Page 1 of 2

Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 4:06 pm
by VMI77
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2014/04 ... ules-here/

• Rule #4: Do not verbally defend yourself.
• Rule #7: Do not tell on bullies.
• Rule #8: Don’t be a sore loser
• Rule #9: Learn to laugh at yourself and not get “hooked” by put-downs.

Under Rule #4 it goes on to say:
If we defend, we lose
.

Rule #5, Do Not Attack, is a beaut too:
We attack enemies, not friends. If I attack you back I am treating you like an enemy.....
Under Rule #7 it goes on to say:
The number one reason bullies hate their victims is because their victims tell on them. Telling makes the bully want to retaliate.......Would we keep our friends if we tattled on them?
Under Rule #8 it goes on to say:
No one likes a sore loser. Would you like to play with someone who gets all upset when they lose? Lose gracefully and be a good sport; kids will like you better.

This is pretty much the liberal position on any kind of self-defense......let the thug have his way.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 4:38 pm
by jmra
We had a much more effective way of dealing with bullies back in the day.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 4:50 pm
by OldCurlyWolf
jmra wrote:We had a much more effective way of dealing with bullies back in the day.
It was called "Beat the snot out of them".

It worked on gangs too, but you have to catch them alone.

I also had this philosophy:

"You may beat me up, but you better watch around every corner the rest of your life. Somewhere, Somewhen I will be there. You won't know where. You won't know when. But I will be there. :mad5 :reddevil "

I articulated this philosophy while doing my best "Crazy" act. It is amazing how effective it is when properly delivered. :evil2:

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 10:50 pm
by MasterOfNone
VMI77 wrote:This is pretty much the liberal position on any kind of self-defense......let the thug have his way.
Hugs for Thugs :hurry:

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 6:30 am
by anygunanywhere
Isn't it strange that that in the vast majority of instances, progressives are the worst bullies?

Anygunanywhere

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 6:45 am
by MasterOfNone
anygunanywhere wrote:Isn't it strange that that in the vast majority of instances, progressives are the worst bullies?

Anygunanywhere
I'm pretty sure that's why they don't want you to fight back or report them.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 7:05 am
by jmra
MasterOfNone wrote:
anygunanywhere wrote:Isn't it strange that that in the vast majority of instances, progressives are the worst bullies?

Anygunanywhere
I'm pretty sure that's why they don't want you to fight back or report them.
:iagree:

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 7:09 am
by Purplehood
That is why you invariably draw a big-blank look from a liberal when you try to conduct any reasonable discussion of the subject of self-defense.

They simply don't get it.

I equate this with the liberal outlook on how they respond to Government bullying. They simply are not bothered by it.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 7:59 am
by Excaliber
OldCurlyWolf wrote:
jmra wrote:We had a much more effective way of dealing with bullies back in the day.
It was called "Beat the snot out of them".

It worked on gangs too, but you have to catch them alone.

I also had this philosophy:

"You may beat me up, but you better watch around every corner the rest of your life. Somewhere, Somewhen I will be there. You won't know where. You won't know when. But I will be there. :mad5 :reddevil "

I articulated this philosophy while doing my best "Crazy" act. It is amazing how effective it is when properly delivered. :evil2:
Here's my bully resolution story. I apologize for the length, but it took a few words to tell the tale.

I tried to play by the rules with my kids - I really did.

I told them not to fight in school, and if someone tried to bully them, I told them to tell a teacher.

They did.

Teach did nothing.

Kid told me.

I called school - told them to fix it. They promised they would.

They didn't.

Kid now tells me he's getting hit every day, now it's multiple assailants, the teacher or schoolyard monitor sees it, and does nothing.

Time to consider other options.

Fortunately, since I was pretty sure human nature hadn't changed in the last 500,000 years, I had started my kids with karate lessons at age 6 because I knew they would need the physical skills, confidence, and judgment that comes with that training at various points in their lives.

Both were black belts by age 11. I had strictly instructed them not to use it in school.

Time for a rule change.

I told my son to take down and humiliate the leader of the group next time it happened. The only restrictions were not to do any damage that would require medical treatment and not to leave any marks. I told him I knew he knew how to do that and he was free to use his creativity to select an appropriate combination of techniques.

He did. When he got home I asked how it worked out. He said the bully kids now want to be his friends.

But he said the teacher was really mad and I was going to get a call from the principal. I said "I'll take care of it."

I stayed in my office at police headquarters the next morning so I wouldn't miss the call.

I didn't have to wait long. The very irate principal called and said my son had been fighting in the schoolyard and was going to be suspended.

I told him that wasn't going to happen. I read him the section of the state penal code on self defense and told him that my son had no option but to exercise his rights under that law because he and the employees he managed were negligent, incompetent or both and had made no attempt to stop the attacks on my son when I brought them to his attention earlier.

He got more irate and insisted he was going through with the suspension. I asked if my attorney should be contacting him or the school's legal counsel. I also asked him for the contact information for the school's media spokesperson so the reporters I dealt with regularly would know who to interview for his side of the story.

