9-year-old died by suicide after he was bullied

Only a fool thinks they can choose their gender
You know that's not what this is about, right? Or are you a confused little person all the time?
You know what it’s about? Political correctness makes no sense in the real world… No matter how much you love socialism it will always be a failure
 
Only a fool thinks they can choose their gender
You know that's not what this is about, right? Or are you a confused little person all the time?
You know what it’s about? Political correctness makes no sense in the real world… No matter how much you love socialism it will always be a failure
And yet, no one condemns 9 year olds being taught to bully others and to call others gay and beat them up.
 
Only a fool thinks they can choose their gender
You know that's not what this is about, right? Or are you a confused little person all the time?
You know what it’s about? Political correctness makes no sense in the real world… No matter how much you love socialism it will always be a failure
And yet, no one condemns 9 year olds being taught to bully others and to call others gay and beat them up.
Bullying is part of life... live with it
 
Only a fool thinks they can choose their gender
You know that's not what this is about, right? Or are you a confused little person all the time?

Someone who doesn't even know the difference between boys and girls is not in a good position to call anyone else “confused”.

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A student at our children's school committed suicide this week, my understanding is bullying played a part in it.

It's a real problem. Bullies are cowards at heart preying on what they view as weak and defenseless.
When kids watch TV and see the president calling people names, talking down to people, calling for them to be beaten, calling other SOBs, attacking people on tweeter....does that help bullying in our schools and society as a whole?
 
When I grew up every kid was bullied by somebody, and no one ever committed suicide.

It was just a part of life, and taught you about yourself and how to deal with other people. .... :cool:

The best way to deal with a bully is to beat the living hell out of one. In school I saw that happen, everyday this guy would pick on this real quiet kid, one day something snapped with the quiet kid and he beat the snot out of the bully, it was ugly I never saw the bully go after anyone else for the duration of school.

My father called those things life lessons
Same can be applied to trump, so he can stop calling people names and intimidating them.
 
When I grew up every kid was bullied by somebody, and no one ever committed suicide.

It was just a part of life, and taught you about yourself and how to deal with other people. .... :cool:

The best way to deal with a bully is to beat the living hell out of one. In school I saw that happen, everyday this guy would pick on this real quiet kid, one day something snapped with the quiet kid and he beat the snot out of the bully, it was ugly I never saw the bully go after anyone else for the duration of school.

My father called those things life lessons
Same can be applied to trump, so he can stop calling people names and intimidating them.

TDS is an ugly thing. The thread isn't about Trump go find one that is
 
When kids watch TV and see the president calling people names, talking down to people, calling for them to be beaten, calling other SOBs, attacking people on tweeter....does that help bullying in our schools and society as a whole?
I seriously doubt that kids are watching the President on TV.

They are playing video games or hanging out with their friends. ... :cool:
 
When kids watch TV and see the president calling people names, talking down to people, calling for them to be beaten, calling other SOBs, attacking people on tweeter....does that help bullying in our schools and society as a whole?
I seriously doubt that kids are watching the President on TV.

They are playing video games or hanging out with their friends. ... :cool:
Wrong....
Few occasions when tRump was mocking his opponents and I had TV on mute while listening on my headphones my 9 year old girl told me, why is he acting like a bully.
And I'm sure millions of kids saw and heard the precious president say all kinds of nice word to his opponents.
 
When kids watch TV and see the president calling people names, talking down to people, calling for them to be beaten, calling other SOBs, attacking people on tweeter....does that help bullying in our schools and society as a whole?
I seriously doubt that kids are watching the President on TV.

They are playing video games or hanging out with their friends. ... :cool:
Wrong....
Few occasions when tRump was mocking his opponents and I had TV on mute while listening on my headphones my 9 year old girl told me, why is he acting like a bully.
And I'm sure millions of kids saw and heard the precious president say all kinds of nice word to his opponents.

Yeah sure
 
Let me guess...........Forced Acceptance Pravda..............using the tragedy of a confused boy that probably had bad parents....

Children are brutal.........bullies are brutal.........kid needed to hide it if possible or the parents needed to council him for feeling this way at such and early age....................

Perhaps then he wouldn't be dead.
 
In my opinion the problem lays with todays parenting.

The parents constantly tell little Johnny he is the best, the smartest, and is perfect. Let him play in sports where everyone gets a trophy and tell him he is the best player on the team.

Then when little Johnny figures out that he isn't the smartest kid in class and in reality sucks at playing sports. That his parents have lied, and he's just a normal average kid.

Little Johnny's world is shattered and he becomes suicidal. ..... :cool:


Mhm....look at the millienals...life hit them like a freight train because they were not prepared for it

I took my daughter to college orientation this summer. About 75% of the presentation for the parents was basically How To Let Buttercup Go. That Your Kiddo Is An Adult Now and etc.

And yes, on the social media parents' group, they still call their adult children "Kiddos". It's enough to make me puke...or drink wine. heh

Our youngest is eight, I've listened to her talking to her friends and they will go on about how things are not fair or whatever, her favorite saying is "suck it up buttercup", she gets it from her father. She's being raised to know sometimes life isn't fair but she can overcome obstacles. Do we help her? Of course but we teach her...life is a constant lesson, teach children to recognize those lessons.

The problem is children are being handed everything, coddled, everyone gets a trophy, ...life doesn't work that way and when they hit the real world they are lost. Teach them, prepare them and guide them

This is the backlash...and thank God for it. "Participation Trophy" has become part of the vernacular and thank God for that too, so we're starting to see some kickback against this notion that children can never, ever see disappointment.

