Recently, I was reading about the 33,000 gangs in the United States today and their level of criminality. What we used to talk about as an urban crisis has been mismanaged to the point that we have gangs in both urban and rural areas nationwide. And watching our intellectual, political, and chattering classes dance a little sidestep to avoid even talking about it would be almost amusing if it wasn’t so incredibly tragic. It’s tragic in that their discussions of America’s crime problems focus on the discussion on “ghost guns” and “gun violence” without ever actually talking about the root problems of the gang culture.
Years ago, I read an article by POLICE Advisory Board member and retired Los Angeles County Sheriff’s gang investigator Richard Valdemar titled “Street Gangs Have Their Own Criminal Culture.” In that article, he describes the gang culture far better than most so-called anthropologists or sociologists, who can’t even seem to find a link between gangsta rap music and gang violence. He articulated what he calls “Valdemar’s Axioms,” which are the following: 1) Gangs are not part of the Hispanic, black, Asian, or white culture. 2) All gangs are part of a criminal culture. 3) It is the nature of criminals to band together. 4) All gangs are formed in defense, and later prey on their own kind. 5) Gangs multiply by dividing. 6) Gangs develop their own “code of conduct.” 7) To a gang member, the gang comes before God, family, marriage, community, friendship, and the law.









