• UlyssesT
    ·
    edit-2
    18 days ago

    deleted by creator

    • wtypstanaccount04 [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      :this:

      Liberals remind me of this too whenever they start condemning violence. "I don't care who started it, you're both in trouble" and "Violence is wrong which is why you should tell a teacher instead of punching your bully"

      • charly4994 [she/her, comrade/them]
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        2 years ago

        Stabbing my bully with a pencil was the single best act I did to stop the bullying. I got detention for it, but after that people stopped trying because suddenly I was the next school shooter waiting to happen and they didn't want to end up on the hit list.

        • VeganTendies [he/him]
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          edit-2
          2 years ago

          The surest sign that "wokeness" is a bullshit concept is that no one really fears that women, LGBT, or black people are going to "get revenge" on white men. They keep tormenting them, literally by their own admission, "because it's fun". Sure, they'll pretend to be concerned about them getting revenge...so clearly they should be committing MORE hate crimes to teach them that committing reverse-hate-crimes is wrong.

          That being said, they certainly WILL shut down anything that even resembles thoughts of revenge. You guys want to ban the T@rner Di@ries? Just take the WHOLE book and reverse the races, the sexualities, the religions, any instant of "left" and "right", until Earl Turner is a black lesbian ready to avenge her people. Everyone will freak the fuck out at this wokeness and the book will finally be banned.

          They will believe that leftists are going to be the guy that sandy hooks the conservative popular kids JUST enough to warrant acts against the left, but rest easy knowing that they can keep tormenting undesirables without any real fear of so much as being told to stop.

  • ssjmarx [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    Bullying is a social phenomenon that creates hierarchies and enforces conformity. It is a reactionary impulse that exists in basically everyone, and even people who don't initiate bullying will often end up joining in as a defense mechanism to ensure that they themselves are not bullied. It is most obvious in children because they do not have fully developed social awareness and will do it extremely blatantly, but of course adults do it as well in more complex ways.

    While it is a set of behaviors that I don't think will ever fully go away, I also think that reactionary society feeds into bullying impulses by teaching kids who the "acceptable targets" are and rewarding them for doing it. Getting praise and being ignored are essentially the same reward to a bully, since part of the escalation is seeing how far you can go before an adult intervenes. This intersects with another otherwise normal childlike behavior of testing boundaries, and just like when your kid says a minor curse word and then looks to see how you'll react you have to immediately shut down the behavior in question or they'll assume that what they're doing is fine.

    To make it go away you need progressive social structures, unfortunately in late capitalism all social structures outside of the marketplace are either crumbling or gone. If you, your kid, their peers and their parents all met regularly in certain social contexts, the opportunities for bully hierarchies to form would be greatly reduced and those that did could be shut down by adults much more readily - but as it is everyone goes home to their separate houses and apartments and very rarely sees anyone outside of their clique and so it's easy to bully people outside of that clique because there are no social consequences for doing so.

  • Dirt_Owl [comrade/them, they/them]
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    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Bullying isn't punished in school and in fact I would say it's encouraged by the lack of teachers giving a shit (or even joining in with the bullying). At least that's how it was when I was in school.

    If we look at what school in imperialist countries is for (not for education, but to produce workers and people that fit into capitalist society) we can see why certain things are punished and others aren't.

    Fail to complete your work in the way the boss (teacher) wanted, regardless of if you demonstrate that you understand the subject or found a better way to complete it? Punished.

    Verbally abuse an unfashionable kid? Not punished.

    They want to teach a social Darwinist hierarchy of domination and submission because that's how our work is structured. If a kid can't learn to fight back on their own, they are regarded as simply lesser by the system, regardless of the reality of the situation. Psychopathy is rewarded and the bullying types will go on to run businesses and become cruel bosses because fascism misperceives it as individual strength. Even though it was the result of how our current society rewards and punishes its people.