There are a few holdouts however. On a teaching FB group some of my colleagues advised to never, ever play games where kids get "out", even games of pure luck. (!!!) It's...wait for it..."bullying". I remember first reading that advice around 2000. I rejected it then and I reject it now. ADULTS think this is harmful for kids. The kids are fine. The soft kids who get a little upset learn good lessons really fast--they look around at their peers, see everyone having fun and losing gracefully even if they get "out", and pull it together really fast. But no, the uber liberals on the thread are telling tales of how they were "bullied" by these games and blah blah blah.

I ignore it. There are a ton of classroom games that include everyone getting "out" except one winner at the end. My winners never get prizes, everyone plays and the kids love it. Win-win-win

All out children are very competitive, in athletics, in academics and in life...we have taught them to be. It builds confidence and a winning mindset. But they know it's OK to lose also, try harder next time . Our youngest is a gymnast, she's extremely competitive and has that refuse to lose attitude. She'll be the very first one to tell you if you get second place it only means you lost.

Some say it isn't healthy, I don't think so. It will carry over in their adult lives and when they go up against the ones who got those participation trophies they will crush them
It is not healthy, let a kid be a kid.
 
Mhm....look at the millienals...life hit them like a freight train because they were not prepared for it

I took my daughter to college orientation this summer. About 75% of the presentation for the parents was basically How To Let Buttercup Go. That Your Kiddo Is An Adult Now and etc.

And yes, on the social media parents' group, they still call their adult children "Kiddos". It's enough to make me puke...or drink wine. heh

Our youngest is eight, I've listened to her talking to her friends and they will go on about how things are not fair or whatever, her favorite saying is "suck it up buttercup", she gets it from her father. She's being raised to know sometimes life isn't fair but she can overcome obstacles. Do we help her? Of course but we teach her...life is a constant lesson, teach children to recognize those lessons.

The problem is children are being handed everything, coddled, everyone gets a trophy, ...life doesn't work that way and when they hit the real world they are lost. Teach them, prepare them and guide them

This is the backlash...and thank God for it. "Participation Trophy" has become part of the vernacular and thank God for that too, so we're starting to see some kickback against this notion that children can never, ever see disappointment.

There are a few holdouts however. On a teaching FB group some of my colleagues advised to never, ever play games where kids get "out", even games of pure luck. (!!!) It's...wait for it..."bullying". I remember first reading that advice around 2000. I rejected it then and I reject it now. ADULTS think this is harmful for kids. The kids are fine. The soft kids who get a little upset learn good lessons really fast--they look around at their peers, see everyone having fun and losing gracefully even if they get "out", and pull it together really fast. But no, the uber liberals on the thread are telling tales of how they were "bullied" by these games and blah blah blah.

I ignore it. There are a ton of classroom games that include everyone getting "out" except one winner at the end. My winners never get prizes, everyone plays and the kids love it. Win-win-win

All out children are very competitive, in athletics, in academics and in life...we have taught them to be. It builds confidence and a winning mindset. But they know it's OK to lose also, try harder next time . Our youngest is a gymnast, she's extremely competitive and has that refuse to lose attitude. She'll be the very first one to tell you if you get second place it only means you lost.

Some say it isn't healthy, I don't think so. It will carry over in their adult lives and when they go up against the ones who got those participation trophies they will crush them
It is not healthy, let a kid be a kid.
Part of growing up is being able to accept defeat.......and having good sportsmanship............

Good traits..........nothing to do with the kid dying though.........
 
Why is a 9 year old thinking about sexuality?
Most likely he was sexually and/or psychologically abused by a(n) adult(s).

Either that or the mother was simply lying when she claimed in her story that the kid "came out" to her as being gay.

This was likely a murder.
 
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I took my daughter to college orientation this summer. About 75% of the presentation for the parents was basically How To Let Buttercup Go. That Your Kiddo Is An Adult Now and etc.

And yes, on the social media parents' group, they still call their adult children "Kiddos". It's enough to make me puke...or drink wine. heh

Our youngest is eight, I've listened to her talking to her friends and they will go on about how things are not fair or whatever, her favorite saying is "suck it up buttercup", she gets it from her father. She's being raised to know sometimes life isn't fair but she can overcome obstacles. Do we help her? Of course but we teach her...life is a constant lesson, teach children to recognize those lessons.

The problem is children are being handed everything, coddled, everyone gets a trophy, ...life doesn't work that way and when they hit the real world they are lost. Teach them, prepare them and guide them

This is the backlash...and thank God for it. "Participation Trophy" has become part of the vernacular and thank God for that too, so we're starting to see some kickback against this notion that children can never, ever see disappointment.

There are a few holdouts however. On a teaching FB group some of my colleagues advised to never, ever play games where kids get "out", even games of pure luck. (!!!) It's...wait for it..."bullying". I remember first reading that advice around 2000. I rejected it then and I reject it now. ADULTS think this is harmful for kids. The kids are fine. The soft kids who get a little upset learn good lessons really fast--they look around at their peers, see everyone having fun and losing gracefully even if they get "out", and pull it together really fast. But no, the uber liberals on the thread are telling tales of how they were "bullied" by these games and blah blah blah.

I ignore it. There are a ton of classroom games that include everyone getting "out" except one winner at the end. My winners never get prizes, everyone plays and the kids love it. Win-win-win

All out children are very competitive, in athletics, in academics and in life...we have taught them to be. It builds confidence and a winning mindset. But they know it's OK to lose also, try harder next time . Our youngest is a gymnast, she's extremely competitive and has that refuse to lose attitude. She'll be the very first one to tell you if you get second place it only means you lost.

Some say it isn't healthy, I don't think so. It will carry over in their adult lives and when they go up against the ones who got those participation trophies they will crush them
It is not healthy, let a kid be a kid.
Part of growing up is being able to accept defeat.......and having good sportsmanship............

Good traits..........nothing to do with the kid dying though.........
And i agree.
 

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