Archive for March, 2008

Bullies

Over the past few days I have been thinking a lot about bullies.

Not many people would look at me now and suspect that I had been bullied as a kid. At 6′ 4″ and 275 pounds, not many people are interested in a physical confrontation with me any more.

I was bullied for two years as a seventh and eight grader by a group of boys that ran amok in my school, and that most of the kids were afraid of. As a tall skinny kid who got straight A’s and didn’t like to fight, I was an easy target for the much larger pack of bullies, and was often chosen as a victim of the day. While the physical side of the bullying wasn’t too bad, the constant threat of violence was always there, and the fear was palpable. I hated school, my grades slipped for the first time in my life, and I was suspended a few times and labeled a troublemaker.

After two miserable years in middle school, I entered a private high school and got a new chance. In my first similar situation in the new school, I punched a bigger kid in the face with a mighty (lucky) punch, and never had to fight again. It took that one act of standing up for myself, and deciding I wasn’t going to take it any more, to end my own suffering. I kept to myself for most of high school and didn’t get picked on any more than normal. My grades returned to A’s again, I graduated with honors, and went on to a great college. Not all kids are lucky enough to escape being bullied, however.

My 8 year old son learned about bullies the other day. He was playing at the high school field with a friend Saturday, and was physically assaulted by a much larger boy 14 years old, along with a group of lacrosse players from the local high school, for throwing a snowball too close to the lacrosse field. He wasn’t hurt, and is likely too young to be too emotionally damaged by the incident, but I am beyond angry and can’t seem to let it go. The rage that I feel about this now is not just as a parent, but as a man who has been bullied and who knows how bullying works.

Using all of the restraint that I could muster, I confronted my son’s bully that day, sat him down, obtained a confession, and called his mother to come and collect him. I told her that if she didn’t come, I was calling the police. She said she would come immediately. When his parents showed up to collect their son (or save him from a beating at my hands I suspect), I was shocked by their reaction. Joey was a “nice kid” who had “never done this before “. Dismayed, I listened as his dad tried to talk his son up as a good kid, all the while telling his son “it will be OK, go to the car, son”. I know that every parent is predisposed to love and defend their child, but I was still shocked. They gave him a pass – for beating up on a kid HALF HIS SIZE.

After speaking with the boy’s coaches, I was told that “it’s not really something we can do anything about, since we didn’t see it.” So a group of high schoolers who admitted pushing two 8 year olds around gets a pass from an adult for as he put it “shit head behavior”. This was not a school affair, as it was not an official practice. So despite being together as a team, on a school field, the coach was taking a pass too.

My parents grew up in a semi-rough neighborhood in South Buffalo. My dad went on to become a cop, and my mom an emergency room nurse. They were people of great character, and did everything in their power to pass that character along to their children. If I had been in a situation where the roles were different and I was the teenage kid who had assaulted an 8 year old, the retribution from my mother would have been immediate and her feeling on the matter clear. She would have screwed up all of the rage possible in her 5′2″ frame and would have kicked my ass on the spot. It would have happened in front of the other 15 lacrosse players who were still at the field for extra emphasis, and it would have happened the minute she arrived on the scene. My parents feelings on the subject would have been very clear to all parties involved, mostly me.

School districts, administrators, and teachers today are wary to intervene in cases of bullying, and cast a wide net on ANY disruptions in the school. Kids that complain of bullying are labeled as “difficult” or “disruptive”. Billy Wolfe is a teenager in Fayetteville, Arkansas who has been beaten by bullies repeatedly, several times to the point of hospitalization, all the while being told by school administrators that “he must have deserved it”. While Billy’s story is a horrific example of a school and district that failed him, he is far from alone. Many children have been seriously hurt, or even killed by “bullies”.

So what is the solution? Is there one?

I am teaching my two boys to stand up for themselves. My wife and I are teaching them self-respect, and help them build their self esteem. My kids are both A students who play sports, have a lot of friends, and are well connected. We work hard to have good relationships with their teachers, and we know all of their friends. We have made a point of helping them develop friendships by having their friends over often, meeting their parents and weeding out the kids that aren’t good for my kids.

We eat dinner together as a family almost every night. It is the best opportunity we have to discuss issues with them, and to listen to them while they ask questions. The feedback we get from them is valuable, and we were able to head off a bully in my older son’s class quickly by giving him tools to deal with the situation. And yes, I did inform my son that if the bullying got physical, that he should smash his tormentor in the face. I know full well it’s wrong to advocate violence, unfortunately it may be the only thing that saves him from years of torment. If the only options are years of emotional pain, or an act of self preserving violence, I will counsel my son to punch the bully in the face and stand up for himself.

