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Exploring America's Bullying Epidemic

Posted by Amanda Marcotte, Pandagon at 3:03 PM on March 26, 2008.


There’s two worlds—the officially recognized one where people are kind and polite, and the one lurking right underneath where bullying happens.
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I find it interesting that the NY Times published this article about bullying at school and then published this one about workplace bullies. I thought that this meant that the Times was doing a series, but unfortunately, they’re not. Which is too bad, because I think bullying is an interesting area to explore. It’s like there’s two worlds in America—the officially recognized one where people are kind and polite, and the one lurking right underneath where bullying happens.

The article about Billy Wolfe from Fayetteville, Arkansas is really the sort of feature story that the Times still excels at. It really captures the essence of bullying. The kid selected is picked for reasons lost to the mists of time, or most likely for arbitrary reasons that were rationalized after the fact. The abuse is back-breaking and non-stop. Most school officials look the other way, because, let’s face it, there’s almost something biological in people that makes them dislike the unpopular even if the unpopular are unpopular for no reason at all.

But what I really liked about the article was that it really clues you in to why bullies bully. Let’s face it; they’re proud of their behavior. Picking on other people to make yourself feel more powerful has this ability to make other people believe that you’re something special, at least for short periods of time. I got bullied in school a lot, but it really petered out in high school, and I think it’s because kids grow up and the social rewards of being brutish start to peter out as kids get more sophisticated. But Wolfe is 15, and so he’s in the thick of it.

A car the color of a school bus pulls up with a boy who tells his brother beside him that he's going to beat up Billy Wolfe. While one records the assault with a cellphone camera, the other walks up to the oblivious Billy and punches him hard enough to leave a fist-size welt on his forehead.
The video shows Billy staggering, then dropping his book bag to fight back, lanky arms flailing. But the screams of his sister stop things cold.
The aggressor heads to school, to show friends the video of his Billy moment, while Billy heads home, again.

And how the school officials side with the bullies over their victims, a facet of bullying that few people like to discuss:

Not long after, a boy on the school bus pummeled Billy, but somehow Billy was the one suspended, despite his pleas that the bus's security camera would prove his innocence. Days later, Ms. Wolfe recalls, the principal summoned her, presented a box of tissues, and played the bus video that clearly showed Billy was telling the truth.

People get better at putting on a more politer, more docile face, but the fact that many people basically love brutality and tend to side with bullies is a little discussed problem, I think. It’s not just the way school officials side with bullies. I think this tendency goes a long way to explain why people gang up on rape victims instead of rapists, why victims of domestic violence find very little sympathy with friends and family in many circumstances, and really even why the Republicans keep winning with childish tactics. And if you are with the stereotypical domestic abuser, who can count on a lot more social support than you’re going to get, that makes it even harder to leave.

The relationship of bullying and sexual violence seems obvious to me, but this workplace bullying article had this sentence in it that kind of made me grind my teeth.

This month, researchers at the University of Manitoba reported that the emotional toll of workplace bullying is more severe than that of sexual harassment.

Sexual harassment is a form of bullying. What difference there is in the workplace probably has more to do with adults’ higher levels of sophistication than kids, so that many workplace bullies know how to bully someone without making it sexual. But kids don’t obey such fine distinctions, as Billy’s story shows.

It began years ago when a boy called the house and asked Billy if he wanted to buy a certain sex toy, heh-heh. Billy told his mother, who informed the boy's mother. The next day the boy showed Billy a list with the names of 20 boys who wanted to beat Billy up…..
In ninth grade, a couple of the same boys started a Facebook page called "Every One That Hates Billy Wolfe." It featured a photograph of Billy's face superimposed over a likeness of Peter Pan, and provided this description of its purpose: "There is no reason anyone should like billy he's a little bitch. And a homosexual that NO ONE LIKES."

Bullying or sexual harassment? Well, clearly it’s the latter, but it’s also the former. I think one thing that’s always driven me crazy about the discourse around sexual harassment is that people think the sexual part is more important than the harassment part. And there’s plenty of blame to spread around about this, but the result has been a lot of confusion about whether or not workplace flirting, hooking up with coworkers, or even talking about your dating life with coworkers are sexual harassment. To my mind, only if someone is being harassed. Which is why the hostile environment standard is so important, because bullies often work, as the Billy Wolfe story shows, by harnessing popular support for the idea that this person you’ve singled out is the scapegoat. And so they create this hostile environment, perhaps with pictures or comments designed to make the target uncomfortable while not directly attacking the target much or at all. If we understood that sexual harassment is just a form of bullying that draws attention to the target’s sexuality so as to make him or her seem even more vulnerable, I think we’d know it better when we saw it.

