Poll: Should Bullys be Prosecuted? (Poll)

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Jake0fTrades

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Yeah, but it's not that simple.

How do you prove that the leading factor of a teen's suicide was the bullying of one particular student?
 

Gypsybob

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I hold big bastard grudges against folk who bullied me in school. I would have jizzed my pants at the thought of them being prosecuted and their lives thoroughly screwed by a criminal conviction.
 

orangeban

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Abandon4093 said:
orangeban said:
You're not allowed to verbally harass adults, beat up adults, steal adults money or publically ridicule adults.

Why should the situation be any different for children? Why is bullying tolerated at all?
Do you really need the answer for that?

Because the people doing it aren't adults. They haven't had the benefit of a long enough life to contextualise. There's a reason that there's an age bracket on things such as consent, voting, drinking and prosecution.

If you can't make mistakes in childhood, when exactly do we learn from them?
How exactly are bullies meant to learn from their mistakes if they aren't told they're wrong for bullying?

And if we just look at bullies and say, "Oh, it's just kids being kids!" then what about the victims? Do we just let them suffer?
 

RaikuFA

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Qitz said:
If someones getting physical with another person there's already a word for that, and it's assault. You can defend yourself right away or prosecute them.
Nope. When I was growing up, I had the shit beaten out of me in school and the teachers would go "I didn't see it so nothing happened." Yet if I fought back, guess who would be the only one who would get in trouble?

Even teachers would encourage it, yet I guess I'm supposed to just take the abuse as that is what I was told in school.
 

Sehnsucht Engel

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Yeah, they should be. I've been bullied a lot in my life. Even when I got older... I don't know, but people tend to have a problem with me. I've moved quite a bit too, but it still happens to me. It's not happened lately... I've tried to avoid people, even my classmates.

I also find gossiping to be the part of bullying I hate the most. Like when people start spreading lies about you, behind your back. If I hear someone as much as say my name, to someone else... Well, that's the kind of people I'd avoid no matter what. Not saying that all of them do it, but gossiping still says a lot about a person.
 

Vivi22

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Abandon4093 said:
Do you really need the answer for that?

Because the people doing it aren't adults. They haven't had the benefit of a long enough life to contextualise. There's a reason that there's an age bracket on things such as consent, voting, drinking and prosecution.

If you can't make mistakes in childhood, when exactly do we learn from them?
It's certainly true that the mental development of children is still ongoing and to hold them to the same bar in terms of behaviour from a legal standpoint isn't a good idea. It's also why minors are generally punished differently than adults.

But the problem here is that bullying frequently goes unpunished, and in too many case, can cross the line into criminal behaviour. How can kids be expected to learn from their behaviour when they aren't punished. Moreover, what lessons do we teach the victims by allowing bullies to be untouchable.

I'm not saying jail the bullies, but if they're going to engage in behaviour which would be criminal for an adult, there absolutely needs to be some repercussions beyond putting them in detention or suspending/expelling them which isn't going to do anything.
 

Strazdas

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Malty Milk Whistle said:
Because putting someone who theoretically could turn their lives around (It's possible) in an environment where only cruel and dick'ish survive is certainly going to improve everyone's lives.
But we already do, its called School.
 

DkLnBr

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The more hardcore bullying should be a crime, where their actions lead to suicide. Bullying this harsh could already be called a crime (for the harassment link, it just started on bullying, but the others like: psychological, racial, sexual, religious, etc. all apply as well)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harassment#Bullying
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assault
Though the dividing line is a little more difficult to determine. Should we send a kid to juvy for good-natured, playful teasing of an overly sensitive cry-baby? no. But the jerk telling the gay kid who attempted suicide to "try and try again" should get punished
 

Malty Milk Whistle

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Strazdas said:
Malty Milk Whistle said:
Because putting someone who theoretically could turn their lives around (It's possible) in an environment where only cruel and dick'ish survive is certainly going to improve everyone's lives.
But we already do, its called School.
Touché

But you know what i mean. And in school, at least there is /some/ intervention between students and teachers.
 

Strazdas

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Malty Milk Whistle said:
Strazdas said:
Malty Milk Whistle said:
Because putting someone who theoretically could turn their lives around (It's possible) in an environment where only cruel and dick'ish survive is certainly going to improve everyone's lives.
But we already do, its called School.
Touché

But you know what i mean. And in school, at least there is /some/ intervention between students and teachers.
Yes, you will get punished for running if you try to run away from the bullies.
 

TwiZtah

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manic_depressive13 said:
No, that's absurd. It sucks that some people are assholes but you can't make being a douchebag against the law. It's just not feasible.
How in the fuck do you think here? If you walked up to someone on the street, calling him names and punching the living crap out of him, you would get jailtime. However, if it happens in school, it's okay?
 