Here are some things we are doing to help our kids:

  • Build self esteem – make them confident and aware of their abilities, personal value, and individual power.
  • Talk to them – listen, learn, and understand them, so that when something is wrong, YOU see it first. My wife is amazing at this, and can spot a problem with the boys long before they can articulate or even spot a problem. She is a good listener, and my boys know that we will always listen to them.
  • Make sure they know you can be trusted – your kids need to trust you. Have their back. You are the only one who will advocate for your children, nobody else will. They need to know that if nobody else will listen to them, you will.
  • Educate your kids – make sure they know it is NOT OK to bully anyone, or be bullied by anyone. Make sure that they know what to do when it happens, and who to speak to, and how.
  • Pay attention – teenagers are especially prone to being secretive. Watch for signs that something is amiss. Did their behavior change? Have they started doing poorly in school? Have they stopped hanging around with their old friends? Especially look for changes in behavior that include withdrawal or isolation, whether forced or self imposed.
  • Get involved – get to know the teachers, administrators, and kids in your children’s lives. Learn the players, and roles in your kids environment and you will be better equipped to help them navigate it.

While my outrage at this situation may be a bit personal at the moment, the issue is real, and bullying is a big problem. All indications are that the problem is getting bigger all the time. Kids now use the Internet now to talk about other kids, cell phones and text messages to threaten and harass, and parents are less involved than ever in their kids daily lives. We are letting the situation get out of hand.

While both coaches I spoke to about their team’s behavior paid lip service to me about the incident, neither followed up. I suspect that they won’t, if I let the issue go. The prevailing attitude seemed to be to placate me, and move along as if nothing had happened. Neither coach seems to think that they have any responsibility to build character in their kids, outside of winning lacrosse games, and both seemed willing to chalk it up to a few “goof balls”. A group of boys acting as a team, assaults two little kids, and they are goof balls? The reality is they bullied my son and his friend, and likely will again, since nobody punished them for it the last time. They are bullies, not goof balls.

I am still considering calling the police and letting them sort it out. Neither the parents nor the coaches of the boy involved seem to think his behavior is that bad. Assault is assault, and I still think that the kids on the team that did this have learned nothing. Actually they learned that their coaches and parents will allow this behavior, since no real punishment was meted out. Nobody on the team stopped a teammate from attacking a small child, and several of the other boys joined in screaming and swearing at my son and his friend.

I will not let my children live in fear. If I need to make myself a pain in the ass to ensure this, I will. My kids will not be bullied, and they will not be afraid to walk in their own neighborhood. This is MY JOB as a parent, and I will not back down because it is uncomfortable or uneasy.

The American Freedom Campaign

I signed the American Freedom Campaign pledge and fully support this great effort. They asked me to pass along information about the campaign to you. Visit the site and read, for this is truly a noble cause.

From their email, which does a better job explaining the campaign than I could:

  • The American Freedom Campaign was launched less than eight months ago to build a grassroots movement to help restore the Constitution and reverse the violations of civil liberties and human rights that have occurred over the past seven years.
  • Over the past few months, the American Freedom Campaign has filled an important role in Washington by leading the fight to restore our system of checks and balances. While there are many organizations fighting specific policies considered unconstitutional, few, if any, are focused almost exclusively on restraining executive overreach.
  • Consistent with its mission to restore checks and balances, AFC aggressively – and successfully – pushed the U.S. House to pass a contempt resolution against Bush administration officials who refused to comply with congressional subpoenas. The Capitol Hill newspaper, Roll Call, in an article about the contempt vote in the House, cited AFC as an example – in fact, the only example – of an advocacy group generating grassroots pressure on House members.
  • AFC has also helped inject constitutional balance of powers issues into the debate over the nation’s Iraq policy. As the Bush administration negotiates an agreement with the Iraqi government to establish the parameters of the two nations’ bilateral relationship beyond 2008, AFC is working with members of Congress to ensure that no significant commitment is made without the approval of Congress. Toward this end, AFC hosted a conference call on which Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA), joined by two constitutional scholars from Yale Law School, introduced a resolution expressing the sense of the House that any major agreement reached without congressional approval will be invalid.
  • As the 2008 campaign moves forward, AFC will play a critically important educational role. We will aggressively push the message that the Bush administration’s dramatic expansion of executive power makes the selection of the next president one of the most important decisions the citizens of this nation will ever make.

The changes to our constitution need to be reversed, and our freedoms returned to us.

Ding Dong the Witch is Dead!

Yahoo!

My local incumbent republican congressman, Tom Reynolds, best known in recent years for publicly supporting congressman/pedophile Mark Foley during a bitter scandal a few years ago, has decided to retire! As the house Republican responsible for getting party congressmen re-elected, Reynolds convinced Foley to rerun for office, even after evidence of his despicable behavior was known.

So now that Reynolds has seen the writing on the wall, and has decided to step down, that leaves an interesting puzzle here in Western New York. Democratic newcomer Jon Powers has started a grass roots campaign, and has garnered some local support and a few endorsements. Unfortunately, he hasn’t gotten the Erie County nod, as millionaire businessman Jack Davis has yet to announce his intentions. Remember Davis, a local millionaire who ran and lost a very close race to Reynolds just two years ago, mostly with his own money.

Davis was a Republican until just prior to that election however, and only switched parties after a personal insult from Dick Cheney. Reynolds is considered by most to be a loose cannon and is really party independent. The Albany Report notes:

” Mr. Davis is prone to overstatement. He has warned about “Red China,” for example, and suggested he would take a bat to anyone who sent his sons sexually explicit e-mail messages like those a congressman sent to young male pages.”