    • TreadOnMe [none/use name]
      ·
      2 years ago

      There is also the issue that, as a teacher, if you are not in your game at all times establishing authority in a classroom (particularly with high schoolers) you yourself will get bullied by rich kids who are used to not suffering consequences or getting their parents involved. I remember a couple of instances of that happening at my school, when a new teacher would basically just quit after a semester because a kid whose mother was on the School Board was being an insufferable prick.

  • Circra [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    Before kids even set foot in the school, they've been segregated into different schools depending on geographic location and therefore relative wealth, ability to pay school fees etc. Then they're segregated further into age groups and in some schools gender groups.

    Few years later, they'll likely be further segregated within their class into ability at academic subjects or sports as well as which of these they do.

    Almost all of this they have no say in. All they do have a say in is social groups, who they hang out with and who they exclude. It's prob not that surprising they enforce this in the way they learned. Fairly brutally and with very little consideration for other people's wishes.

    I mean that's obviously not everything but hell, the way we educate kids is kind of fucked in the head when you think about it.

    • Des [she/her, they/them]
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      2 years ago

      the bulk of the bullying directed at me through late elementary and all of middle school was bascially just the bougie "upper middle class kids" that were in some of the same nerd classes i was tormenting me for being poor

  • Diogenes_Barrel [love/loves]
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    2 years ago

    the schoolhouse is a reflection of & means to prepare students for the society at large.

    it necessarily replicates the inequities and hierarchies of a moribund capitalistic culture. the first step, as in all things is liberation. not necessarily of the whole society or community but a school with the resources and communal involvement to reduce the differences in education from factors outside the classroom goes a long way. fukin not chargin money & providing tutors & other ancillary services to all students

  • Budwig_v_1337hoven [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    I figure it's a bit like with the wolves; they'd be fine and cool if they weren't all locked in, having to establish some kind of pack order while they're crammed in together...

    Not saying home schooling would be the solution - but I'm pretty sure drastically smaller class sizes as well as less hours overall and maybe even less pressure to perform would reduce interpersonal aggression a huge amount.

  • sooper_dooper_roofer [none/use name]
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    edit-2
    2 years ago

    I'm not trying to be racist but is bullying more of a white middle america thing? are you sure it's actually as universal as you think it is?

    because in my black/hispanic/white elementary school I had only 1 instance which could even be called bullying, which was really this socially maybe-on-the-spectrum kid who enjoyed chasing me because he liked running, and when I stopped running away from him he stopped too

    in my very Asian high school we basically had no bullies

    which is a very big contrast to how I hear people constantly talking about how much they hated high school

    • charly4994 [she/her, comrade/them]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Bullying exists outside of white middle America. I went to school in Baltimore for a time and there were plenty of bullies. One day as I was waiting for the bus one of the other kids decided that they were going to run back and forth and slap me in the face as they ran past because they didn't like me, had a kid threaten to kill me and constantly tried to attack me on my way home from the bus stop. It was bad enough that my mother found a new job and moved us elsewhere.

      When I lived in Japan some jackass took my school shoes from the shelf. I don't know what I did to them, but they clearly didn't like something I did so in the most passive aggressive thing they could do, they fucked with me. The teachers didn't give a damn, just told me to wear shoes that were like half my size. Culturally Japan has had severe bullying issues that became a very public conscious debate in the 2010s where multiple high profile deaths of students from bullying occurred because the bullying was horrific and teachers would tacitly endorse it.

    • ethereal_wave [none/use name]
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      2 years ago

      Speaking from personal experience I can definitely assure you that bullying happens in POC communities and schools too.

    • forcequit [she/her]
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      2 years ago

      I can't even picture a school experience without social hierarchies.

    • MerryChristmas [any]
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      2 years ago

      I was an undiagnosed autist with zero social cred to my name, but a lot of my POC peers in high school treated me like I was normal. I always assumed it had something to do with the ways that they had also been otherized by the predominantly white demographic of our school. Looking back, some of our interactions were definitely teasing that I didn't recognize as such, but my black friends were the only ones who ever stepped in when I was being bullied - especially when it was being done by an authority figure such as a teacher.

