The case of the bullied kid Casey - Page 15
Forum Index > General Forum |
Note: a number of sources are saying that Beast Master Casey has been suspended for 4 days and that the rat boy was suspended for 21. Look around for more sources please. | ||
Algar
United States27 Posts
| ||
Kinetik_Inferno
United States1431 Posts
@matjlav, yes, they do. Bullies can ruin your social life. They make your life miserable and should burn. | ||
matjlav
Germany2435 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:50 exploding.godhand wrote: serves the little shit. @matjlav, yes, they do. Bullies can ruin your social life. They make your life miserable and should burn. kids act stupid and hurt someone during grade school, ergo they deserve to have their entire lives ruined forgive me if I don't follow the logic. | ||
Kniwom
South Africa17 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:32 sc4k wrote: 30% parents 70% stupid child's own fault. You can't just randomly sit your child down and say 'son, don't pick on people who look like mike haggar, they might slam your head into the cold hard concrete'. You can't lay too much blame on the parents. It's not like what this kid was doing was particularly unusual behaviour, most kids do it. It's hard to school your kid not to poke fun at people. I do see what you are saying. However, I don't think its unreasonable to sit your son down and say "don't fight/pick on/bully anyone at school (irrespective of how big they are)", and then to punish them if any bullying is done. The fact that most kids do it is all the more disturbing, it means that parents/teachers are not taking it as seriously as they should. Apart from the obvious mental and physical trauma the victim goes through, this video shows that it can be very dangerous and possibly even fatal for the bully. Kids minds are simple, if they do something and it benefits them, they do it again. If it has negative consequences for them, then not so much. At the moment, the only negative consequences a bully ever gets are from the victim when they finally stand up for themselves, which means they do not stop until it is (possibly) too late. Punishment for bullying should be severe, not just a suspension from school (Free days off school is not a punishment imo). | ||
Kishuu
Brazil108 Posts
okay, we must have different definitions of harmless. Why do all bullies deserve their necks snapped again? This is what I mean when I say people in TL started to talk like lawyers. And stupid ones at that. Seriously, when did he said all bullies deserve their necks to be snapped? | ||
andrewlt
United States7702 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:48 matjlav wrote: okay, we must have different definitions of harmless. Why do all bullies deserve their necks snapped again? I didn't say they all deserve their necks snapped. I took issue with your statement that they often turn out fine in adulthood. They don't. | ||
FabledIntegral
United States9232 Posts
| ||
InsaniaK
Sweden120 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:19 Almin wrote: Hitting someone, a low chance of knocking him unconscious(especially at that age, i mean comon) Kicking them in the stomach or something yeah, not the face, too dangerous, but not too high imo. Bodyslam=high chance, considering if he landed wrong. Yeah I would've preferred to see a fistfight, much less dangerous, you're blowing your statistics out of control. Ok, so. First you say that fists/feet would be a lot better, then you say that he should only kick him in certain spots. Next are you going to say that he only should stroke him with a feather? Seriously, if he had hit him with all he had in the face, that kid'd be down. | ||
matjlav
Germany2435 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:54 Kishuu wrote: This is what I mean when I say people in TL started to talk like lawyers. And stupid ones at that. Seriously, when did he said all bullies deserve their necks to be snapped? On March 15 2011 03:50 sc4k wrote: Faggot little child deserved a broken neck, as do all bullies. Yes, I'm twisting the truth so heavily | ||
acker
United States2958 Posts
"No one is going to understand this because of some very serious problems with our culture and a general inability to think rationally, but when a child approaches another child and punches him in the face, that is assault. The word 'bully' should be removed from the vocabulary. There is no excuse for criminal behavior at any age. It is completely irresponsible to allow children to behave this way. That criminal behavior continues into adulthood, and the children who are assaulted physically or emotionally are affected just the same or even worse than you would be if it happened to you in your parking lot at work. Just so people can try to comprehend this, imagine, you have just driven up to your building at work, and get out of the car. As you approach the building, one of the other employees starts yelling at you and calling you names. Several other people are walking by at the time, including one of the bosses. The boss stops for a moment to look sternly at the employee who is calling you names and yelling at you, and tells him, "knock off the bullying Tom, its time to get to work". Then, as you boss walks into the building, Tom, your coworker, punches you in the face. There is a belief that physical and emotional assault should be treated differently in children. In fact, it is tolerated, and those children being abused are expected to retaliate physically. What should happen is that those children who physically or emotionally assault other children should be removed from the school immediately and rehabilitated." On March 15 2011 04:56 matjlav wrote: Yes, I'm twisting the truth so heavily Yes, you are. | ||
floor exercise
Canada5847 Posts
![]() Hopefully he gets on the high school wrestling teams and ends up with a scholarship to a div 1 school | ||
sc4k
United Kingdom5454 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:53 Kniwom wrote: I do see what you are saying. However, I don't think its unreasonable to sit your son down and say "don't fight/pick on/bully anyone at school (irrespective of how big they are)", and then to punish them if any bullying is done. The fact that most kids do it is all the more disturbing, it means that parents/teachers are not taking it as seriously as they should. Apart from the obvious mental and physical trauma the victim goes through, this video shows that it can be very dangerous and possibly even fatal for the bully. Kids minds are simple, if they do something and it benefits them, they do it again. If it has negative consequences for them, then not so much. At the moment, the only negative consequences a bully ever gets are from the victim when they finally stand up for themselves, which means they do not stop until it is (possibly) too late. Punishment for bullying should be severe, not just a suspension from school (Free days off school is not a punishment imo). Yeah I agree with all you say I just personally can't see any more blame being laid on the parents. It's hard to get through to your kids about the negative impact of bullying and what it feels like for the other party involved. It can take until someone is 20+ to experience any real feelings of sympathy...It's the school who needs to have immense reprimanding ability, like you said. You need to have zero tolerance on bullying. So maybe it should be 30% parents, 30% kid and 40% school or something. Still, epically badass street justice, I'm still reeling from the high levels of awesome. Haha I hope they make more SF style vids like this, already laughing my ass off: | ||
andrewlt
United States7702 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:56 matjlav wrote: Yes, I'm twisting the truth so heavily Attributing the quote of the guy you responded to to everybody else who responded to you isn't twisting the truth so heavily? | ||
Klunssila
United States220 Posts
![]() -bullied person. | ||
matjlav
Germany2435 Posts
On March 15 2011 04:55 andrewlt wrote: I didn't say they all deserve their necks snapped. I took issue with your statement that they often turn out fine in adulthood. They don't. Okay, show me the study. Show me that the majority of kids who bully (or kids who get bullied) during school don't grow up to be normal, productive adults. And if we're going to get back on this argument, let me clarify that just because kids on both sides get through the bullying experience to become successful adults, does NOT mean that the experience was "essentially harmless." I don't know why you equate these two things. | ||
ThaZenith
Canada3116 Posts
I'm surprised a big kid like that would take it for that long. He shoulda floored that kid off the first punch. Not the first punch that day, but the first punch the kid ever threw at him however long ago it would have been. | ||
BoldMan
United States168 Posts
lol wtf? nice body slam though, that was like BATISTA style the little kid bully probably got abused (read: raped in the ass by his dad) as a kid some fucked up shit | ||
matjlav
Germany2435 Posts
what a detailed argument | ||
Rabbitmaster
1357 Posts
| ||
ReketSomething
United States6012 Posts
Go casey! | ||
| ||