Digg!

Tagged as: violence, children, bullying

Amanda Marcotte co-writes the popular blog Pandagon.


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Post by Staff. October 7, 2008.

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View:
investigate a theory of bullying
Posted by: e rice on Mar 26, 2008 4:19 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
firstly, i have to contradict the author: ganging up on 'unpopular' people is NOT as old as time--it requires an established hierarchy that dictates the standards of popularity and behavior. it also requires a culture that depends on divisiveness.

for a thorough analysis of abuse in our culture, i strongly recommend _for your own good_, by alice miller, a former and still controversial psychoanalyst who has distanced herself from the psychoanalytical community.

america has been and is an extremely abusive society. from fraternities to the office, abusiveness is not only condoned, it is encouraged. the toll in lost and wasted lives is horrific. nothing will change as long as bullying is perceived as natural, and not psychotic.

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It starts at the top.
Posted by: Quannah on Mar 26, 2008 6:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you have an administration that are nothing more than Bullies of the World, it's clear that violence, like other stuff, runs downhill. From the growing numbers of school bullying, to bullying in the workplace, to Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo, to the verbal bullying of people like Bill-O and Rush Limbaugh... it is all connected.

We have a "leader" that bullies other countries, Congress, anyone he feels like bullying. And so goes the rest of the administration. They are power-hungry vultures and won't hesitate to throw their weight around. We see the same behavior reflected in the rest of society.

Perhaps things will improve if we get someone with a little humanity into the White House. At least it's a start.

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The new Nebraska anti-bullying law
Posted by: RegK on Mar 26, 2008 8:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nebraska has new a law just recently passed that specifically requires school administrators to deal with bullying--no more pretending it didn't happen or blaming the victim. And you can thank Nebraskans for Peace for this; they lobbied for the law for several years. All peace and justice groups around the US should be confronting bullying.

Several years ago, my nephew was bullied--called assault when adults do it!--in middle school in MA. I went to talk to the vice-principal; his response was "boys will be boys." For real. I'm not kidding. Well, that v-p is now in prison for molesting children; he should also have been prosecuted for 'failure to protect.' When the administrators are bullies themselves there's little hope for change in the kids' behavior!

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» sincere congratulations Posted by: e rice
» RE:Thank you for sharing..... Posted by: boydranchitos
A simple solution for school violence
Posted by: Earthian on Mar 26, 2008 10:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just give young people of any age the same protections that adults enjoy: make assault and battery a crime. Bring in a police officer to talk with those involved in violence and their parents. Set the stage for so-called "bullying" to be called something other than this euphemism. Instead call it what it is according to the law: a crime. And treat it in an age-appropriate way. The comments above about "assault" and "failure to protect" are correct and insightful.

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get real and be reasonable
Posted by: aislinnluv on Mar 27, 2008 4:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
my daughter was assaulted on the school bus for opening the window on a hot day. the girl who objected slapped and punched her, hard enough to leave bruises. in response, my daughter spat at her. i wanted to file assault charges, but i was told by the police that if i did, they would be forced to file counter charges against my daughter because "spitting constitutes assault"! what the f? my only recourse was to allow the school to take suitable action against the girl, which turned out to be 5 days during which she would not be allowed on the school bus (insufficient, to my mind). in the end, because the girl apparently had no other way to get to school, even that was not enacted. my daughter was assaulted twice, first by this girl and second by the administration, which could not think of more suitable punishment for physical brutality than to take away bus privileges. any wonder the kids who are bullied sometimes get fed up and lash out themselves? stop punishing the victims and take action against the perpetrators! do not empower the bullies!

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"Duke Lacrosse Team"
Posted by: Krotos on Mar 27, 2008 5:38 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
are the three words which sum up why Amanda Marcotte is part of the very bullying epidemic she decries.

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» RE:Aren't you just a little off Posted by: boydranchitos
Father George Tribou: A Sadistic Bully Made A Saint
Posted by: mrtshw on Mar 27, 2008 7:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My son is, unfortunately, a freshman at Catholic High in Little Rock, Ar; continuing in the Catholic School System despite my outraged protests following his revelations to me in March, 2004 of possible sexual abuse of young girls at his catholic elementary school. A few months ago, the current principal and long-time teacher at Little Rock Catholic High, Steve Straessle, wrote a lengthy, glowing tribute to the late Father George Tribou which appeared in the ArDemGaz. Though Straessle repeatedly referred to Tribou affectionately as "the old man ", he neglected to mention Tribou's reputation for being extremely venal to many mothers, especially single mothers.He also mysteriously neglected to mention any of Tribou's notorious acts of bullying as evidenced in the Wikipedia info about him! See below:


