{"id":11564,"date":"2012-07-26T06:00:41","date_gmt":"2012-07-26T05:00:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=11564"},"modified":"2012-07-26T06:48:40","modified_gmt":"2012-07-26T05:48:40","slug":"the-most-goddamn-admirable-thing-ive-seen-all-year","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/07\/26\/the-most-goddamn-admirable-thing-ive-seen-all-year\/","title":{"rendered":"The Most Goddamn Admirable Thing I’ve Seen All Year"},"content":{"rendered":"
There is an international organisation which protects abused children in a
unique way.
\nThe alpha-masculinity of the men is honourable and has a
positive effect on the community.
\nThe women in it are equals, fully
involved in the work of being a physically intimidating deterrent.<\/p>\n
Oh yes, and it’s a biker gang.<\/p>\n
The Arizona website
AZCentral.com<\/strong> recently published this story about
BACA – Bikers Against Child Abuse<\/strong><\/a>. The theory behind
the group is simple, and works very well: if an abused child is scared of
their attacker returning, if their home no longer feels like a safe haven,
or if the outside world and school feel too exposed, their new family will
stand guard for as long as they need.<\/p>\n
(Warning – you should definitely read the whole article, but if
you do there is a high chance you will cry your eyes out and have your
faith in humanity restored. As the comments put it: “How come
ninjas are cutting onions in my living room?” “Ahh
they’re at my office too!” Not too triggery except in the
general discussion of the topic.)<\/em><\/p>\n
<\/a>Bikers Against Child Abuse<\/strong> is a non-profit organisation
started by a social worker in 1995. John Paul Lilly realised that
the 8-year-old boy in his care was too scared to leave the house,
and remembered what had successfully taken away his own fears as a
child: having a biker gang look out for him. He developed
safeguards and checks to make the idea work in a therapeutic
environment, and now there are chapters in the United States,
Canada, Australia, Italy, The Netherlands and Belgium. The details
of precisely what they do are extraordinary.<\/p>\n
First of all, the child meets the whole local gang and becomes
part of their family. They get the same t-shirt as the gang.
They get a biker name. They are under no doubt that these men
and women will be there for them from now on. For the bikers,
this involves training from qualified social workers and
discipline from their leader around how they behave during that
first meeting.<\/p>\n
I don’t want to see any tears coming out of your eyes,
and the child doesn’t either. Remember why we’re
here: to empower the child. If you can’t handle it, keep
your shades on.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
After that, two bikers are assigned as the child’s
“Primaries”. (Always two, and no biker is ever
alone with a child – two is the minimum number at any
meeting and parents\/guardian must give permission each time
as well). They will be on call, a mobile number the child can
ring whenever they need to. And that’s important,
because being present and being seen (especially by the child)
is what they’re there for.<\/p>\n
If the man who hurt this little girl calls or drives by, or
even if she is just scared, another nightmare, the bikers
will ride over and stand guard all night. … if she has
to testify against her abuser in court, they will go, too,
walking with her to the witness stand and taking over the
first row of seats. (They) will tell her, “Look at us,
not him.” And when she’s done, they will circle
her again and walk her out.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
The emphasis is always on keeping the child safe from fear,
of being a wall of friends between them and the influences
making them feel vulnerable. And it works, again and
again.<\/p>\n
I’ve written for BadRep before about how
society’s definition of ‘manliness’ STILL involves violence and requires
complete isolation from anything feminine<\/a>, and how this
obviously doesn’t help feminism (or indeed men). But
there are also many other aspects of alpha-maleness which
directly harm men, women and equality. Male aggression is
(rightly) regarded as often negative in modern life, and we
haven’t come up with new ways of valuing masculinity
since the office worker replaced the hunter and
warrior.<\/p>\n
The challenge facing these bikers is exactly the same as for
anyone trying to be a White Knight in the modern age:
it’s a very, very narrow and fragile path to stay on.
These men and women are valued because of their capability
for violence, at least by reputation. Their quiet physical
intimidation is precisely what makes them useful to society,
and that’s actually a rare role these days.<\/p>\n
But a successful warrior is defined only by being the best
at combat. If any warrior loses the approval of the
community due to being untrustworthy, indiscriminate in who
they attack or just out of control, then they become a rabid
dog who needs to be contained for the safety of others. A
superhero only has the public cheering them on in fights if
they don’t take cheap shots, attack a child, injure
the defenceless, or any number of things which can break
their honourable image.<\/p>\n
In the same way, these bikers cannot be seen to be harmful
to the children, aggressive to the public or openly criminal
– not one of them, not even once. This charity (which
I approve of and respect so much I was nearly moved to
tears) works only until the first biker breaks that trust.
What this means in the real world is that there are
incredibly tight restrictions on how these particular alpha
males can channel their masculine image, forcing them to be
extremely honourable at all times. It sets up a rare
situation where private individuals on the street following
their own decisions (not soldiers following orders in an
army) are able to display all the violent alpha male traits
which usually result
in problems<\/a> for society, and use them to create trust,
healing and safety from fear.<\/p>\n
I thought this post was a good fit for BadRep not because
I’m under any impression that biker gangs are bastions
of feminism and equality – I know nothing about it,
but expect that any chapters led by women are in the vast
minority and regarded differently. But while all the women
in the article were treated as equals in a family, this time
it was the role of the men I particularly wanted to
mention.<\/p>\n
The article describes such an atmosphere of caring, security
and trust between these bikers and the children that
it’s made many readers into instant converts. I can
totally believe that this approach would work on even the
most terrified brain – anything coming for the victim
will now have to go through their big friends first.
It’s a real-world solution which lets children sleep
at night, and I love that both women and men are out there
doing it with such selfless dedication on their own time and
at their own expense. (In the article, two bikers stay on
watch outside a girl’s house from 8pm until 2am, when
two more arrive to take the next shift. In another example
this rolling watch is kept up continuously for two and a
half days, by people travelling two hours to get there.)
<\/p>\n
An online friend of mine and her husband are members of The Patriot Guard<\/a>, bikers in the US
who (strictly at the invitation of the family) will attend
funerals of servicemen to protect the event from protesters
such as the Westboro Baptist Church. (The WBC picket
funerals of LGBT personnel, shouting that God killed them
because of their sexuality.) It’s precisely the same
thing: bikers using their image to – when invited
– protect the emotionally vulnerable. It’s a
hugely positive way to use alpha male traits in the modern
world.<\/p>\n
The judge asked the boy, “Are you afraid?” No,
the boy said. The judge seemed surprised, and asked,
“Why not?” The boy glanced at [the bikers]
sitting in the front row and told the judge,
“Because my friends are scarier than he
is.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n