Malty Milk Whistle

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Strazdas said:
Malty Milk Whistle said:
Strazdas said:
Malty Milk Whistle said:
Because putting someone who theoretically could turn their lives around (It's possible) in an environment where only cruel and dick'ish survive is certainly going to improve everyone's lives.
But we already do, its called School.
Touché

But you know what i mean. And in school, at least there is /some/ intervention between students and teachers.
Yes, you will get punished for running if you try to run away from the bullies.
I am unsure whether you are disagreeing with my statement, or speaking from personal experience or what, to be honest.
Please clarify, you llama you.
 

Sunrider

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I voted yes, but after thinking a while, I regret it. What they do deserve is a huge beatdown.
 

Space Spoons

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I don't think bullying of that sort should go unpunished, but the responsibility needs to fall to the school, as that's where the majority of the bullying is going on. The problem is that most schools' disciplinary options have been very badly neutered over the last ten years or so, thanks to sue-happy parents who know their perfect little angels would never EVER do anything warranting punishment.

Even when teachers see bullying going on, there's really not much they can do about it without making the school liable. That's a tremendous problem.
 

Chronologist

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When I was in elementary school, I was beaten up. Every. Single. Day. I had issues with my physical co-ordination and endurance, so I couldn't land a punch even if I'd wanted to. The school only had one method of punishing students, that being out of school suspension, but it required the consent of the parents of the child in order to enforce the punishment, and the four or five bullies had parents who couldn't give two shits if their kid was beating on other kids on a regular basis. This seriously scarred my physically and psychologically, and I didn't start reaching out to others in friendship until around 9th grade, when I stopped being smaller than everyone else. I still wake up some nights sweating and hyperventilating, and I've been to several therapists.

So yeah, I think that bullies should be held more accountable for their actions, especially physical violence. I got my share of psychological bullying, but I've found that much easier to get over emotionally. Going home with bruises and black eyes every single day is a special kind of hell.
 

nekoali

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What we need to do more is to enforce the rules that are in place and to guide people away from bullying behavior. Sadly a lot of people even now don't see bullying as being a problem. It's seen more as a 'kids will be kids' behavior.. forgetting that without guidance and supervision, kids are bloody CRUEL to each other. Sadly that is the way they are brought up.

Right now though it is far more common and likely for adults to get into trouble over how they treat kids in their care than for kids to get into trouble for bullying. Teachers, school faculty, even their own parents are afraid to take a strong hand for fear of someone coming along and arresting them for child abuse. There was a time acting out of line got you a smack on the back of the head by a teacher. Now so many are afraid to even speak out about it, and the kids know it... the inmates are running the asylum.

There needs to be a balance.. not careening back and forth until the whole thing falls off the rails. Right now we're tipping over heavily.
 

MrLumber

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This is a fairly awkward topic imo, mainly because bullying is such an odd topic to begin with. Personally I feel that the only kind of bullying that is genuinely punishable is the stuff that kind be filed under harassment and assault. In other words a pervasive behavior that makes it hard to escape, which, last I checked, does not mean cyber bullying. You know why? You can regulate your own exposure to the internet, and people incapable of doing that most likely have other mental issues already at work. Additionally, its not hard to simply ignore people over the internet. If push comes to shove just don't go on your accounts and move on, its not complicated.

In summary, assault and harassment, sure, cyber bullying and teasing, nope get over it.
 

Chronologist

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Sunrider84 said:
I voted yes, but after thinking a while, I regret it. What they do deserve is a huge beatdown.
I don't believe in stooping down to their level. No, I'd spring for solitary confinement. Put them in a room with the other bullies, have a teacher watch over them and hand out assignments, don't let them talk, and extend their stay if they complain about it. Don't let them out for recess or lunch, and chaperone them out of school afterwards.

Hell, my high school did that to you if you so much as argued with a teacher. I got sent to the councilor's office, then after-school detention every day for three months because I told my music teacher that she gave me bad advice for a piece of art.

Hell, in high school a kid grabbed me and slammed me face-first into the stone floor, and all he got was a 5-day suspension. Suspension's too good for bullies, they just mess around at home and get more free time, then get an excuse why they didn't do any of their homework.
 

Sunrider

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Chronologist said:
Sunrider84 said:
I voted yes, but after thinking a while, I regret it. What they do deserve is a huge beatdown.
I don't believe in stooping down to their level. No, I'd spring for solitary confinement. Put them in a room with the other bullies, have a teacher watch over them and hand out assignments, don't let them talk, and extend their stay if they complain about it. Don't let them out for recess or lunch, and chaperone them out of school afterwards.

Hell, my high school did that to you if you so much as argued with a teacher. I got sent to the councilor's office, then after-school detention every day for three months because I told my music teacher that she gave me bad advice for a piece of art.

Hell, in high school a kid grabbed me and slammed me face-first into the stone floor, and all he got was a 5-day suspension. Suspension's too good for bullies, they just mess around at home and get more free time, then get an excuse why they didn't do any of their homework.
Agreed on the suspension part. Unless they have wicked strict parents, it's pretty much useless.
I don't think yours is a bad idea, but I still think mine is superior. It might be drastic, but it's the only thing I've seen with my own eyes that actually works.