Subject: Tribou : A Boorish Sadist Made A Saint By Little Rock Diocese


George Tribou reigned over Little Rock Catholic High School for Boys for fifty years and was able to exercise his bizarre authoritarian bullying over everybody he encountered to such a remarkable extent the resulting Stockholm Syndrome effect left a following of Stepford devotees which includes his successor who considers Tribou his role model.
In order to fully appreciate Saint Tribou's legacy, notice this rememberance reflected in Tribou's own biography below:


Father Tribou's 'creative' approaches to discipline included:

1.A boy was throwing rocks from the garden while another was clapping and encouraging him. The boy had to pick up sticks after school and the other boy had to clap and encourage him throughout the punishment.
2. Making a boy smoke an entire cigar if he was caught smoking cigarettes.
3. Making a boy carry a door for a day since he had such a fond habit of slamming it .
4. His allowing boys to settle their disputes with boxing gloves. The following day, they would serve in-school suspension together and would not be allowed to talk to anyone other than each other the entire day.
If boys fought in the school without being sanctioned, they would have to sit in the main lobby during lunch, holding hands, feeding each other their own lunch with the one free hand.
5. Announcing to the class that he had discovered the identity of the boy who had been seen smoking on school grounds and that if he didn't show up at his office in a certain amount of time, his penalty would be severely worsened (upon which a long line of boys would manifest in front of his office.
Note: Tribou himself was rarely seen without a cigar firmly clenched between his teeth.
6. Giving haircuts to boys whose hair was too long for the school's regulations .
7. Making girls and boys hug the pillars of the school lobby all night if they were caught dancing too close during prom.
8. Having boys wear a plastic bowl taped to their heads when coming to school with a "bowl" haircut.
9 Making a student wear a sandwich board that said "careful, I spit" if caught using chewing tobacco.


Examples of Father George Tribou's "words to live by".:

" The measure of a man is his ability to control the animal within."

"To have destroyed the defective infant, Helen Keller, would have been to destroy also the teacher-humanitarian who was Anne Sullivan. In countless cases throughout the world a defective child has not been an expensive, heart-rending burden but a priceless gift that has brought out the hidden strengths of a father, a mother, and sisters and brothers." (unpublished speech, January 31, 1980)

"Many schools have talked of installing metal detectors. That would not work here. These boys have too much lead in their asses."

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Tribou"

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Do Not Tolerate Bullying
Posted by: kestral on Mar 27, 2008 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have a good friend who was a guidance counsellor at several Greater Boston area schools. He said that the students that were most likely to become victims of bullying were those who differed from the norm--and the more the student differed from the cultural norm of the school, the more likely the bullying would last and would be severe. He said that the victims of bullying were some of the nicest, kindest, most pro-social young people he has known. They do not deserve to be treated this way. He said, for the most part, the victims of bullying did nothing wrong, nothing to deserve the treatment they got. He said that those who witness bullying but who turn a blind eye to it are as much guilty of bullying as the person who bullies. Bullying can not happen in environments where it is not tolerated.

Bullying IS verbal abuse. No one deserves to be abused. Period. Being repeatedly bullied can cause one to develop serious psychiatric problems, including Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Please, don't blame the victim for being bullied, particularly when it is for things that are out of the student's control. Understand that the more a student differs from the cultural norm of the school, the more the student will have problems. Also, don't tell the victim to just walk away and to ignore it. That does not work.

There are things we can do to make schools and after-school activities safe for our children:

1. Make sure that the schoolchildren are supervised at ALL TIMES--and this includes teens. This means hiring responsible adults to monitor the bathrooms, locker rooms, halls, playgrounds, school busses, bus stops, etc.

2. The administration MUST be committed to having a "No Bullying" policy--and effectively implement it. This means that staff has to punish bullies and bystanders.

3. Bullying done by boys and bullying done by girls IS different. Boys tend to be more overt; girls tend to use more covert tactics. Bullying is bullying, whether it be pushing and shoving in the halls, sneaky and nasty text messages, whisper campaigns, name calling, etc.

4. We must punish the bystanders/witnesses to bullying who do nothing as if they were bullies themselves. Bullying is less likely to happen when the bully and the bully gang knows that they will get into trouble.

5. Victims of bullying must feel safe asking for help--even if there are no witnesses to the bullying incidents.

6. Value whistle blowing. Teach children that you have a duty to complain when someone does something that's wrong or bad. Honor people, like Daniel Elsberg, who have had the courage to stand-up to those who abuse their power (whether it be in government or the private sector).

