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Village Voice on Voices From The Hellmouth

Posted by Hemos on Thu May 27, '99 08:04 AM
from the put-on-the-asbestos dept.
Catatomic writes "The Village Voice has an interesting article about Katz "Voices From The Hellmouth" Check it out here. " Well, interesting is one way to put it; incendiary is another. Worth checking out though. Click below to get a response from Katz, who was interviewed for this article.
I'm not a big fan of intra-media incestuous disputes, and I take plenty of criticism and disagreement without complaint. But I'm getting a lot of e-mail about this, and I feel strongly about the Hellmouth series, so I feel ought to respond. The Voice piece was, in my mind, neither an honest nor accurate reflection of a very brief, hurried interview I gave on the phone with the writer who calls himself Jane Dark a couple of weeks ago. First off, I made a huge point of not comparing these experiences to the Holocaust. Not a single e-mailer made that comparison, and I think it's ludicrous, although the pain in these messages was truly breathtaking.But to liken their experiences to the Holocaust has never occurred to me, or to the thousands of kids e-mailing me. Many did compare the experience of being outsiders to being gay.

I said the e-mails had the feeling of testimony, which survivors of disasters often used. He asked me if this were like the Holocaust, and I said I suppose the idea of testimony was similiar, but that they weren't comparable experiences. So here's a lesson in how media work.

Dark asked me a half dozen times if these were all middle-class males, and I said no: nearly half were women, and my impression -- Î couldn't know for sure -- was that a huge chunk were working class kids. The Voice piece obviously reflects a pre-conceived and provocatively contrarian point of view, to which the writer is perfectly well entitled.

But I think it's pretty snarky to misrepresent what I said in support of it. He could just say it himself. I don't know why he even bothered to call. And I'm not into squawking about what reporters write. If you dish it out, you ought to take it.

Then, of course, there's the profoundly stupid idea at the heart of the piece that middle-class kids bring victimization on themselves, or don't deserve sympathy if they are harassed, humiliated, excluded, or sent home or suspended for being different from most other middle-class kids. In fact, it's so foolish an idea I doubt he even believes it.

This may be an honest difference of opinion, but it sure wasn't honestly gathered.So I'm telling the people e-mailing me to move on. Let's not play.

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  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:25AM
  • Woodstock Nation? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:41AM
  • My response to Village Voice by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:49AM
  • stupid parents by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:46AM
  • Re:But of course by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:25AM
  • Asian Americans don't matter by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:49AM
  • My life. by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @01:11PM
  • Re:Asian Americans don't matter -- YES THEY DO! by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @01:19PM
  • What's wrong with being a white male by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:32AM
  • Problems with schools by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @02:34PM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Anonymous Coward (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @04:45AM
  • Re:Letter to the editor by Anonymous Coward (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @07:46AM
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 27, @04:39AM (#1877506)
    This article sounds like it was written by someone who has been claiming oppressed class status and is afraid of losing it if some other group is also seen to be oppressed.

    It also sounds like the same old crap about how middle-class white kids can't possibly have problems because they are part of the alleged white male conspiracy against all minorities and women.

    The truth is, something has gone horribly wrong with these kids, and to attack them for saying something about it is simply shooting the messenger. It doesn't matter who is saying it, attacking those who say it doesn't do anything to fix the actual problems.

    Until every person in middle and high schools in this country is safe from harassment and abuse from their peers, and until schools take a hard look at the established cliques, we will continue to see this kind of problem.

    But it doesn't stop there. The schools alone can't solve this problem. Not only do parents need to start taking responsibility for every aspect of their children's lives, they must begin to instill in them a sense of respect for others and an understanding that other people are also human and do not exist for their amusement.

    Children who are raised with a solid moral grounding (and no, I'm not advocating religion, just a simple, straightforward moral code) will be able to resist whatever is thrown at them by society, and be able to stand up for their own values.

    We can ban violent games, internet access for kids, violent movies, even guns, but unless we bring these kids back into the fold soon, there will only be more Littletons.

    This can be fixed without tearing down the Constitution, but it will require an effort on everyone's part. And it will probably require an outbreak of common sense in the newsmedia and in the legislatures.

    Enough ranting for now :).
  • Re:Insecure kids?

    (Score:5)
    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 27, @05:07AM (#1877507)
    You're missing the point that many people made in Katz's piece. It's not about being called a loser because you're smart. It's about getting beaten day after day for not doing anything. I can handle someone calling me stupid, or not inviting me out on a Friday night. I can't handle a 300 pound meathead beating the crap out of me. It's illegal and immoral, and there's no reason for it to continue, whether the person being beaten is white, black, gay, straight, male, female, etc. These people need to learn to control their feelings and take them out in other ways.

    -D
  • by ender (79) on Thursday May 27, @05:45AM (#1877508)
    (http://andrewburke.org/)
    Why do American kids cry out against their station in life more loudly than their European or Ausie counterparts? American kids are the result
    of the "ME" generation. It's all about them, it's all about being 'happy with who they are'. It's all about being 'special'. They lack the feeling of
    community and common welfare.


