| Bullies: An Rx for Safe Schools by Nicholas Stix March 27, 2001 Democratic state legislators in Washington have responded to the March 5 school shooting in Santee, California -- and those elsewhere -- by drafting an anti-bullying statute. Some cynics have asked, 'How will an anti-bullying law prevent school shootings?' Some have even been so insensitive as to ask, 'How will an anti-bullying law stop bullying?' The fact of the matter is, it was only a few years ago, that professional educators discovered the problem of bullying. Through close observation, reflection, and most importantly, the application of the pedagogical theory of power relations, professional pedagogues determined that some kids pick on other kids. These intrepid educators dropped the project they had been working on, of inventing a device for moving people and things -- with the working title of "wheel" -- and applied all their intellectual energies�to the problem at hand. One connection between the anti-bullying law and the Santee shooting, was that the Santee shooter, Charles "Andy" Williams, was not a neo-Nazi, and WAS the victim of bullying. That's right, THE SHOOTER WAS A VICTIM,TOO, even if he was white, male, and apparently failed to present any markedly same-sex orientation. A few years ago, progressive, certified, professional educators made another epochal dicovery: GUNS KILL PEOPLE. They discovered too that EVERYTHING'S CONNECTED. Hence, bullying and homicidal guns are connected. On St. Patrick's Day, while I was briefly at a local beverage provider, Murphy, the beverage person, argued that school shootings were the result of a feminized, medicalized, disarmed society, in which often heavily-medicated boys had no socially acceptable outlets for the aggression that the testosterone in their bodies produced, and where a few boys in need of release knew that in a gun-free zone, the lad that carries is king. Well, I'm paraphrasing. Summoning up all my courage, I challenged my adversary. "Mr. Murphy, are you a progressive, certified, professional educator?" He was not. I continued, "Then I'll thank you to leave this matter to the professionals, or I'll have no choice but to report you to the Beverage Provider Licensing Bureau, for making insensitive remarks, which could result in your beverage provider and driver's licenses being revoked, and your children being placed in foster care. I recall the worst bully I ever faced in school: John Ryan. I was in the seventh grade in Long Beach Junior High School. It was spring, and so far I'd managed to more or less keep my nose clean. I was about to drink from the water fountain, when Gene Squitieri�decided to try and push me out of the way. Although Gene and I got along both before and after that day, he was bigger than me, and decided to use his height advantage. I felt otherwise. And so, we waited, and deliberated. This was just outside the principal's office. Suddenly, the door opened and there appeared the vice-principal, who immediately decided that I was guilty. I would have to appear the next morning with my mother, and apologize to him -- the vice-principal, that is -- though he never said for what. And so, I said I was sorry, though for nothing in particular. While we were with the vice-principal, I had to bite my lower lip almost bloody, in order to keep from laughing. In addition to the many anti-social behaviors I presented during my junior high school years, I felt a barely repressible urge, whenever I was in the vice-principal's presence, to burst into hysterical laughter. One year later, the vice-principal sat me down for an educational and therapeutic moment. "You know what you are, Stix? A pebble; a pebble, trying to be a rock." My school attendance became a matter of cameo appearances. The vice-principal resolved that I would attend the Berkshire School for Boys, but somehow I managed to be truant from reform school. It seemed that whenever I did appear at Long Beach Junior High, the vice-principal would either suspend me, or I would be sentenced to serve detention after school. The vice-principal then sentenced us to a "school detention." Missing that would result in our being suspended. I had often been suspended; however, as Mike's father, Richard, owned the most popular beverage provider service in town, "Shine's," Mike had missed out on certain therapeutic, educational experiences. Copyright (c)2001 by Nicholas Stix.
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