He stopped shouting. He went to spluttering. I asked him if my son was still going to be suspended. He said maybe not.

I told him I was confident he would ultimately reach a reasonable decision and that this would be the last I heard about it.

I also told him to make sure my son wasn't put in the same situation again unless he wanted to have a rerun of our friendly conversation that morning, and to have a nice day. I hung up and never heard another word.

My son had no more trouble in school - until he got to high school.

On the first day in the cafeteria as a freshman he was surrounded by several seniors and told to lick the shoes of one of them. This time he knew the rules without having to talk to Dad. He approached the grinning bully, smiled, swept his legs out from under him, caught him by the shirt just before he hit the floor, smiled again and told him if he ever spoke to him again like that it was going to hurt - a lot.

I didn't get a call from the school, he had lots of kids who wanted to be his friends, and he never had another issue during the 4 years of high school.

Takeaways:

Bullies respect only direct action. That goes for both the kids and the teachers and principal.

Proportionate direct action backed up by legally aware parents is not something the bullies in school administration are willing to push to the point of getting burned. Like other bullies, they only pick on the weak.

Action gets results quickly and the problem stays solved over time because fear is an effective inhibitor for those without principles.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 8:59 am
by RoyGBiv
anygunanywhere wrote:Isn't it strange that that in the vast majority of instances, progressives are the worst bullies?

Anygunanywhere
They want to take away your weapons so they can bully you freely with their pen and their phone.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 9:09 am
by Excaliber
RoyGBiv wrote:
anygunanywhere wrote:Isn't it strange that that in the vast majority of instances, progressives are the worst bullies?

Anygunanywhere
They want to take away your weapons so they can bully you freely with their pen and their phone.
Don't forget the weapons they kept for their acolytes.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 9:13 am
by Abraham
I attended over 25 schools from 1st to 12th.

I was always on the smallish size.

Within (generally) 3 days the school bully and his entourage would find me.

As soon as he started his verbal bullying, I would immediately punch him in the nose or eye.

Only once, did I have to keep fighting.

The fight left us both battered and bruised, but he never bothered me again.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 9:40 am
by VMI77
Excaliber wrote:
OldCurlyWolf wrote:
jmra wrote:We had a much more effective way of dealing with bullies back in the day.
It was called "Beat the snot out of them".

It worked on gangs too, but you have to catch them alone.

I also had this philosophy:

"You may beat me up, but you better watch around every corner the rest of your life. Somewhere, Somewhen I will be there. You won't know where. You won't know when. But I will be there. :mad5 :reddevil "

I articulated this philosophy while doing my best "Crazy" act. It is amazing how effective it is when properly delivered. :evil2:
Here's my bully resolution story. I apologize for the length, but it took a few words to tell the tale.

I tried to play by the rules with my kids - I really did.

I told them not to fight in school, and if someone tried to bully them, I told them to tell a teacher.

They did.

Teach did nothing.

Kid told me.

I called school - told them to fix it. They promised they would.

They didn't.

Kid now tells me he's getting hit every day, now it's multiple assailants, the teacher or schoolyard monitor sees it, and does nothing.

Time to consider other options.

Fortunately, since I was pretty sure human nature hadn't changed in the last 500,000 years, I had started my kids with karate lessons at age 6 because I knew they would need the physical skills, confidence, and judgment that comes with that training at various points in their lives.

Both were black belts by age 11. I had strictly instructed them not to use it in school.

Time for a rule change.

I told my son to take down and humiliate the leader of the group next time it happened. The only restrictions were not to do any damage that would require medical treatment and not to leave any marks. I told him I knew he knew how to do that and he was free to use his creativity to select an appropriate combination of techniques.

He did. When he got home I asked how it worked out. He said the bully kids now want to be his friends.

But he said the teacher was really mad and I was going to get a call from the principal. I said "I'll take care of it."

I stayed in my office at police headquarters the next morning so I wouldn't miss the call.

I didn't have to wait long. The very irate principal called and said my son had been fighting in the schoolyard and was going to be suspended.

I told him that wasn't going to happen. I read him the section of the state penal code on self defense and told him that my son had no option but to exercise his rights under that law because he and the employees he managed were negligent, incompetent or both and had made no attempt to stop the attacks on my son when I brought them to his attention earlier.

He got more irate and insisted he was going through with the suspension. I asked if my attorney should be contacting him or the school's legal counsel. I also asked him for the contact information for the school's media spokesperson so the reporters I dealt with regularly would know who to interview for his side of the story.

He stopped shouting. He went to spluttering. I asked him if my son was still going to be suspended. He said maybe not.

I told him I was confident he would ultimately reach a reasonable decision and that this would be the last I heard about it.

I also told him to make sure my son wasn't put in the same situation again unless he wanted to have a rerun of our friendly conversation that morning, and to have a nice day. I hung up and never heard another word.

