For me, it was a book called ‘The Outsiders’ by S.E Hinton. It is known as a literary classic these days, but it was quite hard hitting when it was released back in the 1960s.
In a nut shell; It is about a group of semi-impoverished greaser friends growing up in 1960s Tulsa, Oklahoma, and all the life challenges they face, and how they react to prejudice against them whilst coping with family issues.
It was the first book that made me realise that some people in society don’t get it easy growing up, and I discovered what it meant to live on the ‘wrong side of town’ and what societal prejudice was. The outsiders was the first novel I read that brought up hard subjects like; domestic violence, alcoholism, street gang violence etc.
It was the first book to shatter my naive way of thinking about the world, at 13 years old! It is still one of my favourite stories to this day, and for all its slightly dark themes, I love the compassionate friendship and brotherhood that is displayed in this book!
I mean, police funding is done on a local level. If you’re asking why most cities have continued to fund their police departments despite rampant corruption and abuse of power, that’s a pretty complex issue. You’ll probably want to start by looking into the power police unions have, that’s a major issue for anyone trying to get police reform and accountability.
Hello. This is a book forum, not a political platform. Discussing political books is allowed, but discussions unrelated to books (this entire chain was unrelated to the parent comment about The Autobiography of Malcolm X) need to be kept to a political subreddit. Thank you.