Code Of The Street: The Code Of The Streets

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“The code of the streets” is applicable to almost every neighborhood, regardless of class, race gender, etc. and often is a major cause of crime. This is also heavily used in pop culture and film, in which often murderers will say “Too bad, but it’s his fault, he should have known better.” (Cullen). The code of the streets theory can be found in any neighborhood, but it is more dominant and significant in lower income neighborhoods. The code is all about respect and how you need to earn it and self-worth and pride are more important than anything else in this world. As it is expressed in the text, nerve is an aggressive action against another often to get a reaction, and it is expected for the other to retaliate against the person with the …show more content…
You can see the expression of nerve and the “code of the streets” in the television show “Everybody Hates Chris.” This show is a comedy about a low-income family of 5 living in the inner city of Bed-Stuy, which is quite well known for its crime. The expression of the code of the streets can be found multiple times, one of the more prominent times I remember is in Season 2, Episode 16, where Chris (the main character, a young boy based off of Chris Rock) warns a woman who is about to get robbed, in which she runs away and escapes the robber. Malvo, the man who was about to rob the woman, then confronts Chris, stating that “You owe Malvo a gold chain.” This can be an expression of the code …show more content…
It is expressed in the reading that, “Street,” style parents are often seemingly less caring and reckless, but they love their children nonetheless. It states in the reading that, “Street parents often show a lack of consideration for other people and have a rather superficial sense of family and community,” in other words this is stating that Street parents lack the better skills of being a parent, but this does not necessarily make them bad parents. Decent parents are more on the strict side. They care about what their children are doing and often enforce a curfew. It is stated in the text that, “Decent parents tend to be strict in their children's practices, and also encourage children to respect authority,” This likely makes them less prone to committing crimes, but this is actually not the case. The peer groups and neighborhoods of the children play a bigger role in the child's decision making than the parental role. If a child goes to school in the inner city, they are more likely to be exposed to delinquency and crime, whereas if they went to school in a more middle-class neighborhood, they might be less likely to end up in a group of delinquents but there is no real way to avoid delinquents, they are at every school and it really boils down to the child's