      It wasn't like there weren't white kids who were nice to me, too, but it seems like people who have been cast as "the other" tend to feel an often unspoken sense of comradery. I was treated pretty well by the gay kids, the compsci geeks, the back-of-class stoners, the artist-types, etc. It's sort of like when you're in the grocery line and the dude in front of you is an asshole to the cashier - if you've ever worked retail, chances are you'll be as warm and friendly to that cashier as possible when it's your turn to check out. Experience breeds empathy.

    • MikeTysonMaoTattoo [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Yeah same for high school, if you wanted it you could be friendly with anyone even with people from opposing gangs. The only time i got bullied was in elementary because i was the only white kid and all my friends fell out of the system someway or another.

  • robot_dog_with_gun [they/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    what would it take to fix it

    6:1 student ratio, literally octuple the number of teachers and classrooms.

  • Soap_Owl [any]
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    edit-2
    2 years ago

    A surprising ammount of human civilization is just renamed pack instinct. We haven't actually developed any genuine culture for the most part. Bullying is just the same jockying for rank chickens do. Calitalism is just a larger version of that. We are aware of bulling insofar as we know we should be more evolved as a species and we simply are not so.

    So long as we are bound to the odl structures the old ways will be important.

  • Catherine_Steward [she/her]
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    2 years ago

    Children are awful evil little monstrosities with underformed brains and no idea what the fuck they're doing, what the fuck they want to do, or what the fuck they should be doing. It's bad. Kids are bad, folks.

    • CTHlurker [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      So are about half of my coworkers, and I still don't think they should be tormented in the work place, where they are forced to spend a lot of their waking hours.

  • machiabelly [she/her]
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    2 years ago

    So most of the comments here are talking about the role of adults and society when it comes to encouraging certain behaviors. But I think that another important piece is the lack of autonomy that kids have and the lack of interaction across age groups. I think that kids need more boundaries set by people who aren't authority figures, like those who are parents, 15+ years older than them, teachers, ect. I think that if kids spent more time with each other in groups that they form themselves without input from authority figures and those groups are comprised of wide age groups kids will understand what acceptable behavior is much more.

    I remember an article posted here a while back about how different kids upbringings are in remote mayan societies. The kids spent time in packs with kids of different ages and they created informal boundries based on observing each other rather than directly from an authority. I don't know how to replicate this exactly within our current school system but I do remember how much less bullying there was in the summer camps I was in.

    I don't have any airtight examples on how to implement this but one idea would be to have older kids come in to help teach classes that they took the previous year. Or maybe having art or PE classes with different groups than you have your homeroom classes with.

  • HoChiMaxh [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    I work with kids and think a lot about this. I could talk about this forever but I'll just share a few thoughts.

    The problem with fixing it, as I see, it is that kids at that age don't really take cues about how to act from adults, or at least the anti-social ones don't. Inter-kid culture is very strong and has an internal logic that is learned from older kids and it is very hard to dislodge ideas.

    There is a certain amount of sorting out of "pecking order" that is somewhat built-in, or natural, which sucks. You are dealing with a bunch of undeveloped brains learning healthy and unhealthy ways to be social in a group that has their own hegemonic ideas about what is valuable within that group. I think in that environment it is natural for kids who are socially well-developed to end up on the top of this order, and kids who are behind socially to end up on the bottom. This doesn't mean that violence and mean-spiritedness is baked-in, but it is going to be natural that kids look up to and want to invite to their birthday party the kid who is socially mature, while the kid who really hasn't figured it out yet will probably not be invited to the birthday parties.

    I think where this goes from just a natural understanding of difference (like say understanding who is fast and slow at sprinting ) to bullying is when it is combined with a drive to achieve social cache by deliberately performing anti-social acts. I think this is a broader problem than simply bullying, but extends to more general rule-breaking in reckless and destructive ways where a victim to the act exists.

