing. More children will play truant, and likely the council estates will become even bigger shitholes than they already are. We have to work as a society to stop this. People who live in nice places have to start worrying about this too. Not for our sake, but for the sake of the kids born there. Someone has to make it very clear early on that escape IS an option, and perhaps one day we'll make the estates into places you don't have to flee from. But the 'them and us' mentality will have to be the first thing to go; there really isn't space here for a class system anymore.
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