Kid Bullied For My Little Pony Backpack Told Not To Bring It To School Anymore
from the blaming-the-victim dept
In the ongoing idiocy that is schools employing zero tolerance policies, the admittedly misguided overbearing results at least tend to have some pretend logic behind them. The school is afraid of guns, so ban everything that remotely looks like a gun, even if we're just talking about some kid's fingers. The school wants to curtail bullying, so they go nuclear at anything even remotely resembling bullying. Yes, it's misguided, yes, it's stupid, but you can at least follow along the logical path they walked before jumping off the cliff.
But where one California North Carolina grade school got the stones to blame Grayson Bruce and his backpack for the bullying he's endured is beyond me.
A mother and her 9-year-old son say school officials won't let him bring a My Little Pony bag to school. The boy and his mother say he's getting shoved around because bullies think his pick of a favorite toy is for girls.My Little Pony, which has enjoyed something of a resurgence lately, is a show about friendship. One would have to work extremely hard after being hit in the head with a hammer in order to find anything offensive within it. The only explanation anyone has offered for banning Grayson from bringing his damned backpack to school has been that it sets off the bullies to go about their bullying ways. This, in case you're dense, is about as pure a form of blaming the victim as one can find. Fortunately, while the school in question decided to paint a damned backpack as the culprit in this scenario, the power of social media has risen to support Grayson.
Since it aired, the story has been picked up by websites, blogs and television stations across the nation. Tuesday it was one of the top stories trending on social media. The Facebook page 9-year-old Grayson Bruce's parents have set up for him now has more than 3,700 "Likes". Grayson has developed a following on Facebook after a friend made a support page for him. Grayson stands by his favorite cartoon and the message he says it sends. His mother says, why not?This is absurd. In a world where too many schools are embracing too many zero tolerance policies, this one is actually going down the road of removing the subject of the bullying instead. What fun! What if the young man was gay? Or black? Mexican? What if he liked a certain kind of music, or was a huge fan of the wrong sports team? What if he had a medical condition? Sorry, sport, but you have to leave your crutches at home, 'cuz the kids just ain't down with them.
But Noreen says Thursday the school asked him to leave the bag at home because it had become a distraction and was a "trigger for bullying."
No, the proper response to is to pull those bullying Grayson aside and explain to them in stark terms why their actions aren't acceptable. Banning MLP backpacks can't be the answer, lest we allow all those children to learn the exact wrong lesson in their place of learning.
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Filed Under: bullying, my little pony, victim blaming, zero tolerance
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*Headdesk*
Seriously, oww...
The stupidity is strong with that school.
And people wonder why American Education is so f'ed up.
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So, they're treating this incident as if the bullies are the victims?
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
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That won't stop the bullying and may make it worse
And add in that if he tells them the truth, now he'll get bullied for being forced to leave it at home! "So even the teachers/principal/etc. think you're backpack's too sissy for a boy!"
How stupid are these school officials to not realize this? Are they trying to drive the poor victim to suicide or something?
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There is only one reason that we have a "bullying problem"
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Tough
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Glenn Beck, of all people.
Something tells me everyone in that school’s administration regrets Streisanding their school instead of, y’know, doing something about the bullies.
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Re: That won't stop the bullying and may make it worse
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2) Yes, this is extremely frustrating. However, it is not a new problem. This kind of crap has been going on for years, be it an official policy or not. :/
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genre savvy
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Re: Tough
1) Bullying is recognized as an actual issue, and bullies are actually punished in many cases. This case? No. But then it gets blown up online, and it's only a matter of time before things turn in the right direction.
2) The internet exists. Kids can make friends outside of the completely arbitrary "idiots who happen to live nearby" which is what school is. A bullied kid can be someone else online, can be anonymous, and actually have social interactions. He isn't forced into a life more or less alone.
3) Being different is more widely accepted in our culture now than any other time in US history. If you're into something, you can pretty easily find others with the same interests. Knowing that you're a boy growing up who isn't into sports, but is into My Little Pony is a whole lot easier when there's a horde of people in the same boat as you than thinking you're the only one and you're weird or wrong.
In conclusion, being a kid who is different than the commonly accepted norm anytime in the past was FAR worse than now.
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F*** You, school! Protect the victim, not the bullies!
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Keep that skirt home, girl!
Let's also disallow girls from wearing skirts, because they're just going to encourage rape.
Zero tolerance is important so we don't allow the bullies and the rapists to have a perfectly legitimate right to do what they want to do because the victim had the wrong article of clothing or an accessory.
