He's just a little mangina anyways, right?

badbabysitter

Vault Girl
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http://feministing.com/2014/03/18/s...ecause-its-a-trigger-for-bullying/#more-77567


This story is totally enraging. It’s almost funny but it’s heart-breaking. It’s the story about a school which overtly sanctions bullying and punishes the student who gets bullied; a school which condones violence but prohibits the use of a My Little Pony bag. It’s a story of official and institutionalized victim-blaming, gender-policing, cowardice and cruelty.

Nine year-old Grayson Bruce, of North Carolina, wore a backpack with a character from his favorite TV show, My Little Pony, a children’s cartoon. For that, Grayson was bullied, emotionally and physically. The eloquent and adorable Grayson told his local ABC affiliate, “They’re taking it a little too far, with punching me, pushing me down, calling me horrible names, stuff that really shouldn’t happen.” But don’t worry! According to a school spokesperson, ”an initial step was taken to immediately address a situation that had created a disruption in the classroom. Buncombe County Schools takes bullying very seriously, and we will continue to take steps to resolve this issue.” So, what did the school do about it? Protect Grayson? Punish or speak to the bullies about why what they did was hurtful? No. They punished Grayson and protected the bullies. You see, it’s Grayson, and not the kids who punched him over a backpack choice, who are the problem. So, the school responded to the incident by prohibiting Grayson from bringing the My Little Pony bag to school. The bag, according to the school, is a “trigger for bullying.”

In other words, the blame for the disruptive behavior falls on Grayson. Grayson is inviting bullying by daring to use a bag from a TV show that the bullies consider to be a show for girls. He is disrupting gender norms, not that the school would ever use any language like that. And the school doesn’t want to disrupt the bullying because that would require some real work on their part and because the bullying, though abusive, respects gender norms. The school is more comfortable with physical and emotional attacks than it is with behavior it perceives as gender-non-conforming. Grayson’s behavior is deemed abnormal and is responsible for inviting the normal punitive response of bullying.

Does this sound familiar? One can’t help but hear the ultimate rape culture refrain translated into the realm of bullying: “If he didn’t want to get bullied, he shouldn’t have worn that backpack…Boys will be boys…He was asking for it.”

The echo of victim-blaming and rape culture is certainly heard by Grayson’s mom, who called out the school for its reprehensible response: “Saying a lunchbox is a trigger for bullying, is like saying a short skirt is a trigger for rape. It’s flawed logic, it doesn’t make any sense.”

Luckily, Grayson’s story has served as a “trigger” for support. A friend made him a Facebook page, which 21,000 people have liked and where hundreds of people have left messages of support and encouragement. It is inspiring to see this reaction. But it in no way absolves the school.

Grayson has a supportive network of friends and family, in real life and online. But not every child who is bullied survives. A study released earlier this month, in fact, found that kids who are bullied are twice as likely to think about and attempt suicide than their non-bullied peers. The story of 11-year-old Michael Morones, for example, demonstrates just how dangerous school apathy is. Michael, also of North Carolina, was also teased and bullied over his love of My Little Pony. He attempted suicide and had unknowable brain damage. Luckily, he is conscious and recovering. For bullying prevention expert Nancy Mullin, the school’s lack of response to Michael’s bullying was a contributing factor in his attempted suicide. Though Michael’s parents were supportive of his interests, “The missing piece here is what the school is doing about this.”

Schools fail their students (both the victims and perpetrators of bullying) and their communities when they shift the blame onto victims, and turn a blind eye to the root causes of bullying.
 