    The problem is that suffering (as well as.. joy?) are subjective. If I feel that I am suffering maximally, and so does an etheopian child, then to me and that child, we're suffering equally. You cannot gauge a person's problems from outside of them. Yes, you can say that in fact, the ethopian child is suffering more objectively, but to the white middle-class kid who gets beat up in school for being a geek, his hell is no less hot by his standards.

    American teens are more out of touch with this than teens in other countries. The "American Dream" and "keeping up with the Joneses" tells
    them that if they don't have the BEST, they don't have it good. If they don't have it good, they then must have it bad.


    I fail to see how this has to do with being ousted by a community. In high school, I was "less than popular." I was a geek, I was into computers, and worst of all, I was fat. Wether or not I had money, or a nice house, or whatever, that made no difference to tormentors. (odd that "mentor" is present in that word) I don't think I "had it bad," materialistically I had it pretty good, and I was well aware of that. However, that has nothing to do with how you feel emotionally because someone else deems you "unworthy" of popularity, of acceptance.

    To summarize: even if you have a billion dollars and all the best stuff in the world, if you're say, clinically depressed, then your life is still a living hell. If you're poor, but find happiness in something then I say you're better of than the person who "has it all."

    If you're a jock, and you feel horribly worried that you won't be accepted so you beat up some kid who's different but it tears you up inside, then i'd say you're just as bad off as the kid you beat up, but you chose a more harmful way to deal with it.

    High schools are one of the worst inventions ever created. They foster horrible class structures based on the wrong criteria. I don't know a solution, but I do recognize a problem here.
  • Cryptonomicon by Skyshadow (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:24PM
  • humanity by gavinhall (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:01AM
  • Of course, Gays don't count as White males. by gavinhall (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:28AM
  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by gavinhall (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:16AM
  • Re:Confused Author by gavinhall (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:18AM
  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by gavinhall (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:14PM
  • by gavinhall (33) on Thursday May 27, @06:16AM (#1877515)
    Posted by generic kewl tech reference:

    to know that there was such an easy solution to the constant abuse that was my school experience: Just learn to fit in or suffer, rich white boy!

    Thank you, Village Voice.

    Never mind that my parent was on welfare and had less than $100 in the bank, everybody knows the white people are the oppressors.

    Admittedly, where I went to high school, we had very few minorities when I went. Perhaps I didn't notice how badly they were being treated, being selfishly caught up in my own trivial little daily beatings, humiliations, assaults, and death threats.

    I wish that the well-meaning parents, teachers, school counselors, and psychiatrists (and psychiatrists, and psychiatrists...) had been as honest with me as you were, Village Voice. Instead of telling me to tell a teacher or authority figure (which got me beaten) or to just pity or ignore my tormentors (which got me beaten) or to stand up to my oppressors (which got me locked in a locker as they threatened to set fire to me), they should have just told me that it was all my fault and to conform or perish.

    It's nice to know that the suicide attempts were just petty whining over normal adolescent problems. I'm sure every child goes home, digs out the 9mm Walther PPK their parent had hidden away, and wonders just what it would feel like to go to school the next day and blow away everyone who pisses them off.

    Thank you, Village Voice.

    cc: Village Voice
    bcc: slashdot.org
  • Rush the band, not the Big Fat Idiot. by DunbarTheInept (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:24PM
  • Mostly atheists? I doubt it. by DunbarTheInept (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:29PM
  • I think the comparison with homophobia is fair by Paul Crowley (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:26AM
  • Re:But of course by Xamot (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @08:12AM
  • When do my white male power elite funds arrive? by adamsc (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:01AM
  • Katz and the Village Mouth missed the point by On Lawn (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:24AM
  • Village Idiot by tjones (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:34AM
  • Re:Unity makes you strong! (Re:Fighting back...) by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:53AM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:57AM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:01AM
  • Re:The Hellmouth by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:13AM
  • Re:Geeks 'R' Us by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:26AM
  • Re:Village Voice fails to get it by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:32AM
  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:46AM
  • Re:Children are monsters by jafac (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:55AM
  • Re:the WB is SHT by jafac (Score:1) Friday May 28, @09:10AM
  • Re:Not the worst article, but... by Frater 219 (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @08:16AM
  • by miniver (1839) on Thursday May 27, @05:19AM (#1877533)
    (http://unicornsrest.org/craig/)
    Here's the letter I wrote to the editor [mailto] of the Village Voice; I encourage everyone else to write to them as well.

    Dear Sirs:

    I just finished reading your feature "Suffer the (White, Middle-Class) Children" (http://www.villagevoice.com/features/9921/dark.sh tml) and I must say I am quite disappointed. Your writer apparently heard stories of suffering and pain, then checked a color bar and saw "white" and "male" and concluded that the pain and suffering weren't real, and that this was just the white, male establishment trying to steal the identity-politics initiative. Hardly the journalistic thoroughness that The Village Voice is known for.