7. Encourage students who are victims of bullies to form their own anti-bullying gang. When victims know that someone is watching their backs and will report bullying, it makes school a friendlier and safer place.


Parents:

If you can choose a school for your child, try to choose one whose culture is one that your child will fit in. For example, a smart child will be more likely to have a problem at a school where the culture does not particularly value education, learning and being smart. Also, be aware that the more your child sticks out from the crowd, the greater the risk of having problems. If your child wants to dress in a way that you don't like but is appropriate, please let the child dress that way. If your child is having a problem with bullies, don't tell him or her to "ignore it" , "walk away" or "don't respond". Remember that your child may not be able to walk away. Instead, be an advocate for your child. Talk to your child's teachers, guidance counsellor and school administration. Hold their feet to the fire.

The best web site on bullying is: http://www.bullyonline.org/

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Go to Police and do not back down!!!
Posted by: arthurread on Mar 27, 2008 8:45 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If your school does not respond properly when they are made aware of bullying, go to the police. Do not take "no" for an answer, as assault and battery is a crime. Too many administrators defend bullies, many of whom are popular jocks, in an effort to thwart team suspension or expulsion, "for the sake of the team". Do not fall for this school "patriotism" hogwash. When bullies see other star quarterbacks, basketball team anchors, etc. lose their place on the team, which is the ONLY solution for jocks who bully, the and only then will bullying stats go down.

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BULLY-PARENT EQUATION
Posted by: Roverton on Mar 27, 2008 8:57 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All bullies are damaged, not unlike a junkyard dog. They attack anything that moves around them. Fear makes one simplify, and bullies are always afraid. It's why they need to lash out - to "Protect" themselves.

It is a logical assumption that the damage came from a circumstance at home.

Some parents are skilled at hiding their abusive traits in public. No child is born a bully. It is learned.

Fox News is an entire network established to re-enforce the bullying mindset. The new wave of "Extreme Cage-Fighting" is another step in the demonic descent of man.

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In a legal adverserial society what should you expect
Posted by: Andrew_S on Mar 27, 2008 10:05 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is true we create our own little monsters, while much is known of social behaviour, socializing and character traits. We have yet to create a framework and voice that helps the meek, the mild and the helpless. Who by their very nature are swallowed up by our more gregarious do good state centrist political types. As a society headlong following the American tradition of seeding the dysfunctional above the future needs of society, we have a price to pay for ostrich economics both fiscally and socially. Funding is certainly available, but swallowed by 'administrative' and political costs. I say we just keep doing what we do best, keep filling the pig trough for our more enlightened orwellian types. Whatever their position they can always earn a good day's pay at the taxpayers expense.

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bullying is pervasive and teachers clueless
Posted by: CJC on Mar 27, 2008 10:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even my own son was occasionally bullied.
I say "even" because he was generally popular, was good looking, not small for his age, was a good student and an excellent athlete - soccer, baseball, football - and yet even in a good suburban school he was sometimes bullied. It never got serious and so I never went to the school about it but episodes included "friends" teasing him and taking his crutches in elementary school when he had a bum knee from a sports injury, and being verbally harassed on the street by groups of age mates.

He was aggressive on the playing fields but not personally. Maybe the kids were jealous of his successes and figured out that he would not fight back?

Bullying is not new and has nothing to do with the Bush administration, although one does wonder whether GWB wasn't a bully himself in his childhood. I've heard he tortured small animals.

But the schools should pay more attention and they should never never punish the victim who fights back or even worse blame him/her for provoking the attacks.

In schools, I think exposing the bullies, calling all kids to account, informing the parents and openly talking about the unacceptability of verbal and physical abuse
would go some way to addressing the problem.

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Thankfully,
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Mar 27, 2008 10:53 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I grew up in a household where my dad and brother taught me to fight. Well. When punks tried to bully me, they paid for it.

Teach your kids to defend themselves.

jdfu!

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re: simple misdemeanor
Posted by: arthurread on Mar 27, 2008 10:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, I did not say all jocks were bullies. But alot of them are. And therein lies the problem. Administrators and coaches put extreme pressure on anyone who would jeopardize a "jock's career".Even if assault is a misdemeanor, schools should have a policy about allowing anyone to represent them, even in sports. Maybe 2 misdemeanors and you're gone, bozo.

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BULLIES - THE SOURCE OF SCHOOL SHOOTINGS
Posted by: cyr3n on Mar 27, 2008 11:21 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having gone through middle school and high school during the pre-Columbine era... its always been pretty obvious to me that bullying is the *PRIMARY* cause of school shootings.

