Perceptions by Gerry
Warner
Key Amanda
Todd into Google Search and more than 40 million hits come up. More come up
every second. The horrific bullying/suicide tragedy of the 15-year-old
Coquitlam girl has touched a chord around the world. You’d have to be living
under a rock not to have heard about it.
The
details are heartbreaking.
A
little more than two years ago, the tormented teen made a
silly, and ultimately fatal mistake. She flashed her breasts on YouTube, and to
hear that horrible expression that we hear all too often these days, the
image “went viral.” It wasn’t long
before Amanda received a threat from a stranger that if she didn’t put on a
“show” the images would go everywhere. And soon they did and Amanda’s life
began to unravel. More threats washed over her like a cyberspace tsunami.
YouTube, Facebook and all forms of social media. The frightened teen became a
social pariah.
Thanks
to the joys of digital technology, she was bullied every day. At school. In
class. On the school grounds. And on the mean streets outside. She lost all her friends and self-respect.
She would sit alone during lunch breaks and in just one of the almost
continuous incidents a classmate told her: “look around, nobody likes you” and
when Amanda went outside the classmate’s boyfriend, who Amanda secretly thought
really did like her, urged his girlfriend to beat her up which she did,
knocking her to the ground while another classmate filmed the incident with her
“smart phone.” Her father found her
later in the day lying in a ditch.
That
was the day Amanda drank bleach.
“I
just felt like a joke,” she said in one of her YouTube posts. Amanda changed
schools three times after this, but thanks to ever-present “smart phones” and
omnipresent social media, the harrowing, harassment continued. Finally on Oct.
10, 2012, she escaped. How Amanda “escaped”
has mercifully not been disclosed. But if you’re a social media fan, you could
probably find out if you were sick enough to look. And I’m sure many are.
What
has this world come to?
As
a father, who with the help of a good wife, has successfully raised two happy,
well-adjusted children, I don’t know what to think anymore. Thank God, our kids
were old enough that they missed the brunt, of the social media revolution. Our
kids never owned smart phones while they were in school, but they got them as
soon as they went to university, admittedly with their parents help. But by
then they were mature enough to use them properly and there were never any
problems and they proved a great way to keep in touch.
So
I’m not a complete Luddite. I acknowledge digital media and social media are
here to stay and they bring much good along with the bad. But obviously these
are very powerful tools at our disposal
now and they’re not meant to be used frivolously or tragedy can ensue. What’s
frivolously? You don’t need to be a
rocket scientist to figure it out. Giving pre-school children smart phones as
gifts or “toys” is like giving them a gun to “play” with. Any parent that does
that should be turned into the authorities. I’m aging myself here, but I
remember when a child’s “play” phone was two tin cans with holes in them and 50
feet of waxed string. Laugh if you will, but there were few teen suicides back
then.
If
you feel compelled to give a pre-teen a phone, give them a basic cell phone,
which can be used for emergencies and little else. As far as smart phones go,
some parental discretion and judgment goes a long way. Inevitably teenagers
will obtain them, but it’s a parent’s responsibility to ensure they’re used
responsibly no matter how difficult that may be.
And
once again the school system must bear a major portion of responsibility for
smart phone abuse and the cyber bullying that inevitably accompanies it. It
seems when the smart phone revolution came along school officials just threw up
their hands and said they couldn’t deal with them. Instead the educational
establishment tried to incorporate the socially toxic instruments into the
curriculum and we’ve seen the horrifying results. Yes, they can be used to
teach and learn, but they can also be used to bully children to death.
Wake
up educators! It’s your responsibility to develop rules and protocols to
prevent that. If you can’t do it, you shouldn’t be in the business. But I
believe you can. And if you did, Amanda Todd might be alive today.
Gerry
Warner is a retired journalist and Cranbrook City Councillor. His views are his
own.
I enjoyed your article until you showed your predictable teacher-bashing bias. "If only those teachers would do their jobs, we wouldn't have any problems with our youth." How simplistic. If only life were so simple.
ReplyDeleteShame on you, Gerry.
Good for you Scapegoat!! I couldn't agree more. I wonder when Gerry Warner was last in a school to find out what really goes on there, and to talk to teachers about some of the problems they face every day?
ReplyDeleteFrom one editor - Gerry - It takes a community to raise a child and your last two paragraphs are very disturbing to this educator. In reference to your statements - this is rather like saying that because a doctor helps you look after your health, that doctor is responsible if you smoke. Doctors are not responsible for all the ails in the world any more than teachers are responsible for the social ills.
ReplyDeleteGlad someone from CLC made a comment about the negative talk directed at teachers!!
ReplyDelete