Or we can apply zero tolerance to bullying by school officials and remove anyone who creates or applies a zero tolerance policy.
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Wait.
Isn't that the typical answer from abusers? I wouldn't [insert abuse here] if you didn't make me. Or, if you didn't do [insert thing here].
Nice. Let's tell kids that the solution to abuse is to lay down.
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The Twisted Sister Effect
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It's ironic how the school is actually right.
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John Wayne rode horses
OK John Wayne is a bad example, but plenty of other real men.
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Re:
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Re: Wait.
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Am I the only other (going to hell) individual that thought "Huh, if he totally should have went with the mentally challenged angle"
'cuz the kids just ain't down with the Down's.
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Re: Wait.
I sure hope not.
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Re: The Twisted Sister Effect
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http://www.chron.com/neighborhood/fortbend/article/Boy-inspires-mean-lookin-guys-to-flock-to- Sugar-5224579.php
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Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Tough
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Nah, still zero tolerance
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Re: Re: Re: Tough
Try being one forty years ago.
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Re: Re: Re: Tough
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Re: The Twisted Sister Effect
As Greevar pointed out, parents today aren't doing much actual parenting. They've grown lax and lazy, and don't bother to teach children tolerate others who are not like themselves, and let the TV, movies, and video games teach them instead.
What's ironic is that the newest MLP TV show: Friendship is Magic (which I myself have watched, and I'm 22 years old) is a well-written, savvy show that isn't overly saccharine in the least, and a lot of good morals can be taught to children through the show because of how the stories are told.
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Re:
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He's not alone
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Re: genre savvy
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Re: Re: That won't stop the bullying and may make it worse
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Reality Check
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California?
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Re: *Headdesk*
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Re: Re:
Yeah, so now my daughters are mortified that some girls come to school practically nude, but at least they aren't forced to wear a uniform every day.
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You'll get your Cutie Mark one day.
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Re: Re: Re:
This is surprising considering that the district(in Texas) is a growing one with a large portion of the district still covering rural communities. Diversity is growing(although still quite weighted towards Caucasians) and there is a general level of tolerance to differing personalities.
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And then see what happens.
"We left that one at home. Now he's got a new backpack. Oh, that didn't stop the bullying? Hmm... I wonder why. Why don't you just give me a list of 'approved' backpacks, and then make all the other kids follow it as well?"
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Re:
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So not only will you not stop the bullying, not only are you punishing someone for being bullied, but you in fact decide to act like you're a villain from the show.
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Re: Re: Re: Tough
Because bigots only exist in the south? You're bias is showing, you might want to cover that up.
It wasn't until I lived in Michigan that I learned what a "kike" was, and what it meant to "Jew" someone.
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Lets see..
we Drop down food for them..
HOW do you find bullies?
BAIT them.
If the school REALLY wants to find bullies..They now have the BAIT.
NOW retrain them into NICE little slaves.
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Re: Reality Check
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Re:
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A little bit of my faith in humanity has been restored.
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Re: *Headdesk*
I wonder if that's the trade off of having high quality education.....
Hell... the Philippines is struggling about quality education and I have yet to hear such case occurs here, solely blaming the victim about the situation...( I can't say it's the same with Politics, mates... It's another matter...)
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Re: Re: Re: Tough
IMO... Bullying is the simplest form of discrimination... Plain and simple.
They see someone in the school in their mind not worthy, too different, easy pickings and/or a form of entertainment for them once they "played" with the poor kid.
they didn't see a kid, schoolmate or colleague but a toy to be played "Roughly".
soon those bully, without any proper guidance, will discriminate even more once they grew up.
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If they actually dared to punish the bullies and stand up to the parents about it, it would stop. But it is easier to make 1 kid change to allow them to avoid having to be the grownup.
How do they expect to raise the next generation of leaders when they refuse to show them there are rules and consequences? Perhaps some day when they are old one of their former students will be their caretaker, and ignore the rule that they needed that pill at a certain time... wonder if they will still think they did the right thing then.
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Good message to send
When will society stop victim blaming and finally put fault where it belongs? In, you know, the people *actually* doing the bad thing?
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Re: Re: Tough
Everyone wants to pretend things are the worst they've ever been and going downhill, but that bit of delusional thinking has been going on since pre-Roman days and if t'were true we'd be at the bottom of a 2500 year decline, much much worse off than we are today. The phenomenon is understandable in intra-generational terms as OF COURSE things were better back in "the old days"...YOU WERE YOUNG THEN. derp.