The OP post contains a major faux pas:

  • The use of the term "rape culture".

http://rainn.org/images/03-2014/WH-Task-Force-RAINN-Recommendations.pdf

In the last few years, there has been an unfortunate trend towards blaming “rape culture” for the extensive problem of sexual violence on campus. While it is helpful to point out the systemic barriers to addressing the problem, it is important not to lose sight of a simple fact: Rape is caused not by cultural factors but by the conscious decisions, of a small percentage of the community, to commit a violent crime.

http://time.com/30545/its-time-to-end-rape-culture-hysteria/
RAINN urges the White House to “remain focused on the true cause of the problem” and suggests a three-pronged approach for combating rape: empowering community members through bystander intervention education, using “risk-reduction messaging” to encourage students to increase their personal safety, and promoting clearer education on “where the ‘consent line’ is.” It also asserts that we should treat rape like the serious crime it is by giving power to trained law enforcement rather than internal campus judicial boards.

RAINN is especially critical of the idea that we need to focus on teaching men not to rape — the hallmark of rape culture activism. Since rape exists because our culture condones and normalizes it, activists say, we can end the epidemic of sexual violence only by teaching boys not to rape.

No one would deny that we should teach boys to respect women. But by and large, this is already happening. By the time men reach college, RAINN explains, “most students have been exposed to 18 years of prevention messages, in one form or another.” The vast majority of men absorbs these messages and views rape as the horrific crime that it is. So efforts to address rape need to focus on the very small portion of the population that “has proven itself immune to years of prevention messages.” They should not vilify the average guy.

In short: RAPE CULTURE is less legitimate than the word 'friendzone'.

You want some ice for that burn?
 
You don't often hear expressions like "trigger for bullying", "rape culture" and "gender non-conforming". However, "boys will be boys" is pretty common. Could be a reason for that.
 
I agree with your points.

However you're wasting your breath

Literotica promotes two things.

Rape culture and bullying in general.

So you're railing away to an audience that would be the people who would pick on this kid.

The site refers to cyber bullying as "free speech"
 
I agree with your points.

However you're wasting your breath

Literotica promotes two things.

Rape culture and bullying in general.

So you're railing away to an audience that would be the people who would pick on this kid.

The site refers to cyber bullying as "free speech"
Do you know what RAINN stands for? They say "rape culture" is bullshit. I'm sorry, but compared to them, who the fuck are you?

Oh I know, you're that pussified fucking mangina who hates your own gender and brags about imaginary rape threats you supposedly got via email and your daughters knowing shaolin kempo kung fooey because you thought that would intimidate people.

Hilariously, you wound up spouting that tough guy bullshit to someone who knows Tae Kwon Do, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, .357 Magnum, 9mm, and the ultimate tool for getting rid of rabies infected manginas: Mossberg.

Fuck you, and I hope you wind up married to Catherine Kieu when she gets out of jail.

Oh yeah and didn't your feminist stories get nuked by Literotica? Man, you gotta suck to have that happen to you. Fucking pansy.
 
Do you know what RAINN stands for? They say "rape culture" is bullshit. I'm sorry, but compared to them, who the fuck are you?

Oh I know, you're that pussified fucking mangina who hates your own gender and brags about imaginary rape threats you supposedly got via email and your daughters knowing shaolin kempo kung fooey because you thought that would intimidate people.

Hilariously, you wound up spouting that tough guy bullshit to someone who knows Tae Kwon Do, Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, .357 Magnum, 9mm, and the ultimate tool for getting rid of rabies infected manginas: Mossberg.

Fuck you, and I hope you wind up married to Catherine Kieu when she gets out of jail.

Oh yeah and didn't your feminist stories get nuked by Literotica? Man, you gotta suck to have that happen to you. Fucking pansy.

I read the article you posted regarding RAINN. They did not say what you are claiming they said. They made the reasonable point that a focus on rape culture should not detract from placing the responsibility for their actions on individual rapists. They did not say that rape culture is "bullshit".
 
I read the article you posted regarding RAINN. They did not say what you are claiming they said. They made the reasonable point that a focus on rape culture should not detract from placing the responsibility for their actions on individual rapists. They did not say that rape culture is "bullshit".

it's not what said that counts to LT..it's what LT thinks is being said
 
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