    Neither Jon Katz, nor the thousands of kids and adults that wrote him, claimed that they were the only people being punished for being different; all they said was "Hey, it's happening here, too." School *is* Hell; Matt Groening wasn't telling any new tales when he drew that collection of cartoons a decade ago.

    I've never been a fan of identity-politics -- I've always felt that the problem was "the system" was taking advantage of individuals, because individuals rarely have any way to fight the system or even of knowing that the system doesn't have to be that way. Black, white, female, male, adult, child: as individuals we are all easily oppressed; only by gathering together can we become strong enough to fight the system.

    But there are plenty of special interests that have figured out that they don't have to gather everyone and address all the problems -- all they need is to gather enough people from a single category, and focus on one set of problems -- and they'll have found their own special path to power, and representation within the system, consequently make the system that much worse for the rest of us. Blacks, women, gays, the elderly, the poor, the handicapped -- they all have their special needs and special desires, and their own special advocates who are all just more cogs in the system.

    Your writer and your editorial policies indicate to me that The Village Voice is proud of its place within the system, and isn't interested in anyone else upsetting the status quo. Just remember when you send your kids off to school in the morning, you're condemning them to the same daily torture that you once suffered, and remind yourself that you had a chance to say and do something about it -- and decided not to rock the boat. I hope you feel proud of yourselves.

  • Re: Why this is? by Ex-NT-User (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:14AM
  • by Bander (2001) on Thursday May 27, @05:34AM (#1877535)
    (http://nick.vargish.org/)

    I found the article pretty offensive, personally. It showed the ugliest side of reverse discrimination, the part that says, "your pain has no validity because you don't match our idea of an oppressed group." The fact Ms Dark assumes that the people who contributed their personal stories to Katz's series are white males is so patently racist that I'm shocked her editors didn't call her on it.

    None of the respondents even mentioned their race. For all we know, many of the contributors were non-caucasian and non-male. That wasn't so much relevant as the fact that they considered themselves nerds and geeks.

    I consider myself a liberal on many social issues, but this Village Voice article is exactly the kind of "liberalism" that makes me want to puke.

    -- Bander

  • The Village Voice Missed the point by deanc (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:23AM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by cirby (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @12:03PM
  • Re:He's off by a bit. by cfulmer (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @04:57AM
  • Re:But of course

    (Score:4)
    by Paulo (3416) on Thursday May 27, @05:30AM (#1877539)
    >White middle American class kids do one thing >well - complain. Katz provided what
    > appeared to be a legitimate >opportunity for them to claim victimhood


    I see that you're making exactly the same mistake that the author of the article did; classify opression as "more or less important" using shallow political factors, instead of looking at the real issue -people being physically/psichologically abused (not just bullied). "Middle-class white male" isn't an monolithic group, despite what some people might think.


    >Note to future teenagers - you're going to be >bullied, you're going to be hard-pressed for a
    > sexual outlet, no one is going to like your >clothes, and you've got horrible zits. Welcome to
    >planet earth. Kids in Kosovo would kill to have >problems as trite as yours.

    "Note to gay kids: you are going to be discriminated, beaten up, harassed and killed just because you're different. That's okay because that's how it's always been in the real world, and if you don't like it, go to Sudan/Ethiopia/India and face the real problems".
    Is that okay with you?

    (As for whining, many of the responses to Katz's article weren't so much accounts of personal experiences as calls for action and practical advice to deal with harassement, so I wonder how much of them did you really read).

  • by Dr. Evil (3501) on Thursday May 27, @05:47AM (#1877540)
    (Last Journal: Wednesday November 30, @02:51PM)

    What an insult.

    Being home... alone... unharassed... on any night whatsoever was paradise.

    I think they completely missed the point.

  • by Dr. Evil (3501) on Thursday May 27, @06:52AM (#1877541)
    (Last Journal: Wednesday November 30, @02:51PM)

    Nobody can judge anybody else's personal pain. We are products of the societies we are raised in. It's the flipside of this pyramid. Sometimes the people being beaten the most at school, who have the most quiet voices are feeling the least pain. They've grown accustomed to the abuse.

    Who hurts more? The popular kid who's rejected by their peers, or the unpopular kid who's rejected by their peers?

    Is the unpopular kid deserving of a "reality check?" Should we throw him into a greater hell simply because he isn't in enough pain where he is? Should we call him selfish if he cries?

    It's a damn shame he doesn't want to be beaten up every day. He should take it with pride and tell himself that as long as the Ethiopians are starving, he has no right to complain. His agressors are good kids -- They're not crying 'What about ME.'

    It's a little more complicated being selfish or "keeping up with the Jones'."

  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by jjoyce (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @11:50AM
  • Unity makes you strong! (Re:Fighting back...) by Crass Spektakel (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:25AM
  • What I sent to the Voice by kevin lyda (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @05:24AM
  • Remember who "Jane Dark" is... by clintp (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:32AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? Not in Aus ? Ho ho ho by MeerCat (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:56AM
  • Insecure kids?

