On Monday, May 18, 2026, in San Diego, not from the Islamic Center of San Diego, several people embrace one another. (Nelvin C. Cepeda/The San Diego Union-Tribune/TNS)Nelvin C. Cepeda
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Editorial: America must confront the growing crisis among young people

· The Fresno Bee

Monday's act of terrorism against a San Diego mosque, in which two teenagers are accused of killing three people, should deeply disturb every American. Not only because of the hatred allegedly involved, but because of what it reveals about the growing emotional, moral and psychological instability consuming too many young people across this country.

America is witnessing a dangerous generation of disconnected young people, increasingly detached from the value of human life itself. We're no strangers to this phenomenon in Baltimore, which has long struggled with youth violence and where too many children grow up surrounded by trauma, drugs, broken families and hopelessness.

The San Diego attack was not merely an isolated criminal act. It reflects the growing ability of extremism, online radicalization, hatred and nihilism to reach vulnerable young minds. Teenagers today are consuming endless streams of violent content, ideological rage, conspiracy theories, humiliation culture and social isolation through digital platforms that reward outrage and emotional instability.

Young people who once sought belonging through families, churches, schools, sports and communities are now too often finding identity through online extremism, grievance, anger and attention-seeking behavior.

Social media algorithms accelerate this crisis daily.

Violence becomes entertainment. Chaos becomes viral. Extremists become symbols. Disturbed individuals receive notoriety. And increasingly, emotionally immature minds are unable to distinguish fantasy, ideology and consequence from reality itself.

Baltimore's violence reflects many of these same deeper failures.

Too many young people in Baltimore grow up in environments where dysfunction becomes normalized. Abandoned homes, failing schools, open-air drug activity, fatherlessness, poverty and repeated exposure to violence create emotional numbness over time. Entire neighborhoods are filled with children who have experienced more funerals than opportunities before reaching adulthood.

This is not simply a policing issue. It is a societal collapse of structure, discipline, accountability and hope.

And while compassion matters, honesty matters too. A society that refuses to enforce standards eventually communicates that life itself has little value. Young people must understand clearly that violence destroys not only victims, but entire families and communities.

At the same time, America must stop pretending these problems exist in isolation.

A nation cannot spend decades weakening families, removing moral foundations, glorifying outrage, normalizing chaos and flooding young minds with hatred and instability without eventually paying a price.

The overwhelming majority of young people are good. Most families are fighting every day to raise responsible children under increasingly difficult conditions. But the warning signs are everywhere: growing extremism, emotional fragility, mental health crises, addiction to digital validation and a generation struggling to find purpose beyond anger and attention.

Children need structure. They need fathers, mothers, mentors, faith communities, discipline, accountability and purpose. They need to understand that freedom without responsibility eventually becomes destruction.

America cannot arrest its way out of this crisis. But neither can it excuse or ignore it.

The answer requires moral courage from parents, schools, churches, community leaders and political leadership willing to speak honestly about cultural decay, failed institutions and the urgent need to rebuild both accountability and hope.

Because once young people lose reverence for human life itself, the consequences reach far beyond San Diego or Baltimore.

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Baltimore Sun editorial writers offer opinions and analysis on news and issues relevant to readers. They operate separately from the newsroom.

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This story was originally published May 21, 2026 at 2:10 PM.