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Keli Goff

Keli Goff

Posted: October 4, 2010 10:46 PM

There's a famous story in the Goff household about my mom's first week back in school shortly after it was integrated. There was a boy who apparently wasn't a fan of the progress our country was making and decided to take it out on my mom by shouting the N-word at her repeatedly, every single day. For days mom turned the other cheek, so to speak, but on the fifth day she declared loud enough for everyone to hear, that she was going to beat the stuffing out of the guy. Now anyone who knows my mother knows that she would have, had the principal, who was white, not stepped in and warned Mr. Bully that if he didn't leave her alone not only would my mom have the principal's permission to punch him but he would also be kicked out of school.

That was the end of Mr. Bully's bullying.

Most of us would like to believe that the kind of prejudice my mom faced is a thing of the past. The thinking goes, "Sure prejudice exists but it's more subtle" or as an older family friend once said, "People no longer spit in your face but in your food."

But in recent days we've all been reminded that this is not true and that the kind of prejudice and open hostility my mom faced fifty years ago is still alive and well in America's schools.

In recent weeks Asher Brown, Billy Lucas, Seth Walsh, Tyler Clementi and Raymond Chase killed themselves. While we are still awaiting key details in some of the cases, we do know this: All of the boys either self-identified as gay or their classmates believed that they were. Billy Lucas was 15 years old, while Asher Brown and Seth Walsh were just thirteen-years-old, yet they faced constantl bullying, ranging from verbal to physical, at the hands of classmates for their perceived sexual orientation. In the case of Tyler Clementi, the college freshman is believed to have jumped from the George Washington Bridge after his roommate allegedly tweeted, then recorded and broadcast an intimate encounter Tyler had with another man.

Sadly, these are not the first instances of this type of bullying resulting in death. Last year the suicide of 11-year-old Carl Walker made national headlines when he hung himself after being teased relentlessly by classmates who accused him of being gay. (To learn more about Carl's tragic life and death click here to view the Public Service Announcement inspired by his story.)

These tragedies have led me to ponder the following question: If a young student was called the N-word every day for weeks or months on end, and after repeated cries for help finally took his own life, how quickly do you think citizens of all races would take to the streets to protest? Or better yet, how quickly would Al Sharpton and Co. demand accountability from the school and elected officials under the threat of casting the kind of media spotlight that people like Don Imus have nightmares about?

As I noted on Monday's episode of "The Dylan Ratigan Show," in these recent cases it is alleged that the students and their families sought help from various school officials with limited and disappointing results. But I have a hard time believing that if these kids had been bullied for their race, not for their sexual identities, that the adults tasked to protect them would not have reacted differently, or at the very least would have reacted at all.

Which makes me think that the kids doing the bullying are not really the ones at fault. They are simply taking their cues from adults. And the message they are receiving is that today in 2010 it may not be okay to call someone the N-word on the playground, but it is okay to call someone the F-word.

Ten years ago Matthew Shepard's death became a rallying cry for college students of my generation. Many of us assumed (naively, we now know) that the kind of blatant, violent homophobia Matthew suffered would be a thing of the past in the near future. In the last decade our country has advanced significantly on the issue of gay rights, with a majority of Americans now supporting a variety of measures for gays and lesbians that they didn't just a few years ago. We also have more openly gay public figures and elected officials than we ever have. But the deaths of Asher, Billy, Seth, Tyler and Raymond show that we still have work to do.

We need more adults willing to display the kind of courage that my mother's principal did all of those years ago, when he stood up for someone because it was the right thing to do, not because it was the popular or politically correct thing to do. Because until we as adults confront homophobia head on, our kids are going to continue to victimize other kids and think it's okay and that they have our blessing to do so. But we owe our kids more than that.

We owe the memory of Asher, Billy, Seth, Tyler and Raymond more than that.