    (Score:5)
    by dpg (5987) on Thursday May 27, @03:14AM (#1877547)
    (http://yallara.cs.rmit.edu.au/~danpat)
    I'm sort of afraid to ask this, but....why do
    these things seem to be centred around the US?

    I'm not sure on the demographics, but I know
    Australia has one of the highest person/net usage
    in the world, most of the kids I know play console
    games, we get all the terrible US telly, and yet
    we don't seem to have the same problems.

    I know that I was bagged at high school for being
    geeky, but who cares? Do other people opinions
    _really_ make that much difference to how you
    think about yourself? I certinaly didn't give
    myself an ulcer over it.

    Just think of the people who critisise you as
    being stupider than you are, merely trying to
    bring you down because of their dissatisfaction
    with their own intelligence. Makes you feel
    better :)
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by David Ishee (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:56PM
  • Making light of others' oppression by knuth (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:00PM
  • Re:Minimize my pain! by Doctor Memory (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:48AM
  • Confused Author by xinit (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:55AM
  • Once again because it's in a school by gelfling (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @05:52AM
  • He's off by a bit. by djarb (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @04:23AM
  • 30 years ago.... by Mr. Shadow (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:33AM
  • Re:Children are monsters by Mr. Shadow (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:42AM
  • Star Athletes and Violence by Mr. Shadow (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @01:01PM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by carlfish (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @03:43PM
  • Re:He's off by a bit. by GypC (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:02AM
  • Re:Village Voice fails to get it by Signal 11 (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @07:24AM
  • Re:Village Voice fails to get it by Signal 11 (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @07:25AM
  • Disappointly silly and distorted by JonKatz (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:44AM
  • Down with the system. by TWZ (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @11:38AM
  • Re:Remember who "Jane Dark" is... by jgalun (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @08:02AM
  • Village Voice Writer States the Party Line by llywrch (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @01:52PM
  • The problem with Jane Dark by LafinJack (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @05:18AM
  • multiple issues by UncleRoger (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:05AM
  • Re:But of course by malkavian (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:24AM
  • Maybe it's just me... But the whole article reeks of the prose of one of the hardcore Politically Correct.
    From the title alone, "Suffer the (white, middle-class) Children", you get a taste of the real issue the author is addressing.
    The fact the kids are white and middle class.
    There's no real addressing of the 'Geek Profiling', no attempt to address the fact that the most sensitive of the kids are being picked on, for the sheer fact that they are sensitive, and show the most reaction to being hurt.
    Oh yes, that article is penned in eloquent English, with the verbal flourishes and pomp that accompany the arrogant and self obsessed.
    There was one mention of ethics. And one of compassion.
    The rest was about politics. 'Progressive' politics. 'Identity' politics.
    And the sum up paragraph drove home what the author really seemed to be directing all this flamboutance at (and don't be fooled, it is almost entirely flambouyant waffle.. There is very little not no real meat in this article...)...
    The impression in her mind that the white middle class males are trying to steal the 'identity' of the 'opressed' (read 'black', 'from the slave origin', Politically Correct garbage).
    Is that all it comes down to in the minds of some, that all the pain and suffering is merely political vying to see who can be the biggest victim??
    I'm white, was brought up middle class, and had a rather nasty breakdown at 11 due to bullying.
    All the PC administration would do is tell me 'I ought to get to know them better, they're nice really... You should invite them round for dinner'... Every excuse under the sun, and many that weren't...
    I wasn't interested in being a victim, and I'm not now...
    Faecal matter occurs.. Deal with it.
    This isn't about politics, or something that happened generations ago.. People have grown up a little since then.. They understand a lot more...
    This is about something that's happening now..
    It's about ethics. It's about opening your eyes and seeing that the people who change the course of the world are those that think differently...
    And if you kick that person all their life, when they change the world, will they not kick back?
    At school, is the place where attitudes are formed... And, I know very well that it's a nightmare for the teachers to cut the fine balance between overprotecting the children (as seems to be the rage in the US), and offering them no protection at all.. Or maybe protecting them from the wrong things...
    Every child needs a challenge.. They need the ability to prosper and grow...
    The physically inclined require physical challenges (so, install a few adventure playgrounds... The few bruises and grazes they garner are proud badges to a child, to show wht they've achieved... But, oh, I forgot, in the US, the parents would sue the school for 'damaging their child'...), the bookish need the company of the bookish, so they can exercise their minds and feelings in peace...
    I'm sorry, but I feel nothing but contempt for the author's offhand dismissal of the problem as being politics...
    It's not.. It's about the people... It's about the future.
    Only when people stop shouting about politics and the 'use' of the 'victim culture', and deal with the people who hurt, but refuse to identify themselves as victims.. Just as people who hurt, will things start to become clearer...
    Just my tuppence worth,

    Malk
  • Re:Letter to the editor by DavidTC (Score:1) Saturday May 29, @02:17PM
  • You missed Katz's comments. by DavidTC (Score:1) Saturday May 29, @02:45PM
  • "You think *you've* got problems?" by tuffy (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:28AM
  • Good Morning Sunshine Your A Racist by tomwhore (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:30AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Brant (Score:1) Friday May 28, @09:01AM
  • Huh?