I have been following Jon Powers’ campaign for weeks now. Powers is running on a change platform, however the only change he seems to advocate is away from Tom Reynolds. What will his position be now? If you visit the Powers’ web site, you can see that his campaign may be in a strange spot now though, since all of his campaign rhetoric is directed at unseating Reynolds, and does not really make any case for what Powers wants to do.

As for change, Powers has also already taken special interest money and his campaign has told me that he will continue to do so. Real change would be to run free of soft money contributions, and with real plans for change. So far I have nothing to indicate that Powers has any plan other than not being Tom Reynolds. Grabbing Obama’s message of Change is certainly popular this year, but I hope he’s got a real plan somewhere.

Do you really doubt that the Clintons will do ANYTHING to win?

Something I read this morning BLEW MY MIND.

For weeks now I have been reading about Rush Limbaugh’s public call for Republicans to switch party lines and vote for Hillary. His contention was that by extending the Democrats’ primary race that it would hopefully weaken them for the race against a now assured John McCain candidacy. I think that some people thought it a joke, but apparently it’s working. Here’s the video:

Now for the mind blowing part: BILL CLINTON APPEARED ON THE RUSH LIMBAUGH SHOW ON THE MORNING OF THE TEXAS AND OHIO PRIMARIES. For real. Is it conceivable that Bill Clinton was in bed with one of his biggest critics and demonizers of anything democrat? Yep. If it would help Hillary on election day.Geraldine Ferraro was recently sent out to make a statement to ensure that the race card would be played in this election. As a paid member of Hillary’s staff, many have called for her dismissal, which the Clintons so far have rebuffed. A far cry from the dismissal asked for and granted when one of Obama’s senior staffers dared called Hillary a MONSTER (which she is), the Clinton campaign has ignored cries of horror from party democrats at this divisive, petty tactic. Would an elder stateswoman in the Democratic Party intentionally make racist, divisive statements to advance the needs of her candidate while at the same time hurting, or at least disctracting the party? If it would help Hillary on election day.UPDATE: Geraldine Ferraro resigned yesterday saying it was her own decision and that Hillary, nor her campaign asked her to. – ed.

The Washington Post thinks Hillary’s “3 A.M.” ads in Texas and Ohio were fear mongering right out of Karl Rove’s play book. Exploiting fear to promote her own experience was ugly enough, but the fact that SHE HAS NO EXPERIENCE IN TIMES OF CRISIS made it hypocritical.The Chicago Tribune did a great job detailing Hillary’s exaggerations and lies with regards to her ACTUALForeign Policy experience. So as the Clintons have used fear mongering ads, basically perpetrating LIES. We have all seen the effects of repeating lies enough that people begin to believe them. Remember the Weapons of Mass Distraction Destruction that were talked about for months leading up to the Iraq War? “Don’t let the smoking gun be a Mushroom Cloud over the United States” was and oft-repeated phrase we heard verbatim for months on television and in the print media. Would the Clintons stoop so low as to apply such Rovian tactics to this election? If it would help Hillary on election day.

The Clinton’s are ignoring math, which keeps getting worse for her campaign all the time. They are ignoring the will of the Democratic party by continuing their often dirty fight against Obama, and what it seems at times like the entire Democratic Party. They seem to be hoping for a miracle, a back room deal, or some other form of a political Knife Fight at the Convention. Hillary has even gone so far as to state that McCain would be a better choice than Obama if Barack were to win the democratic nod. Hillary has become a political suicide bomber, willing to take down Obama, and the entire Democratic Party if necessary to meet her goals.


So the real question here is: What would Mrs. Clinton do if she was in charge of the country? If she is so willing to DO ANYTHING to get the job, what is she capable of doing with the newly expanded powers of the Oval Office?

Mrs. Clintons has proven that she will ignore the Democratic party, get in bed with the Republicans, and ignore ethics, morals, and decency in order to achieve her goals. We already have a president like that.

We need a change.

Obama Button

Snow!

Foot of FreshI woke up this morning to over a foot of fresh snow in my yard. Most people outside look sort of annoyed, shoveling, scraping, and generally trudging around in the snow.

Not me. I watched it snow last night and all I could think of was a foot of fresh on the slopes. Sailing through the powder, taking small snow drifts in the face as I carve through the deep stuff. I am actually smiling broadly as I even think about this.

Except that two weeks ago I cracked my ribs pretty good doing the same thing. They are still very tender, and I am a bit apprehensive about skiing today.

I must persevere though. Life’s simple pleasures aren’t waiting around for the perfect day, the perfect healthy ribs, or even the perfect moment. The opportunity to enjoy this late season gift of beautiful new snow is rare, and I am going to take advantage of it. I am going to tough it out, and take a few “flights” today. Skiing is as close to flying as I can get without buying a ticket. It’s a glorious chance to escape the earth for a moment, and truly defy gravity. Passing that opportunity up is not easy, and is in fact not advised for those addicted to skiing.

These flights of fancy are good for my soul, and are worth the pain.  I therefore declare my motto for today to be Carpe Diem, “seize the day”.