This post originally appeared on TheLoop21.com for which Goff is a political blogger.

www.keligoff.com

 
 
 

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11:57 PM on 10/22/2010
As a black lesbian I know it is time to demand the right for my lesbian sisters and gay brothers to openly have the right to go half way around the Earth to kill children and other lesbians and gays. And I do not support the privileged of those who want their college education and other benefits before they kill others or blow themselves up or maim themselves in that process. Otherwise whether you are a member of AlQueda or the marines what would be the point of supporting the never ending war humanity is waging upon itself...and all life on the planet?

Or as planed and modern eugenics makes way for a hastened evolution of humanity into these fallen angels and victims of innocence:

http://www.google.com/images?oe=utf-8&q=depleted+uranium+baby+images&um=1&ie=UTF-8&source=univ&ei=VEzCTIb9AsGBlAeinZkQ&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&ct=title&resnum=1&ved=0CCgQsAQwAA

Or as my gay black brother at the link below said after trying to obtain the release of all prisoners for drug offenses and an end to all war, ¨Of course I will not win the Nobel Peace prize for my 5 year sentence. This isn´t China.¨

http://bramin.wordpress.com/2008/04/14/buddhist-threatens-to-set-self-on-fireif-all-war-not-over-by-6pm/
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Prometeo
Proud Puerto Rican. Blogger ang blog visitor. Like
04:11 PM on 10/09/2010
As things are right now it'll be a long time before the "F" word achieves the protected status of the "N" word.
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lambdin1
What's this?
10:08 AM on 10/09/2010
Hate is something that is learned! If we learn to stop hate the world would be a more peaceful place. Adults are only part of the blame. Hate is learned from generation to generation, gender to gender, age to age, etc. While teachers, schools and parents are to blame so are children and many other enities. Religion is the biggiest hate monger. What people do not understand they often fear and religon plays on those fears. To stop hate from governments and all segments of society we must face our fears. And discover that most all are unfounded. There will always be those who will espouse hate in some form or another. Learning what we fear lessens the chance that hate will endure.
09:31 PM on 10/07/2010
The headline for this article teases in a way that is in bad taste.
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Mark Olmsted
essayist, blogger, activist
01:38 PM on 10/07/2010
And what if the Supreme Court comes down on the side of the religious fanatics bullying the families who have lost sons and daughters in the war. Isn't that hate speech? If those people have first amendment rights to bully grieving families, couldn't kids feel that they also have the right to use the "N" or "F" words? Just wondering...
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
01:59 PM on 10/07/2010
A lot of very bad messages are being sent from a lot of places that are supposed to be 'leadership,' while, speaking of 'leadership,' we thought we elected Obama to stand up for civil rights and to *be* a leader on these social issues.

There's so much else that needs doing in the country, and the abuse of LGBT people is being intensified by the Right to create *distractions.* The hurt they do is real, but their purposes, I think, are quite crass.
05:44 AM on 10/07/2010
I am older, and disabled, retired NYC teacher and Stonewall vet. I have had students of mine who were gay who were literally shipped from their home country into my care( I still have the other gov't's papers.) to stop them from being crucified. I had another fall/jump from a 4th floor window and have the police witness describe him as looking like a bag of garbage. Then Matthew Shepard is tortured and left hanging on fenceposts. It is not a matter of civility, nor has it ever been. IT is a psychological subset of the culture that is composed of itinerant elements, from evangelicals to political movers, powerful corporate interests which make no sense. but it is basically the otherness that drives both the response and its consequences. The removal of DADT would be a remarkable social occurence and alleviate much of the institutional bullying. By the way it is not tolerance I'm talking about, it is equality: the right to life, liberty, AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS> I think there was a Buddhist hidden among our Founding Fathers.
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04:02 PM on 10/06/2010
forget the 'f' word...it's WAY more insidious:

MOST MALE ADULTs I KNOW joke about other males as not being 'normal,' or possible gay, in their presence (OR ONLINE-like on facebook) if those others do ANYthing like the following NORMAL nongender-based human behaviors:

think the sunset is beautiful and express it with REAL feelings
show a feeling other than irritation, anger or pride
say "I love you" to a male friend
say that they have no interest in following sports