    (Score:5)
    Was it just me or was there an undercurrent of
    bigotry, prejudice and racism in that article
    nicely clothed in a wrapper of political
    correctness? Not only that it dripped with a
    thinly veiled bitterness.

    Oh, of coure, I forgot. All us white middle class
    folk are part of a conspiracy to oppress everyone
    else. For her information it has nothing to
    do with race or class (I'm 1/2 chinese myself).
    Don't peg people with race or class labels.
    Only the small minded do that. I'm not saying
    that there aren't minority groups and that they
    don't get oppressed sure they do. BUT, you can't
    define a "minority" group by race and class
    alone, if you are to do it at all.

    She should get off her, we are so down-trodden
    holier than thou, "horse." Wake up, your
    type of thinking that labels and classifys others
    and then pre-judges them based on YOUR arbitrary
    classifications is EXACTLY like that of those other
    small minded bigots who I image, and you insinuate,
    persecuted and oppressed you. We need to realise
    that people are people no matter where you go.
    We all have the same wants and needs, hopes and
    dreams, as everyone else. Whether your white,
    black, hispanic, asian, whatever. Judge people
    on the merit of WHO THEY ARE, not where they
    come from, what they look like or how much money
    they make.

    The pity is that she has failed to realise that
    she has become just like those "racist bigots"
    that she hates so much. Poisoning yourself with
    bitterness will not make you a better person.
    I sympathise but we all have issues. Ever had to
    deal with the extreme loneliness of being from
    a bi-racial family? (man I hate using this
    terminology, but it's probably the only thing
    you'll understand). You're of two different
    cultures but belong to none, not accepted by
    either side. Until you stop looking at everything
    through the glasses of race and start drawing
    on the strength that your unique background
    gives you. Same thing for anyone from a single
    minority. But you can't get to that point in
    your personal growth without letting go of the
    bitterness, hate and frustration that you've
    accumulated. It starts with forgivness. Sounds
    cheesy but it's true.

    Cheers.


    ********************************************
    Superstition is a word the ignorant use to describe their ignorance. -Sifu
  • Minimize my pain!

    (Score:5)
    by lar3ry (10905) on Thursday May 27, @04:31AM (#1877576)
    Home alone on Friday night. Gas chambers.

    I don't think that Jon's article went that far, and despite that, I do think that the Village Voice article raises quite a few interesting points.

    Yes, it sucks to be a kid. But, unlike the author of that article, I believe that you can decide against the moves for playing along with the popularity game.

    Twenty-some odd years ago, I was in the same situation as Jon's correspondants. I was a computer nerd (geek wasn't used back in 1974). I didn't earn the anger of the more popular students, but rather they just ignored me totally.

    There is NOTHING that justifies what happened in Littleton. But also, there is NOTHING that justifies what has happened in the aftermath of Littleton -- expulsions, suspensions, geek counseling, "geek profiling," etc.

    The establishment is overreacting, as usual. But let us not overreact as well.

    School sucks. College sucks. Work sucks. Life sucks.

    It's up to you to figure out how to win the game. Spraying a school with bullets isn't the answer. Succeeding is the answer.

    How? Everybody will have to figure that out for himself/herself.

    --
  • blah blah blah by 10am-bedtime (Score:1) Sunday May 30, @04:42PM
  • Re:Minimize my pain! by Balance (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:35AM
  • Re:But of course by PsychoSpunk (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:44AM
  • Re:And again, "they" don't get it. by PsychoSpunk (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:00AM
  • Re:And again, "they" don't get it. by PsychoSpunk (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:49AM
  • by PsychoSpunk (11534) on Thursday May 27, @06:28AM (#1877582)
    Your comments, while valid, also seem to prove a point about America which perhaps you did not intend to prove.

    After WWII, America rejoiced, reveled and otherwise felt good about itself. We were told that we could have anything we wanted, but as the Great Depression taught us, we would have to work to get those things we wanted. This did not bother Americans, those two great tragedies seemed to have an important effect on this mode of thinking.

    Now jump forward to present. The geeks, nerds, and other social outcasts in high school are idealists (mostly, and I know because I'm proud to be one.) We've read countless books where in the end, it is the smartest person who is our hero, because he uses his ability to determine the best route to thwart his oppressors. These are propagandist stories, judging simply from when in history they were written, and also by whom they were written. Yet they still hold true to some case.

    The geeks, nerds, and outcasts have worked to put learning (gasp) as the focus of our schooling, and yet now our American Dream is failing. The truths that were instilled from our parents and grandparents that if we work hard enough, everything will be provided seems to be fading. Why is this? Because rewards and vicarious living through the talented athletes, popular people and otherwise "in group" has become prevalent.