My son had no more trouble in school - until he got to high school.

On the first day in the cafeteria as a freshman he was surrounded by several seniors and told to lick the shoes of one of them. This time he knew the rules without having to talk to Dad. He approached the grinning bully, smiled, swept his legs out from under him, caught him by the shirt just before he hit the floor, smiled again and told him if he ever spoke to him again like that it was going to hurt - a lot.

I didn't get a call from the school, he had lots of kids who wanted to be his friends, and he never had another issue during the 4 years of high school.

Takeaways:

Bullies respect only direct action. That goes for both the kids and the teachers and principal.

Proportionate direct action backed up by legally aware parents is not something the bullies in school administration are willing to push to the point of getting burned. Like other bullies, they only pick on the weak.

Action gets results quickly and the problem stays solved over time because fear is an effective inhibitor for those without principles.
I've told this story on here before. Back in the 50's, in California no less, my brother beat up a bully who had been terrorizing the school. Did my parents hear from the principal? They sure did. The principal drove him home and told my parents that he was proud of my brother for standing up to the school bully. By the time I went to junior high in California standing up to a bully meant suspension regardless of the circumstances. I tolerated some bullying because I didn't want to get kicked out of school. Then one day I snapped and fought back. End of being bullied; and I never tolerated being bullied again. The shift in attitude between the time my brother was in high school and I was in junior high was the beginning of the country's descent into the moral sewer of progressivism.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 9:52 am
by jimlongley
When I came home from school in tears because the bigger kids on the school bus were picking on me about my new (and very much hated in second grade) glasses, my father gave me pretty much all the same advice. I was driven to tears easily, which made me even more of a target, and despite my entreaties to all of those in authority, nothing got done. The bus driver saw nothing, the principal ("It's spelled that way because I'm your pal.") suggested that I was the one at fault, and one of my teachers even thought it was quite funny. This was the 50s also.

One day my grandfather (the one who worked his way from buck private to Brigadier General) happened to be at my house when I came home with tears and snot all over my face, broken glasses (again, and my mother would whip me for having broken another pair) and a couple of visible bruises, and "Grandpap" took me aside and we had a long talk.

One of the things I learned was that use of force when you are going to lose anyway, is acceptable, but better if you set it up so you will win. Win by using their weaknesses against them. Win by using "sneak attacks" which does not necessarily mean be the aggressor, might only mean responding in an unexpected manner. And ultimately win by being superior, by living better, or just plain better tactics.

So one of the school bullies came by my friend's house collecting for his paper route, by himself instead of with his little gang (And BTW, wearing glasses). My parents made me dress up in my Sunday best and go to his house and apologize to his mother (a war widow) for beating up her poor Billy, but I couldn't help but grin and snicker at the sight of him sitting there in tears. It was the last time he or his gang ever picked on me.

Fast forward to going back to work for the phone company after 4 years in the Navy, and they deemed it was necessary for me to attend climbing school since I hadn't climbed in all that time. Lo and behold, another bully, from high school, was in the same climbing school class. The first day the instructor let me loose to go out and climb to my heart's content, something I always enjoyed, while he gave everyone else the rudiments. In the afternoon he brought the rest of the class out so they could see me climb, because he had observed that I was doing it right, and there I was perched, sitting, on top of a 30 foot pole in the middle of the pole yard, not always the approved thing to do, but I was showing off.

Later in the week as the class was beginning to get off the ground, the instructor, unaware that Bill and I had "history" and seeing that Bill was having problems getting more than two steps up the pole, assigned me to "coach" Bill while he attended to the rest of the group. I climbed up and down Bill's pole in front of him, while he was on the pole, made it shake back and forth, leaned out to full reach from the next pole over and tapped him on the butt, and even physically got behind him and pushed him up the pole. With my help Bill washed out of climbing school the next day and was "released" from the phone company.

I retired from the phone company after 28 years, at the age of 48, as a second level manager, and still consider that my best revenge.

Re: Public school advice on dealing with bullies

Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 10:05 am
by RogueUSMC
Freshman year of high school was when it started...

Four guys a grade above me would come to me EVERY day and tell me that the NEXT day they were gonna whoop me. Never happened but I heard how I was gonna get my butt whooped EVERY day for four YEARS (three of them failed a grade so I had to hear it ANOTHER year.)

Fast forward seven or eight years. I had discharged from the corps and come back home when I was out with some friends at a bar. One of those guys walked up and was trying to chat up one of my friends. She was giving him 'go away' signals that were bretty obvious but he kept at it. She finally went with a couple of other girls to the bathroom (guys don't do that...lol) which was a VERY obvious 'go away' signal.

He turns to me then and says, "you ain't sayin' much."
I said, "I don't have anything to say to you."
He said, "you don't know me."
I said, "I know you well enough to know you're an @#$%$#@."
He asked where I knew him from but I never gave him an answer...I'd like to think he was wondering for a while but he prolly didn't.