MrRadish
New member
Well actually I'm on his ignore list so he wouldn't have noticed, though he will now because you've decided to quote me....
Btw, he'll also notice you've spelt 'definitely' wrong itoo...
![]()
Stop Internet bullying Lighthouse!
Well actually I'm on his ignore list so he wouldn't have noticed, though he will now because you've decided to quote me....
Btw, he'll also notice you've spelt 'definitely' wrong itoo...
![]()
Stop Internet bullying Lighthouse!
The TheologyOnline.com TOPIC OF THE DAY for September 30th, 2010 10:26 AM
toldailytopic: Internet bullying - where do you draw the line?
Take the topic above and run with it! Slice it, dice it, give us your general thoughts about it. Everyday there will be a new TOL Topic of the Day.
If you want to make suggestions for the Topic of the Day send a Tweet to @toldailytopic or @theologyonline or send it to us via Facebook.
It is possible to rebuke somebody without resorting to the need to insult them and call them names.Oh please. "Rebuking" or "truth smacking" someone is a perfect euphemism for bullying, CM, and you should know that full well.
Stop Internet bullying Lighthouse!
I'd rather get beat up than have a sex video posted on the internet. Especially if I was a closeted gay man. Sometimes emotional abuse can be worse than physical abuse. The phrase about sticks and stones and words isn't true.Is there nothing to be said about the other side of the story? Where do we draw the line on parents not raising their kids with enough self confidence to deal with harrassment? When do we draw the line and start expecting people to TURN OFF the computer/TV/radio if its something that makes them uncomfortable? Yes, bullies are a problem. The were a problem 10/20/30 years ago, too, but no more than today as far as severity. I understand that the bully's availabilty to victims has grown(internet/text/blah blah blah), but did kids in the 60's go suicidal over a fat joke? Did some jocks picking on others cause kids to shoot up high schools in the 40's? Back then, bullies ACTUALLY BEAT PEOPLE UP! They didn't just make fun.
Bullies are wrong. BUT they are there. Shouldn't we be raising kids the deal with it? Shouldn't we be teaching our kids that bullies bully(for the most part) because they feel like crap on the inside?
A line should be drawn, yes, but not just one line and not just in one place. Kids shouldn't go to jail for murder just because someone else's parents didn't teach them that words are just that........WORDS.
closeted gay man.
Sounds like he had issues before the video... where do you think those issues started? With bullies? I doubt it.
And? :idunno: The source of his homosexuality and why he's hiding it (if he was) has nothing to do with my point. Although bullying, of a sort, might indeed have played a role in being in the closet.
I'd rather get beat up than have a sex video posted on the internet. Especially if I was a closeted gay man...
Parents have a job on both sides, but that doesn't mean we can't do anything about these sorts of cases. Teaching children to have strong backbones and punishing bullies aren't mutually exclusive.
I'd say it has to be a reasonable person standard with a caveat relating to personal knowledge that might raise the threshold.If a person commits suicide how can you prove it was because of what somebody said to them on the internet?
The video was of him making out with another guy, so the homosexuality is probably a good assumption, but I was questioning the cloestedness. But it doesn't much matter so....I am not familiar with the story. There is no point in making assumptions about his sexuality or closet-state.
I do mostly agree with you. I think our culture has gotten too sensitive and too PC in some areas. Another thing that concerns me is when you start saying an action is wrong only based on how the other person reacts. So, the action is OK if the victim just shrugs it off and deals with it and the action is a crime if the victim commits suicide. I think that can be a tough line to take. However, when it comes to things like broadcasting videos of someone online without their permission, I think it's safer to say that can be punished no matter what. When it's just verbal abuse, it becomes more of a slope. I think intent is needed and intent can be hard to prove.You said closeted, I thought closeted. In any event, I don't disagree with you at all. I don't think that harrasment/bullying should go unpunished. I just think this whole internet bullying thing is a bigger issue than sending bullies to jail for picking on someone, as wrong as that may be.
Toot toot! I was raised to stick up for kids who couldn't do it, and to know that my worth wasn't defined by what jerks at school thought. I am/was very lucky to have the parents I have. It MAKES ME SICK that in America, nowadays, EVERYTHING that happens to someone(or that they do to themselves) gets blamed on someone else, or on upbringing. I will do my very best to raise my two sons to champion the kids getting picked on, and to know that people can be jerks, but that jerks are jerks for a reason, and that my sons worth isn't based on what those jerks say. I was simply saying in my first post that I think the issue SHOULD be raising our own kids better, not finding a more appropriate punishment for jerks who talk smack online.
Disagree and I will put you in a whooole nother world of pain!K:<---my 1st attempt at online bullying. How'd I do?
Had these two lost souls reached out to Christ after having out of wedlock sex (in the case of Tyler Clementi, with another male), we wouldn't be having this debate.
But, as any good Libertarian worth his weight in moral relativism will tell you: "There will be some victims along the way to true liberty."
So, the action is OK if the victim just shrugs it off and deals with it and the action is a crime if the victim commits suicide. I think that can be a tough line to take. However, when it comes to things like broadcasting videos of someone online without their permission, I think it's safer to say that can be punished no matter what.
This is about bullying, not your pet topics. You who are so persuaded by an avatar, I trained police, worked in the criminal justice system in Texas. I have seen more of the dark side of humans, than you will ever imagine!
You're right, Christian values is my "pet topic". Both parties (the two that committed suicide, and the one's that taunted them) didn't follow those "pet topic" values.
Congratulations, that makes two of us that have seem more than our fair share of the dark side of humanity.
What's the solution, MORE LAWS, or perhaps we could persuade society to follow the "pet topic values" of Chrisitianity?
You're right, Christian values is my "pet topic". Both parties (the two that committed suicide, and the one's that taunted them) didn't follow those "pet topic" values.
Congratulations, that makes two of us that have seem more than our fair share of the dark side of humanity.
What's the solution, MORE LAWS, or perhaps we could persuade society to follow the "pet topic values" of Christianity?
if all prisoners had to work(IN PINK PRISON GARB) we would have the beginnings of creating a means of production.
I guess I can be outcast with aSC, Christian values is my "pet topic", as well. However, I definitely think that(in my absolutely absent knowledge of the darker side of humanity) more laws would have presented one of my best friends suicide... ooops. No it wouldn't have- better parenting would have.