bookitty
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2009
- Messages
- 5,732
Very true about the pretty girl getting bullied. But it doesn't seem to be the case in Pheobe Prince.
In doing a little digging I found what I suspected. Unfortunately I'm sure I'm going to get slammed to the mat again for looking at this issue from a realistic stance, no matter how not glamourously sympathetic it may be. I am not interested in blaming the victim here, but finding out the truth of the pattern. There is the pattern in her case that I was discussing before.
(again I'm only discussing suicide as a result of bullying)
Patterns I've seen
An "odd bird" she just is a little different than the rest, smarter, prettier, is also "different" IMO since most teenagers are freaking morons.
Her mother and father had no idea what was going on. Her father is Ireland and the mother used to leave her alone one night a week in the apartment.
Psychological issues, Phoebe was a cutter and had attempted suicide before, prior to the bullying. She was also on two different kinds of prescriptions for mood disorders including Prozac, which she had stopped taking.
Taking things very personally and internalizing things that others might have an easier time letting roll of their back.
She also got in trouble for smoking pot and scarring herself with the pipe in a burn, and had it reported to her mother and was going to have to deal with that when she went home. She might have been pushed to the edge for this reason as well.
Now I was never seriously targeted as a "slut or a whore" at school so I'm not sure if I'd have been able to blow that off. I think that's slightly different in bullying. But I do know some people can take being called a slut and not give a damn but others would be horrified at it.
The DA is making a major case out of this and I think it's a good idea because I do think overall that we should criminalize bullying. I think the idea of prosecution could serve as a deterrent and also get parents more involved. However I'd be hard pressed to vote guilty for any of these students.
More here Not sure about the source, if anyone knows it's a crap source please let us know.
http://www.newser.com/story/96116/the-truth-about-what-happened-to-phoebe-prince.html
It is interesting that you linked to the more provocative summation and not the story it is referencing. The story in Slate is a rehashing of the same old victim blaming that can be found here. The article sets out to defend "the uncomfortable fact that Phoebe helped set in motion the conflicts with other students that ended in them turning on her." Yet there is only a single mention of Phoebe speaking to one of the teens charged in her death. In another example, Phoebe walks out of a bathroom without even making eye-contact - an obvious example of someone who is the weaker party in a power play.
In every other example of what Phoebe supposedly did, the other girls are the aggressor. They mocked her on Facebook, they called her whore in the hallways, one yelled at her in the class room and was suspended for two days, that same girl was overheard by a teacher "venting about Phoebe during class in a way that made him think a fight was looming." The day Phoebe died they drove by, screamed whore at her and tried to hit her with a soft drink can thrown from a moving vehicle.
The second part of the article attempts to show that the D.A. is far too aggressive in prosecuting bullies. Instead of this case, it focuses on a previous case in which a senior assaulted a junior classmate because he was gay.
This story started at prom. Martin (his middle name), then a 17-year-old junior, brought his boyfriend as his date. Other students treated them with respect. But soon after, when Martin was in line in the school cafeteria, he felt someone come up behind him and put a hand inside the back of his pants. He felt a finger in his buttocks, he later said. Martin turned around. He saw a senior named Max Keith, whom he'd never spoken to, wildly laughing. Another student yelled, "Faggot."
There is much hand-wringing about how the poor senior will now be on the sex offender registry and that his whole life is ruined. There is some cursory empathy for the victim but it comes from a quote made by the judge and not the writer herself.
There is far too little evidence for this to be anything other than an opinion piece. The author has obviously spent so much time speaking with the students that she has become biased to their point of view and has forgotten that Phoebe herself suffered because of those views.