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Make Bullying History: Stopping Violence Before It Starts

Posted: 08/29/2012 10:18 am

One in six American schoolchildren report being bullied verbally, physically and online, two to three times a month or more, many for more than a year. That's a fact.

Everyone in America likely has a bullying story, whether as the victim, bully or as a witness. The question is, when will it stop -- and how do we stop it? Making bullying history is a tall order, no doubt, and one that was at the fore of the Department of Education's third annual Federal Partners in Bullying Prevention Summit this month.

First, we must acknowledge publicly that we have a bullying epidemic in America. It is estimated that 13 million American children are teased, taunted or physically assaulted by their peers, making bullying the most common form of violence our nation's youth experience in 2012. Every day, about 160,000 of American children miss school because of fear of physical and psychological attacks on the basis of their skin color, ethnicity, physical or mental abilities, sexual orientation, gender identity or religion. Bullying doesn't just affect youth, however, it impacts the elderly, too. This is a problem that is both profound and pervasive.

Second, in fashion similar to how the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention deal with health epidemics, there must be a two-pronged approach to stopping the bullying epidemic. One is prevention. The other is intervention. Couple this with a restorative justice model that prioritizes victim-offender reconciliation, as well as trauma healing for the entire community, and a different path is possible.

On prevention, it doesn't take a brain surgeon to understand why people bully, at any level of society. It often stems from a position of weakness, insecurity and fear. Few people who are truly confident in status, intellect and security (emotional, financial, social or other) need to resort to bullying. In contrast, many people who bully are missing out on something, whether it was a supportive and stable home environment, sufficient self-confidence that comes through healthy emotional and cognitive development, or a desire to be part of a community, accepted and respected.

This is not rocket science. We all have basic human needs for meaning, connectedness, security (of all types), recognition and autonomy or action. When these needs go unmet, either due to acts of commission or omission by others, we tend to create conflict -- sometimes violent, sometimes not -- to try to meet those needs. Some people internalize the pain, through addiction, unhealthy eating habits, or even suicide. Some people externalize the pain, through bullying, violent crime or even homicide.

Any fix to bullying, then, must attend to these basic needs that are not being met. That means we must focus on everything from the home environment to the policies of our government, from parenting to poverty.

On intervention, the same dynamics are at play. Bystanders often remain quiet while witnessing bullying because they don't want to jeopardize their status in society, their connections to the community or their relations with friends and neighbors. That is why we allow jokes to be told in front of us that make fun of people who are gay, people who are obese, people with mental or physical disabilities, or people who have a different religion or race or belief. And yet, we don't say a word. Why? Because we don't want to be ostracized from the community in which we are living, nor do we want to be thought uncool or even unpatriotic. Instead of seeing something and saying something, like an upstander would, we indeed say nothing and are complicit in the act.

Remember that bullying is symptomatic of a much deeper wound. If we allow it to continue to fester, the symptoms will only increase in severity. They will not go away. By failing to intervene, we forgo an opportunity to stem a tide that will, in time, wash ashore with a force more powerful and more violent than previously possible.

Bullying is also not something that can be stopped through hard power or punitive punishment, for it merely exacerbates that which started the bullying in the first place: a desire to meet any of the basic needs for recognition, connectedness, security, meaning and action. It's a pretty simple equation. People who resort to bullying are usually people who want to be accepted, want to be loved, or want a seat at the cool kids' table. That's it.

Therein lies the answer, and it is what inspires our work at the federal level, through the recently founded Congressional Anti-Bullying Caucus, and at the local level, through the work of the River Phoenix Center for Peacebuilding, which aims to bring together all community stakeholders in Gainesville, Fla., to make bullying history.

Our efforts will mean more money and more training for every educator, every bus driver, every school nurse, every janitor, every counselor, every parent, every playground attendant, every administrator and, ultimately, every kid and adult in the classroom in America.

But this isn't enough. We need your help. We need you -- when you see something -- to actually say something. Stop the violent act before it escalates. Intervene. But we also need your help in making sure everyone has a seat at the table. Prevent. Help people meet their basic needs. Because we know what happens when they don't.

Rep. Michael Honda is a California Democrat and is the founder of the Congressional Anti-Bullying Caucus. Joaquin Phoenix is a board member of the River Phoenix Center for Peacebuilding.

This article was first published in USA Today.

 

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One in six American schoolchildren report being bullied verbally, physically and online, two to three times a month or more, many for more than a year. That's a fact. Everyone in America likely has a...
One in six American schoolchildren report being bullied verbally, physically and online, two to three times a month or more, many for more than a year. That's a fact. Everyone in America likely has a...
 