TO THOSE MEN..."GROW UP...you set a TERRIBLE EXAMPLE FOR YOUNGSTERS!"....
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JohnJacobJingleheimer
03:22 PM on 10/06/2010
It is interesting to note that although we have made progress, sexual orientation and the rights pertaining to it are still fervent wedge issues used in American politics, religion, and social and cultural life as a means to achieve emotionally divisive reactions in the population, and hence win elections and promote careers, often hypocritically. There is more support today against this than ever before, but if you think about it, we accept, even if we do not agree, the foundation of the use of homophobia as a means to certain basic ends. This is tolerated by us, so young people being bullied often receive mixed messages, even if they have great friends, parents, counselors, and self-esteem. I heard a comedian once, who was leading a game show I used to work on (so he wasn't really a comedian) use 134 homophobic nuances during ONE taping in order to make the audience laugh. There was only moderate laughter, I am happy to say. But he felt free (or stuck) as a comic to use something that has not yet been communicated to him as being socially outdated to do. He gets his input from the same sources as everyone else.

The last point to make is take a class in Jujitsu, ask a friend to teach you martial arts, and risk expulsion from school to punch the idiocy out of the A-word who is bullying you. He'll then have to deal with his own issues, and a broken nose.
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ginas13
01:42 PM on 10/06/2010
Bullies have been around since time began. It is the same in the animal world. The weakest get attacked. I was teased for having a big nose, another kid for being fat, another for not having a dad... The key is to teach children how to handle these situations. There was a girl that always wanted to beat me up. One day I saw her arm and she had scars where she had tried to kil herself. This was the 6th and 7th grade. I realized she was jealous of me because I had parents at home. It made me feel sorry for her. Most bullies are jealous.
Children need the tools to deal with them.
05:21 PM on 10/06/2010
Absolutely brilliant !! ginas13 --- if a child chooses to act in a homosexual manner or participate in homosexual sex --- well the OTHER 96% of us are going to notice -- and some will heap ridicule and comment on them, --- its human nature to tease/make fun of/ridicule people who are different. Does'nt make it right , --- but it's reality.
More importantly --- where are the parents to help guide their children away from a destuctive unhea;thy lifestyle ??
10:18 PM on 10/06/2010
What is it going to take for people to understand what is going on here??? Carolina your ignorance is disgusting. BEING GAY IS NOT SOMETHING SOMEONE CHOOSES. I am gay. Are you? Now sit there and tell me I chose this. You are a disgrace to continue to contribute to the very ignorance that is destroying so many lives out there right now. Educate yourself.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
01:46 PM on 10/07/2010
No, it's not 'reality' that LGBT people are 'weaker' (a prejudice of itself, that cuts both ways, gay people are called 'weak,' (when they aren't being called 'threatening') ...and 'weak' people are called gay. Or they'll call girls 'the d-word' if they *aren't* acting weak, or maybe throw them off bluffs if they want to call them 'lesbians' anyway. ) LBGT people aren't even necessarily 'different'... This doesn't matter to a homophobic society: being queer or being called queer *makes* one different, even if the bullies may as well be claiming there's an outbreak of cooties for all they actually know about the subject..

Except that the homophobia coming from their elders, politicians, and preachers, and some musicians, is something that gives them permission for brutality, or even demands it. ...Especially if they know that if they call someone gay, homophobic school authorities will look the other way, or even punish the victim, often referring them to parents and clergy for still more abuse.