    Now to get to your point about the difference between Ethiopian, Kosovar, and geek. It is true that the tragedies happening elsewhere in the world are far more disturbing and shocking, and it is true that their victims are mostly unable to speak up. Yet, Kosovars and anti-Milosevic Serbs ARE speaking up online. So are the geek class. Why?

    The answer is simple. Our ideal is dissolving, and we as a class are finding ourselves under fire by all sides. So, we USE our voice which our class created to speak up against the atrocities (I use that word with as much fervor as I would describing the helplessness to stop tragedy anywhere) performed by our oppressors.

    Yes, it is a shame that Ethiopians cannot speak up, but it speaks of their upbringing (not to say that their upbringing is the Right Thing) which has made them helpless. And without meeting Maslow's pyramid of having the necessary things to feel good about yourself, these people are forced to accept their plight. It is most definitely not the Right Thing.

    Geeks in America are on a higher rung of the pyramid, and are in the position to move higher by fighting for what is Right. However, no one ever condoned killing, slaughtering, or massacring your oppressors. That is a war crime by Geneva standards. (I find the Geneva guidelines for war to be silly. I know that they protect basic human rights, but to imagine that we have rules for war is outright absurd. I guess "Not all is fair in War.")

    I guess my point is that it's not about "keeping up with the Joneses" or even "being the Joneses", it is about reward for work done. That is what we believe. I'm fairly certain that you will not find another person in our "social class" that feels otherwise.

    Finally, I'm making another shameless plug for escape from your situation to all high school students that feel oppressed. In Texas, there are at least two programs which allow students to leave high school after their sophomore year. One is Texas Academy for Leadership in the Humanities [slashdot.org] at Lamar University in Beaumont. The other is the Texas Academy for Math and Science at University of North Texas. I went to TALH my senior year, (it's charter year) and I am currently planning our 5-year (since the beginning) reunion. My best friend was my roommate there (and we're going to be roommates again), and my fiance also attended. The rest of the charter class are people I would consider my closest friends ever. My advice is to research whether there is a program like these in your home state.

    It was a reward for my intelligence, but also provided a new challenge. Isn't this what we're all after anyways, challenges?

    I'm [mailto] always glad to help anyone learn more about these programs, as I consider TALH (and somewhat Texas Governor's Honors Program) to be the life-changing experiences that have shaped me.

    PsychoSpunk
  • Re:Children are monsters by Detritus (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:56AM
  • Village Voice O' Wisdom by wolfen (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:53AM
  • It seems that people cry out about what most bothers them. It seems only natural.

    People with the means to cry loudly, do so. Though having the means usually implies that their woes are not as dire as those of the ones who hurt too much to be heard.

    A starving Ethiopian child can not be heard farther than earshot. And this is a tragedy.

    An angst-ridden middle class American teenager, with access to the Internet can be heard world-wide.

    Why do American kids cry out against their station in life more loudly than their European or Ausie counterparts? American kids are the result of the "ME" generation. It's all about them, it's all about being 'happy with who they are'. It's all about being 'special'. They lack the feeling of community and common welfare.

    Now, I am not begrudging anyone their experience of the educational system being unfair and unpleasant. I too was a geek who didn't fit in - though by comparison to some, I was very fortunate. Certainly being beaten for being a geek will leave welts that last a lifetime. But laying on dirt, starving, is worse by far.

    American teens are more out of touch with this than teens in other countries. The "American Dream" and "keeping up with the Joneses" tells them that if they don't have the BEST, they don't have it good. If they don't have it good, they then must have it bad.

    We're all in need of the occasional reality check.

    Having food is better than not - even if it is something we don't like.
    Having a home is better than not - even if ours is the only one on the block without the swimming pool.
    Having a job is better than not - even if the boss is a sadist and the guy in the next cubicle smells bad.

    Unlike the starving Ethiopian or driven-out KosovAlbanian, we have choices people. We have options, and we define our context.

    As for being a high-school reject, left home without a date on yet another Friday night... What better time than now to hack on some Linux code and start your own company. I wonder, had Jobs and Wozniak not made the Apple in their garage, would they have been the type to go an kill people?
  • maybe it's a different reaction to depression by maffew (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:19AM
  • Shifting the blame

    (Score:5)
    by Rayban (13436) on Thursday May 27, @04:29AM (#1877587)
    (http://www.grack.com/)
    The Village Voice seems convinced that oppression can be blamed on the oppressed (read the last paragraph). It's like saying, "You weren't very happy in that German death camp, so why didn't you just leave?"

    I don't believe students always have someone to talk to, or they might not be sure of who to talk to. As well, by shifting the blame to the victims, it almost suggests that this abusive behaviour is acceptable, which it isn't.

    Look at the men and women in abusive relationships. How many times have they been asked, "Why don't you just get out of there?" I think people need help to realize that there are more options than violence, and the people involved in the oppression should be taught respect for their fellow students/people/etc.

    Why not attack this problem from both sides?