 
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02:29 PM on 09/14/2012
@DogsOfPeace:The research data you quoted fit exactly into the bullying I know.
The bullies I know look like they take pleasure in intimidating. Pure and Simple. Their eyes light up as soon as they see fear in their victims' eyes.
No problems with their school work, their extra-curricular activities, no lack of support from their parents.
In fact, their parents help them to lie to the police, typically say that they saw the whole alleged bullying episode when the parent wasn't even there --- the parents teach the children the example of how to lie convincingly to the police.
02:22 PM on 09/14/2012
More awareness is necessary --- I absolutely agree,
but not all bullies are underachievers, as this article suggests.

I know a group of bullies who are academically doing well, from well to do families, but
pride themselves in being smart enough to dupe the police officer, and partner with the local gangsters who sell them marijuana for help to intimidate anybody who walks their couple of blocks of the street at certain hours.Those bully those who are even smaller than them, to make themselves feel big. The police see that they are doing well in schools and are from "good families", and completely fall for their lies about what happened. Typically, they are very vicious when they bully. Once the police appear, they tell their tales in a way that make them look like angels falsely accused! Some victims started trying to use their cell phones to document the truth. Then the mom of the head bully charged over to the victim's family to prohibit them from using their cell phone! The victim's family called the police. The responding police officer privately told the victims that they should stop taking the cell phone pictures because this makes the other mom angry!!! The police are somehow had by these smart bullies whom the police claim to be straight A students and therefore can't be bullies. How wrong are the police!
Don't make the stereotype a blanket gospel truth.
Don't let that stereotype cause more unnecessary emotional trauma to the victims.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LornaP
It's like picking low hanging fruit.
12:05 PM on 09/03/2012
I was a bullied child and I thought that the kids who were after me were protected by the adults. Now that I am an adult, I see that I was right. Schools forbid striking back. Teachers call kids "tattletales". My eldest son was bullied for being physically disabled and the teacher blamed him because she couldn't make anything work out with the kids in her class who were protected by IEPs for emotional or attention issues. I then home schooled for eight years, sent my youngest to school at his request, and he was punched in the face on the eighth day by someone who had been picking on him. He told the teacher who did nothing. Another son was called a "faggot" and a boy sexually propositioned him in P.E. They are in sixth grade! If the schools are bad, the parents are worse. They barely pay attention to their kids and don't want to hear that they are troubled. My neighborhood is filled with trash talking, spitting, intimidating kids who can't hold up their end of a conversation because they are also uneducated. And please understand, I live in a normal, suburban, middle class neighborhood. So it is the adults who permit bullying to exist. I don't accept that it originates from within a broken child, I suspect it is a behavior that is attempted, not stemmed, and then it flourishes. It's simply too pervasive to be the result of poor self-esteem.
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matthew albracht
Executive Vice President, The Peace Alliance
12:49 PM on 08/30/2012
Love this! Thank you Rep. Honda and Joaquin. Everyone please TAKE ACTION also, sign the petition in support of the Safe Schools Improvement Act today! http://www.change.org/petitions/stop-bullying-tell-congress-to-pass-the-safe-schools-improvement-act
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
09:49 AM on 08/30/2012
One way to address the bullying problem is from dear old Japan it's called 'judo'. One minute, you're browbeating some high school freshman a foot shorter than you, and intimidating them out of their lunch money, the next, you're on the ground, and said freshman is now twisting your arm up behind your neck, and for some reason, your feet won't move. Rut-roh, just lost all the self-reinforcing 'cool points' with your homies, instead, all the kids are laughing at you, now. Sometimes, bullies only really respect a show of strength. They will push, until/unless they see it/get it. Bullying is a mental power game, establishing a pecking order, 'you're on my bus/you're in my seat/you're on my street', etc. When those aggressed are able to defend themselves, and are better organized than you and your entourage, suddenly, the game's just not very fun, anymore.
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Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
09:17 AM on 08/30/2012
Bullying is an epidemic partly because we as a nation are bullies and also because many parents seem to live in some fantasy land where the world is full of lollipops and rainbows so they don't teach their kids to understand how to defend themselves verbally and physically if absolutely necessary ..I was bullied most of my youth because I was really skinny and sometimes a loner and it didn't end until in high school I confronted one of my tormenters and punched him in the face and gut..After that he never bothered me again and word got out and nobody else (I had a lot of punks that picked on me) ever attempted to bully me like before but they did attempt to push my buttons and see if I would defend myself, I did and had to fight a couple of them and didn't kick their butts but the simple fact that I would give them a few punches in the face for their trouble made them respect me and leave me alone
08:16 AM on 08/30/2012
The idea that bullies, in their heart of hearts, just want to be accepted, goes against ALL of the research into bullying. The bullies typically ARE the "cool kids" and manifest their popularity by picking on those who are smaller, physically weaker, "different" (racially, religiously, in mannerisms, in clothing, etc.), and who have a weak social support network. There is research which suggests that bullies (at least those who repeatedly offend) have brains in which the pleasure centers "light up" when presented with images of others in pain (emotional or physical). Control groups' "aversion" centers light up to the same images. To me, one of the most significant factors is school environment, and that is set by the adults -- all the policies and signage in the world doesn't count at all -- and may even increase the desperation of the victims (and other kids who fear they may be next) if the adults seem oblivious and/or do little or nothing in response to instances of bullying. (See the Boston school district study from several years ago which found that the school environment was the principal difference between schools with higher and lower rates of bullying.) Opinions are fine. Let's do some research to back them up.
03:14 PM on 09/14/2012
@DogsOfPeace:
Please share your research references -- the journal, researcher, university professors who conducted the research. Much appreciated.
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Trey McCain
Truth has no agenda. It simply is
02:51 AM on 08/30/2012
repressive tolerance is bullying
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francisco cortes
02:26 AM on 08/30/2012
This is how bullying work. If you stop this process you stop bullying. A first step is marginalization, the processes whereby targeted individuals or groups are pictured (in the sense of being framed) as outside the circle of wholesome mainstream society. The next step is objectification or dehumanization, the process of negatively labeling a person or group of people so they become perceived more as objects rather than real people. Dehumanization often is associated with the belief that a particular group of people are inferior or threatening. The final step is demonization, the person or group is seen as totally malevolent, sinful, and evil. It is easier to rationalize stereotyping, prejudice, discrimination, and even violence against those who are dehumanized or demonized.
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Sherry Wachter
01:19 AM on 08/30/2012
You are to be commended on taking steps to address this problem. However, I wonder how much more effective anti-bullying initiatives might be if our children didn't have the examples of bullies before them daily on the news. Anyone who can watch the GOP's obstructionism, or one of Rush Limbaugh's rants and maintain that bullying isn't a part of our culture from top down isn't paying attention. When we have congressmen demonizing the weakest and most vulnerable in our society, it's hardly surprising that our children see the weakest and most vulnerable among them as targets as well. Children mimic what they see. lf we really want to deal with bullying, we need to do it--from the top down.
09:42 PM on 08/29/2012
Practical jokes, punking, and most reality shows are thoroughly enjoyed by the bullies among us --millions of them if the ratings are accurate. Remember the sole purpose of each of these "humorous events" is to ridicule another person and feel superior by contrast. Culturally acceptable enablers!
12:22 AM on 08/30/2012
Agreed. I never even liked Don Rickles because I thought he was just a mean bully!
08:59 PM on 08/29/2012
Bullies face little to no consequences for their actions and that's why they keep doing it. Bullying needs to have serious consequences and not just some slap on the wrist punishment. Parents of bullies usually don't care unless it is their child that is being threatened.