Also of interest, after all the appropriately-derided examples of the abdication of common sense in favor of Zero Tolerance Policies, this particular example is what we get when left to the mercies of "common sense" as wielded by school administrators. Don't really see a winning course of action here...
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*sigh* Contrarian impulse strikes again...
Would you approve of school administrators telling a child to leave an "Al Qaeda Death to the Crusaders" backpack home?
How about a Confederate flag backpack??
How about a Third Reich backpack?
I can hear the "Yeah, but..."s already. So we don't have a principle here, only a preference? Agreed?
I sympathize with Grayson. I skipped grades, got glasses and then moved to rural southern schools, a perfect storm for bullying. And so it came to pass. BUT. Bullying is an artifact, a temporary stage in social maturation, at least for the huge majority of people. These 'bullies' need to stop pushing him around, but you can't make them like MLP, or Grayson, for that matter. They are, in fact, merely expressing themselves, but need to be taught that this is an unacceptable manner in which to do so. They're not evil, you guys are just projecting that. They're 9-year-olds. School needs to help them with the socialization process, which they are failing to do in this case. But that's about it.
The exaggerations, imaginative characterizations and wild projections regarding these kids is kind of alarming. The irony of a torches-and-pitchforks campaign demanding those bullies be forced to goodthink under the threat of, presumably, school-administered bullying (the 'good kind', from the authorities) seems to be...hard to grasp, apparently.
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Response to: Watchit on Mar 19th, 2014 @ 4:37pm
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I read shit like this
How'z about, punish the bullies....? Zero tolerance should be banned from use, and educators should be forcibly retrained in the use of god forbid, common sense... or lose their jobs
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Re: "...you can beat him up because you just can't control yourself..."
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Re: *sigh* Contrarian impulse strikes again...
Except that wouldn't have been a better outcome, just manipulation of a stupid system. Zero tolerance, my ass.
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Re: I read shit like this
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Mom and I were discussing this the other day.
Maybe Pink/Blue is great for distinguishing sex when they are all bald/hairless platypuses, but after they get older, why keep forcing the Pink/Blue stereotypical toys?
Oh. That's right. Because their parents generally freak out and pull the boy child away from pink toys, and the girl child away from the trucks.
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The one time I did it, it was just before science class, and unfortunately the dude was sitting next to me (alphabetical order my ass), and he was like NEVER DO THIS AGAIN, then after that I never had a problem with him.
I'm so glad I'm not a kid now, shit's complicated, we had nerds, skater/punks (with a nerdy side most of the time), metalheads, and that was it, not even jocks, cos EVERYONE DID SPORTS THEN, yeah, in the middle 90's, when internet was 33,6k max in speed so we'd get bored quick with it.
I'm rambling, had some hydrocodone syrup due to my really bad bronchitis, but there's a point somewhere in there. Bronies just ask for it is all I'm saying, even girls laugh at them.
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Re: Re: Tough
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Re: Re: The Twisted Sister Effect
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Re: John Wayne rode horses
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Re: Response to: Watchit on Mar 19th, 2014 @ 4:37pm
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Re: *sigh* Contrarian impulse strikes again...
http://imgur.com/aEb5orV
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RE: Red hair and albinism
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Re: That won't stop the bullying and may make it worse
Yet here's a chance to stop the bullying (and possibly stop a cycle of violence) before it begins.
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Re: Re: Response to: Watchit on Mar 19th, 2014 @ 4:37pm
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Re:
Mr. Clapper, kids watch tv and go on the internet. This Justin, ask Bieber. They are watching Mr. Rogers.
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Re: Mom and I were discussing this the other day.
I don't care if it is pink or blue or how many age of majority cards they have, I prefer a hairy platypus.
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Re: Re: Mom and I were discussing this the other day.
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Re: Response to: Watchit on Mar 19th, 2014 @ 4:37pm
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Re: The Twisted Sister Effect
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Re:
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Re: Re: Re: The Twisted Sister Effect
Strange that you thought he said either of those things.
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Re: *sigh* Contrarian impulse strikes again...
How about a Confederate flag backpack??
How about a Third Reich backpack?
If they asked him to leave it at home because he was getting bullied then I would not approve. If not, then it would depend on the reason.
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Re: Mom and I were discussing this the other day.
You're going to go right past the bullies and the bullies' parents to the toy makers?? If only his backpack weren't pink (oops, it was blue) this wouldn't have happened?
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Backpack
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Re: Wait.
It's important to not let them get away with it.
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My Little Pony
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Re:
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