Moderator: Community Team

 xeno
				xeno
			






 
		xeno wrote:What does it matter to me now? The internet desensitized me to the world at a very early age so my soul has already been corrupted.

 BigBallinStalin
				BigBallinStalin
			
















 
			BigBallinStalin wrote:xeno wrote:What does it matter to me now? The internet desensitized me to the world at a very early age so my soul has already been corrupted.
I think that's the marijuana talking.

 xeno
				xeno
			






 
		

 BigBallinStalin
				BigBallinStalin
			
















 
			BigBallinStalin wrote:Hey, for you what created the desensitization first? The Internet or marijuana?

 xeno
				xeno
			






 
		Army of GOD wrote:The beauty of the internet is that, as long as someone isn't going Clockwork Orange on your ass and forcing your eyes to stare at a computer screen, is that if you don't like something, you don't have to read it. It's amazing though how many opinions you'll find on here, regardless if they're just a troll or not.
 PLAYER57832
				PLAYER57832
			















 
		Woodruff wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Woodruff wrote: Just as with bullying "in person".
That's the thing. I don't think it's as obvious to me as to how much bullying is too much. I feel like, as long as there isn't an end game (a suicide or something) of some sort, it's just a vague spectrum of bullying intensity.
Seeing it in the school all the time, I don't agree at all that it's a vague spectrum of bullying intensity. There are specific actions that are a part of "the bullying concept", if you will, that take the bullying to a level where active action against the bullies needs to be taken.
 PLAYER57832
				PLAYER57832
			















 
		PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Woodruff wrote: Just as with bullying "in person".
That's the thing. I don't think it's as obvious to me as to how much bullying is too much. I feel like, as long as there isn't an end game (a suicide or something) of some sort, it's just a vague spectrum of bullying intensity.
Seeing it in the school all the time, I don't agree at all that it's a vague spectrum of bullying intensity. There are specific actions that are a part of "the bullying concept", if you will, that take the bullying to a level where active action against the bullies needs to be taken.
I gotta disagree here.
Let me give you an example from a specific bullying curriculum.
The scenario given was one boy (weaker, younger, less popular) was constantly asking to join a basketball game. Every day, he gets told "no". In a bit, it escalates and every day, the kid is derided, perhaps even physically pushed, but not necessarily.
This was given as an example of bullying by the bigger kid because it happened repeatedly.
HOWEVER, let's change the context just slightly. Instead of it being a boy wanting to join a game, maybe its a boy asking for a date or kiss from a girl. OR... maybe its even a homosexual boy asking another boy not known as a homosexual.
The thing is, most people would consider the "asker" to be something of a bully, to be causing harm in the second situation. Yet, objectively the situations are pretty much the same.

 Symmetry
				Symmetry
			


 
		PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Woodruff wrote: Just as with bullying "in person".
That's the thing. I don't think it's as obvious to me as to how much bullying is too much. I feel like, as long as there isn't an end game (a suicide or something) of some sort, it's just a vague spectrum of bullying intensity.
Seeing it in the school all the time, I don't agree at all that it's a vague spectrum of bullying intensity. There are specific actions that are a part of "the bullying concept", if you will, that take the bullying to a level where active action against the bullies needs to be taken.
I gotta disagree here.
Let me give you an example from a specific bullying curriculum.
The scenario given was one boy (weaker, younger, less popular) was constantly asking to join a basketball game. Every day, he gets told "no". In a bit, it escalates and every day, the kid is derided, perhaps even physically pushed, but not necessarily.
This was given as an example of bullying by the bigger kid because it happened repeatedly.
HOWEVER, let's change the context just slightly. Instead of it being a boy wanting to join a game, maybe its a boy asking for a date or kiss from a girl. OR... maybe its even a homosexual boy asking another boy not known as a homosexual.
The thing is, most people would consider the "asker" to be something of a bully, to be causing harm in the second situation. Yet, objectively the situations are pretty much the same.

 Woodruff
				Woodruff
			









 
		Users browsing this forum: No registered users