"HOW CAN THIS HAPPEN??!" .. AND OTHER CLICHES.
Think about it folks.. you take an impressionable person, still trying to figure out where they fit in the big picture.. and repeatedly tell them they're hated, unloved by their parents, undesirable for the opposite sex, and intellectually weak. Then you've got a ticking timebomb. The only thing keeping them from suicide is their quality of life. If they have nothing to live for (ie: shit job, no friends, abusive parents, and no hope for improvement) they will opt for suicide. At that point, "do unto others" kicks in. Why would the kid just kill himself without taking a few of the 'popular' kids out with him?

Solution:
Raise your kids right, show them you love them.. teach them to protect those in their class who are more introverted than they are, unable to defend themselves verbally or physically. Then just maybe, if/when someone does snap, your kid will be allowed to walk out unscathed while someone else's self-serving crotchfruit eats lead.

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Just demote their status
Posted by: cyr3n on Mar 27, 2008 11:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The jock can be demoted into BP classes or a similarly undesirable curriculum (ie: home economics or fashion). I say they get transferred from an elective class they enjoy and temporarily moved into a "girly" or "faggy" class which will affect their social heirarchy.

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A few points
Posted by: willymack on Mar 27, 2008 12:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Bullies are usually cowards who live in their own private hell. 2. Those who are bullied almost always outlast and out perform the bullies in every aspect of life.3. Outlawing bullying is about as effective as outlawing human nature.

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» RE: A few points Posted by: e rice
» RE: A few points Posted by: willymack
» RE: A few points Posted by: e rice
gathaiga
Posted by: gathaiga on Mar 27, 2008 4:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In my experience, bullying has always been with us...possibly everywhere but particularly in some of the more backward areas such as Oklahoma, where I live..Arkansas is another..and a number of other states. When I was young the "jocks" were usually the perpetrators. Our attitudes toward violence show that we still live by the law of the jungle and, on relative terms, haven't been out of the trees long....no matter how much you word the subject to death.

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To Forgive or Not to Forgive
Posted by: Mel H. on Mar 27, 2008 5:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I unfortunately have experienced being bullied and it has affected my life. I know I would have been able to progress through life differently now if my school environment had been nurturing.

It has taken me almost 20 years to work through the pain and to salvage my self-worth.

I choose not to forgive the aggressors. They have never asked me for my forgiveness or apologized. Perhaps, if they did, I would consider it. I also choose to think about these past experiences as little as possible and have tried to move on.

I usually disagree with running schools like a business, but interpersonal relations is one area where a school should be like a workplace. People who do not get along well with others or are rude, abusive and nasty can often be fired or forced to act polite.

Maybe schools should take all of the bullies, put them in their own school and allow them to abuse each other (the way they do in jail.)

I'm sure some of these children had parents and families that treated them like dirt. Still, that is not an excuse in my book.

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mim
Posted by: mim on Mar 27, 2008 5:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good for the Times in drawing our attention to bullying, both among kids and in the workplace.

But have Curt and Penney Wolfe at least tried to put their son in another school while they fight their legal battles? Even homeschooling might be a better alternative than sending Billy back to that hell-hole that is his present school.

I have been told--by a psychologist--that kids never try to justify bullying because their brains aren't developed enough for moral argument. Maybe little kids don't, but a Google search of "justify bullying" shows that big kids do. They say that the target deserves it, that he brought it on himself, that he (or she) needs to understand that there are rules that must be followed, that we're just having fun and the target is way too sensitive, or that it's a tough world and the target needs to be toughened up ("cruel to be kind").

On the blog Queerty, which noted that a straight boy is being tormented as if he were gay, a schoolmate of Billy's argued in a comment that the Times coverage was unfair, because Billy is getting what he deserves.

But wherever bullying is legitimized, one thread runs through it all: power. And the test of power, as both George Orwell and Erich Fromm observed, is the ability to make others suffer.

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jitterbugmom
Posted by: hermionie on Mar 27, 2008 6:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My mom taught there for years. When this kid was on Good morning America the other day she just sat there and wept. "They've got to pull him out of school" she said, "I know those kids. They'll kill him"... a friend of my sisters (there in Fayetteville) is keeping a 14 girl at her house because since being gang raped and beaten up by classmates (which they too filmed and put on the internet-until their lawyers made them remove it)...my sisters friend is often threatened while out at the grocery store etc by these other kids parents... I tell ya. My mom, my dad, and several syblings have left that place in the past four years...it is a sick sick place. But I am afraid it isn't "untypical". Scary but now I think I know where the Abu guards all grow up.

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» RE: jitterbugmom Posted by: todayspeaker
» RE: jitterbugmom Posted by: mim