Introduction
Violence to me is when a person commits a violent act towards others. The violence comes in many different forms including hitting, physical abuse, mental abuse. Jealousy or hate can cause aggression, and it is mostly referenced by people to develop perceptions and define a community by its attributes in regards to the ways of life.
Understanding violence requires significant internalization of morality or senses of humanity because it does not only involve physical attributes but it often employs peculiar psychological intentions. The U.S is supposed as a country that has higher rates of internally-based forms of violence over other nations in the world whereas is known as the most developed nation with better living environments. The United States is criticized by the series of exceptional characteristics such as high crime rates and other ruthless practices of violence (Schwetman, 2010). At this point, it is deducible that violence is a multifaceted concern, meaning violent acts may be practiced through different ways. In regards to Malcom (1999), it is reasonable to expound that violence is not only defined through hitting and physical abuse instead it also involves psychological intentions such as discrimination and denial of universal rights. As such, it is true that violence is a sophisticated practice in regards to its existence; whose pervasiveness is relative to the norms of a community.
In most scenarios, development, and spread of violent behaviors has its roots in the active movements within a social context. The contemporary world entails different modes, through which violence can be transmitted owing to, suggestible, likely, the transformation of social structure. The newer environments are characterized by a diversity of entertainment elements including visual contexts such as movies, Audio forms of communication like music and written materials which are viable to transmit different kinds of destructive acts, physical abuse or mental abuse across a larger population. Nevertheless, economic development and the need for its protection has been a threat to the proliferation of physical abuse and also destruction in the community (Schwetman, 2010). Persuasively, the community has turned to be a competing ground where the wealthy are aiming at securing their wealth by destruction thus multiplying violent acts through causing harm to their competitors. There has been an increase of gun possessions in the community as a response to the need of protecting property. However, most of the weapons are preferably used by criminal groups in pursuit of economic sustenance thus facilitating the dominance of financial insecurities.
According to Schwetman (2010), violence is not necessarily a communicative intention. This means that the complexity of violence does not deliver a direct response to the purposes of a violent act although its practices depend on the norms of that particular context. Violence is arguably a belief considering that different viable ways guarantee its occurrence without realization. Schwetman affirms that violence can be conducted as a medical procedure through false articulations to maintaining a patient's lifespan (2010) whereas its primary purpose is to cause physical abuse. In such a situation, it is hard to determine the primary intentions of a medical procedure until the appearance of following effects on the victim. The intent of pharmaceutical forms of violence in this essay is to elaborate the power and difficulty behind intentions for physical abuse in the community. The orientations of the current society entail a lot of considerations from which conflicting motives can be developed. For example, conflicts for limited resources are and competitions for leadership positions and superiority on the rise, which underlines the worrying trends of attitudinal and physical abuse of other people's wellbeing.
According to Wilson (2009), mental abuse is closely associated with one's familial background. The author conceptualizes that people; mostly children who witness domestic violence have high chances of developing similar characteristics in the later life. Moreover, children who see vigorous activities within their background characterize the adverse effects of domestic violence through higher levels of depression and extensively defiant behaviors such as violence toward their peers (Wilson, 2009). In the U.S, the dominance of domestic violence has been relative to the reluctant measures by the government to its control, which has over long continued to facilitate mental abuse among the many children who grow in such environments. Nevertheless, Wilson affirms that partner to partner violence has been triggering deteriorating attitude development not only in children but also in women since women are most affected by such violence than men.
However, the underlying intent of addressing domestic violence revolves around the need for the adverse effects it portrays to the victims, especially siblings in their future. Children adopt some of the critical factors that cause domestic violence between their parents or guardians from which they develop long-term perceptions regarding those situations (Wilson, 2010). Therefore, it is reasonable to state that most of the evidenced cases of violence factors such as sexual assaults, property destruction, psychological manipulation and physical harm are a reflection of the background that one spent his or her childhood. It imposes that mental abuse is the most severe form of violence since it a developmental process, which encompasses long-term effects in an individual from one generation to another.
In conclusion, violence is a process that changes from one generation to another in regards to the movements within its context. Its complexity is as well evidenced in its control since effectiveness to the management of violence depends on the appropriateness of implemented measures. Suggestible, management of destruction or hitting requires clear regulations and extensively, justifying punishments to deter its acceptance in the community. The community needs to find appropriate and moral methods of competition, preferably, through innovation for social happiness to control physical abuse. However, the best approach to ensuring commonality is by regulating mental abuse. Mental maltreatment shows its involvedness to facilitating the occurrence of different forms of violence hence the need to control its perverseness for enduring solutions. This can be done by the implementation of strategic rules regarding marital relationships and also through counseling the victims to regulate their perceptions while creating awareness on its effects in the community.
References
Malcom X (1999). Expert from the ballot or Bullet.
Schwetman (2010), Violence. CREDO
Wilson, N. (2009). Domestic Violence. Gale