Bullying leaves mental scars that could take years to heal or some never heal. Unfortunately there is a way to see the mental damage that bullies cause to their victims and that's why the issue is never taken seriously. The old adage that "sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me" only holds true if the teasing happens once in a while, but constant taunting and teasing by peers will forever change someone and most likely for the worse.
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tnkeating
Dyslexic agnostic insomniac
08:19 PM on 08/29/2012
This is life folks, it doesn't matter if your in school as a child or in the work place or any other place, people will abuse you if you let them. Deal with it, I got my ass kicked several times, even when I fought back, but when I fought back people stopped bullying me because they knew I would fight back. Its really just ranking to see if you will stand on your own two feet. Teach your children how to defend themselves, it will give them confidence when needed. Out numbered? Ask them politely to stand in line, they will get their turn, watch what happens, if you get beat down by the first guy, get up and ask whos next? Many of these so called bullies really want to be friends but lack social skills and want to know if you got their back and deserve their respect. Do you?
08:04 PM on 08/29/2012
"People who resort to bullying are usually people who want to be accepted, want to be loved, or want a seat at the cool kids' table. That's it."

Wrong. The best contemporary research (see "Bullying At School" by Dan Olweus) says that most bullies are kids who are privileged, who feel entitled, who are popular, who given license to bully by their peer group and by their parents (and other adults, including coaches and teachers) who will overlook and/or defend their bad behavior at every turn. They ARE the cool kids and they decide who sits at their table.
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RobbinsT
07:39 PM on 08/29/2012
Great to see this article. Thanks guys. Been there done that in terms of bullying - on the receiving end that is. Needs to stop