  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by mjackso1 (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @06:36AM
  • Subdivisions by Robotech_Master (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @08:59AM
  • Re:Not the worst article, but... by Robotech_Master (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @03:34PM
  • wtf? by mcc (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:38AM
  • Racism, school shootings, and the mass media by sethg (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:14AM
  • Re:Insecure kids?

    (Score:5)
    by sethg (15187) on Thursday May 27, @05:35AM (#1877593)
    (http://dynamic.ropine.com/yo/)
    I'm sort of afraid to ask this, but....why do these things seem to be centred around the US?
    Maybe it has something to do with American suburbia. The culture of the stereotypical US suburb depends on:
    • cheap land outside cities
    • a tax system that favors homeowners
    • local government control of police departments, fire departments, schools, and zoning
    • gas taxes that are, by First World standards, extremely low
    • generous government subsidies for road-building
    Because of these conditions, the following things developed over the past forty years or so:
    • Middle-class people can easily move out of central cities, buy houses in the suburbs, and rely on their cars to take them to work, shopping, etc.
    • Zoning laws prevent developers from building townhouses or apartment buildings in many suburban areas, so people below a certain economic level can't afford to move there.
    • Since local governments depend primarily on local property taxes for funding, wealthier suburbs can attract people with their well-funded public schools, well-maintained streets, and so on. Meanwhile, some central cities found their tax base leaking away, so they had trouble funding adequate school systems and police departments. This encouraged more middle-class urban residents to move to the suburbs.
    • When the US legislature and courts outlawed segregation in the 1960s, many whites moved from the cities to the suburbs, so that their children would go to an all-white suburban school rather than a racially integrated urban school.
    These trends are beginning to reverse, but I think the average American suburb is more bland, er, homogeneous (ethnically and economically) than a large city in the US or in Europe. In a large, crowded city, a slightly "abnormal" kid can find friends and hangouts that match his or her interests and quirks. In the suburbs, it's much harder, especially for a kid who's too young to drive, so these kids are more likely to be at the mercy of their classmates.
  • Identity politics isn't bad, for a start by TreyHarris (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @12:00PM
  • Re:And again, "they" don't get it. by Jurph (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @10:30AM
  • Re:Asian Americans don't matter by RedGuard (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @11:20AM
  • Re:Asian Americans don't matter by RedGuard (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @01:48PM
  • Therin lies the problem... by Anonymous Shepherd (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @08:04AM
  • Re:Not the worst article, but... by lee (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:33AM
  • Pretty good, except for one point. by akintayo (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:19PM
  • Pretty good, except for one point. by akintayo (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:21PM
  • reality check by wmeyer (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @09:10AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Gerund (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @03:10PM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Gerund (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @03:17PM
  • the WB is SHT by Pope (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @12:44PM
  • Cultural Differences by Martian Moon Landing (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:44AM
  • Re:Children are monsters by dkixk (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @11:53AM
  • Jane Dark : Weekly World News by FatSean (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:21AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Jonas Öberg (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @04:39AM
  • Giving the article it's due... by MidKnight (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:08AM
  • by eann (20201) on Thursday May 27, @07:21AM (#1877611)
    (http://www.opencode.org/)
    I don't agree with Katz on many issues, but I almost always enjoy reading his work because it's substantive enough to make me think about issues I might not have considered.

    I was disappointed with the article in the Village Voice because it didn't do that for me. While my experiences in high school weren't as bad as many of Katz' correspondents, I refuse to have my own sour memories and mild but still perhaps too-lingering resentment caricatured like I'm in a John Hughes film.

    There are sick people out there. What are we going to do about it? Try to "profile" them so we can head them off, and catch mostly well-adjusted (or at least non-threatening) people in the process? Pretend to restrict access to media (when does an 'R' rating actually stop a 16-year-old)? Pretend to restrict access to firearms? Hasn't society learned yet? There are no easy answers, but it's a good step in the right direction to just start being nice to each other.

    The Hellmouth series didn't solve the problem, and I don't think that's really what it was for. It gave me an important insight, though. The system is not merely damaged; it's broken. Katz is significant simply because he opened a discussion on a large scale that didn't previously exist, and perhaps, by opening that discussion, he has contributed to helping thousands or millions of people realise they're not alone. Jane Dark didn't seem to be blaming guns (or worse, pictures of guns), so it's all the more frustrating that on so many levels, she seems to have missed the point.

    Humans are not constrained to finite compassion. We can care about white, middle-class, teenage boys and still care about malnourished children around the world. They're both symptoms indicitave of broken systems, that is, sets of values that cannot survive in a world that's changing as rapidly as ours. Ms. Dark's article is a symptom, too, that the problem is more pervasive than we might've hoped. It's my responsibility--my moral obligation--as an adult that survived at least one of those situations (hint: I had plenty of food), to try to fix things. I have accepted that most of my attempts will fail. That's okay. I don't have to be successful every time--just once will do.
  • Re:wtf? by JaneDoe (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:12AM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by cetacean (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @03:14PM
  • A Letter To Village Voice by Ratface (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @07:06AM
  • Village Voice article makes a good point by double_h (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @06:44AM
  • I think the article is criticizing some things that were never really said -- Katz was comparing the email he was getting to the *tone and format* of holocaust testimonies, not so much the crimes committed against the kids to death camps.

