Lord Tebbit 'could have been a hoodie' if his stint doing National Service hadn't knocked him into shape, he has said.
The Tory peer, who was known as the Chingford Skinhead during his time in politics, said serving the Armed Forces had given him an outlet for his energy and stopped him getting into trouble as a teenager.
Without a compulsory period in the military, the young find it difficult to channel aggression and energy in a positive way, explained the former Conservative chairman, who was a close ally of former prime minister Baroness Thatcher. Consequently, too many are driven to anti-social behaviour and crime - characterised by those who wear hooded tops.
He said: 'Growing up in inner London somewhere today, I would possibly have been a hoodie.
'You just have to get out and do something at that age. You have to lead people.
'One of the tragedies of today is the kids who ought to be leaders are being left to do destructive things instead - they feel they have to lead somewhere so they lead the gangs.
'It's the only leadership they can get,' the 77-year-old told veterans at the RAF Association, Bognor, in West Sussex.
Between 1945 and 1963, every healthy man from 17 and 21 was expected to serve in the Forces for 18 months
Lord Tebbit, 77, grew up in Enfield, North London.Lord Tebbit also blamed Britain's education system for the teenage crime wave sweeping the country.
He said: 'We are failing them in the most dreadful way. We are creating terrific problems for society.
'The most academically gifted young people are not being stretched enough by state schools and those without many talents are just being cast adrift from society. '
http://tinyurl.com/5w3877I can't help but think he's speaking the truth