    I think this is where we have a lever to pull. I think in the west we tend to infantilize kids. We give them no freedom, respect or responsibility, despite how deeply these things are craved by kids. When we systemically refuse kids any agency, some will submit but some will unconsciously strive to perform acts that are uniquely their own to receive recondition and praise for them.

    Many kids find ways to pursue passions that they can be good at and they end up serving as psychic proxies for actual agency and independence, satiating this drive in a positive way - they feel they have legitimate value to offer the tribe and feel rewarded and recognized for it. This might be kids who are naturally good at academic subjects, or maybe even some other weird thing they're into like ballet, guitar, whatever. What's important is they feel like they receive social cache and feel validated as a legitimate member of the pack who gets to be confident that they not under threat of being cast out of it.

    Most kids don't have that source of feeling of unique value. Out of those kids there is a subset who are going to force it - seek out their independence themselves. However, when you are completely controlled the only agency you really have is to break rules, that's the only thing you can do that is uncontroversially truly an act of your own doing. Kids performing these acts immediately receive the type of social cache from the kids surrounding them, breaking rules (which can be in the form of bullying) become as Skinner box where when you press the button you get the dopamine, this dopamine attending to the distress you feel from feeling you're old enough to take responsibility but not having any freedom to exercise that freedom.

    Holy shit I've been typing on my phone for forever and I was just about to get to my actual thoughts on the question at hand but my partner has made breakfast for me. I'll return to finish up .

    • HoChiMaxh [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Okay so the pancakes were :chefs-kiss:

      I don't think you'll ever eliminate bullying, but I think it can be reduced. I think you can attack this problem from a few different directions.

      • you can reduce the perceived threat of not being considered valuable by the tribe

      • you can increase the perception of value to the tribe

      • you can decrease differences in social maturity

      • you can decrease the social cache associated with victimizing other kids

      So, within this framework I think you can imagine a lot of different ways we could change things to reduce bullying. I think ultimately the most powerful (and hardest to achieve) would be a cultural revolution in the west that fundamentally changes our way of treating children in the home and community so kids feel respected, listened to, included in decision making and valued contributors to the community. While this may not feel attainable, I think it does frame the problem as intergenerational and it needs to be thought of on that time frame.

      Failing that, addressing income inequality can play a big role. Doing so increases the likelihood that parents have opportunities to spend time with their children, giving meaningful guidance and intervention, paying attention to their development, freeing up opportunity think about how their kids are developing and giving them resources to address deviation. This can reduce differences in social maturity and also decrease the perceived threat of being thrown from the tribe. This can do a lot but does not address the social psycho rich kid bully - that is something different much more akin to sociopathy and is a different conversation. In theory it might actually help by reducing their privilege, but only if you are able to almost eliminate it will you eliminate them.

      In addition, expanding social programs so kids can get involved in many different types of activities to give them opportunities to find ways they can feel uniquely valuable by the community in positive outlets.

      And lastly this feels lib but I have seen a big difference in kids over the past generation with simple directed education about emotions, empathy and normalizing acceptance of difference. This addresses the fourth point. Over my time I've seen the biggest difference on this metric, as bullying is growing more likely to be seen by other kids as lame or pathetic, an act to be looked down upon.

      Anyhow those are some of my thoughts hope that helps.

  • CheGueBeara [he/him]
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    2 years ago

    To fix it we need teachers that can monitor young children and both create and model a safe environment. Kids don't know how to treat other people yet, they have to be taught it and accidental fights need to be headed off, deescalated, lead to reconciliation.

    We also need to address home life, as kids going through shit will run into more conflicts at school. Solving that starts with solving poverty, though there's more to it than that.

  • forcequit [she/her]
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    2 years ago

    Parents with contradicting priorities, mostly.
    Give parents the time and space and resources and support to raise their children properly, without having to fight tooth and nail to feed/clothe/nurture this marvellous humanworker-in-training into the being they ought to be