That's not 'normal' social competition and socialization, actually, it's stigmatizing a group in ways that mean all the usual bets are off: call someone's a 'lesbian' or 'gay' or 'not really a man' or 'not really a girl,' ...Then all of a sudden it's open season when the culture would otherwise say boys don't do certain things to girls, (and girls ought to stick together if they try,) you don't attack someone on crutches, etc..
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Morgan378
01:13 PM on 10/06/2010
Not until someone is shot for using the "F"-word will anyone think twice about using it. Sorry to say. I had a fight with a person and they were black - they called me the "F" word and dared me to call them the "N" word. I refused to go to their level. Yes, I'm older and not in highschool - but to be dared to call someone a word comparable to the "F"- word only makes one aware that the "F"-word is NOT at this time, as unsavory as the "N" - word, yet it should be. I must say that at least in the gay community I have not heard anyone joking around calling someone the "F"-word like they do in the black culture of the "N" -word. I know it happens - but a more civilized tongue is required if anyone want's to maintain friendships in the gay community. Someone calls a friend of mine the "F" word and my "earrings come off" and the fight is on. At 6' 7" and 291 lbs that's a lotta mad comin' your way.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
01:57 PM on 10/07/2010
Heh, well, some slurs *can* be used within the community usually called them, either by way of reclaiming them (Like with the Q-word,) or with irony (Like particularly-flamey guys calling each other the F-word: which is just as controversial as rappers using the N-word about themselves: key thing there being it's *definitely* not OK to say that in front of your Mom or for anyone else to use it. Quirky sort of way people have about them)

And, well, I'm kinda *hoping* no one gets shot over it. It really shouldn't have to go that far. As a society we should be able to handle this: much of the question there is if the politicians and clergy and others have the *will*. Human rights aren't supposed to be a popularity contest, and it's *contemptible* how the Right supports homophobia and even bullying and hate crimes as if this weren't and hasn't always been a pandemic problem.
11:55 AM on 10/06/2010
It pains me to see so many children so miserable that they choose death over life. Bullies show up early in life, often in toddler years. Parents should be on alert for signs of pinching,biting, slapping and immediately remove the child from the social situation. Make it make sense to the child for the sake of society: If you behave mean, you just cannot be around people. Enforce this strictly. It takes close supervision which is not likely to happen if you are the parent who prefers to blab on the phone and park your child in the familyroom absorbing unknown behavior on TV. Children imitate; a parent's role is to demonstrate civil behavior. Someone is not doing their job. I've seen many potential bullies diverted simply by being guided by their parents, so don't let your kids learn that it's ok to hate.
08:39 AM on 10/06/2010
BS These two are not children on the playground. These are college students...supposedly the brightest young people. They know right from wrong. They made choices. Now they are responsible for the consequences.
08:38 AM on 10/06/2010
I am not an advocate of gay rights, but I believe people should respect other people no matter what their sexual orientation is. perhaps this is not stressed enough in class.
11:57 AM on 10/06/2010
Well said. I support rights for all, including your right to make your own choices.
05:15 PM on 10/06/2010
What does this mean: "I am not an advocate of gay rights, but I believe people should respect other people..."? Does it mean "I don't believe in equal rights, but I think people should be polite"? Does it mean, "Everyone is equal but some are more equal than others"? What is respect without acknowledgment of human rights? Smiling at me as you pass me on the sidewalk (why thank you for letting me pass), but voting against my equal rights behind my back barely hardly meets the definition of respect.Duplicity maybe, hypocrisy possibly, cowardice even perhaps. So you don't bully me directly; you contribute to the atmosphere that allows it. Respect advocates for everyone's rights.
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iam7545 r
08:31 AM on 10/06/2010
Keli - NYC reports an overall increase in "building junping" incidents are up 27% this year

So maybe there is an overall pattern too
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
02:06 PM on 10/07/2010
Bad economic times increase stress across the board. LGBT people and kids are just one of the prime scapegoats. We get the economic stress, discrimination *really* bites when jobs are scarce, compared to when there are more openings, and economically-stressed others tend to get more religiously-aggressive and sometimes violent toward us, or at least rhetorically-so... In these times the conservatives are pushing the 'family values' thing and other divisive and xenophobic actions, because their *policies got us in this mess and they need people to blame,* which in turn increases our stress and anxiety level as LGBT people... and for the kids it can just look like a hostile world where it seems that just getting away from abusive environments doesn't mean you get away from the abuse: the government is full of it, too...

You have any idea how that *looks* when you're a kid?