    As for the criticism of "The idea that this group could move into the slot of the oppressed, as well as occupying the traditional role of the oppressor...." I don't know of many geeks who end up 'the oppressor'. It's true that if geeks survive high school, many of them will end up successful, but that doesn't make them the 'oppressor'; and I'm offended by the implication that later success obviates horrendous early abuse. Did her escape from slavery invalidate Sojourner Truth's rage at bondage?

    There was also a trick pulled that even people on slashdot have done -- amalagating different levels of abuse to say 'hey, everyone is miserable in high school, stop being such a martyr.' Under this technique, unhappiness at not making the cheerleader squad is cheerfully is treated as indistinguishable from rape and attempted murder.

    In elementary school, for example, I was definitely the wierd kid and abused, but I didn't suffer *daily* abuse. Some of the individual incidents were pretty bad, but while they may have led to longterm scarring, they didn't cause the sheer irrationality that daily abuse did -- as I discovered when I got to junior high, and got to be the (fairly randomly picked) scapegoat. If you haven't experienced the terror of going to class *knowing* you will be tripped and spat at and verbally torn down *with the passive, or even active approval of teachers and adminstrators*, it's almost impossible to understand the insanity it causes -- you stop being able to judge whether a bump in the hall was an accident or another attack, you can't tell if an overture of friendship is real or a trap, you are in a constant state of fear and tension... there were times when I *wanted* to kill, when if I had had a weapon in my hand people would have been dead. I didn't, thank god, but I can't help but understand the rage utterly.

    Then I got to high school, where I was a pretty normal kid (the adminstration didn't tolerate bullying, and the geek clan was large enough that we had our own gravity and protection from abuse.) Had occasional unhappy times, just like anyone else, and I think a lot of people who weren't abused but also weren't in the top cliques look back at their sometimes-unhappy times and think it's the same as the worst abuse.

    Laura

    PS: If you want a lovely look at the attitude at Columbine high, take a look at Chuck Green's Sunday column [denverpost.com]. The captain of the Columbine football team is under a restraining order to stay away from his ex-girlfriend; he's facing a criminal charge for threatening her; he was picked up by sheriff's deputies prowling outside her house; he was caught by a teacher intimidating her in school; he threw himself in front of her car. Dear Principal DeAngelis's reaction? Suspend a *jock*? The captain of their precious football team, the one they have a sports medicine doctor for? Oh, forfend, no! Instead, he told the girl's parents that she should leave school.

  • Re:Why this is? by Q-bert][ (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:05AM
  • Why this is? by Q-bert][ (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:49AM
  • Yeesh by nigiri (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @03:19AM
  • Re:He's off by a bit. by Stephen Williams (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:27AM
  • Re:And again, "they" don't get it. by Stephen Williams (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @07:21AM
  • Re:Mostly atheists? I doubt it. by Stephen Williams (Score:2) Friday May 28, @02:18AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Onetus (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:42AM
  • Re:The Hellmouth by Megaweapon (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:26AM
  • Re:He's off by a bit. by Sybir (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:49AM
  • This might be offtopic or even flamebait, but it's been on my mind, so I'll say it. Worst that happens is I get moderated :).

    It's easy to say anything you want after somebody dies. Just a few weeks ago, some kid walked through a school in Georgia and shot a bunch of people. Nobody died - the kid didn't kill himself. Where's the outrage, where's the compassion? Where are the millions of people rushing to the aid of this kid, somebody that you could actually help?? I gotta feel something for him moreso than those at Littleton, because here's a kid who was so emotionally tortured that it drove him to try doing something similar, but at least he still had a spark of humanity left in him that wouldn't let him do it.

    When people ask "Oh my god, what went wrong? What could we have done?" I don't think they really want to know. That's why they ask it of dead people, because they won't get an answer. They like to beat themselves up and feel guilty, but not *that* guilty. Not so guilty that they'll actually have to do anything about the problem.

  • Re:He's off by a bit. by meersan (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:58AM
  • Liberal != Left by Breakfast Cereal (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:09PM
  • Re:Village Voice fails to get it by alkali (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:42AM
  • Re:Why this is? by 0xdeadbeef (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:11AM
  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by 0xdeadbeef (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @05:32AM
  • this guy's different by TheDullBlade (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:19AM
  • Your data are wrong by hello_c (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:50AM
  • Not Jane's first article dealing with racism by AtariDatacenter (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:57AM
  • A lot of thought put into it.. but quite wrong. by AtariDatacenter (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @06:23AM
  • I give the Village Voice props on this one by haizi_23 (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @04:33AM
  • This is not about the Hellmouth by deacent (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:34AM
  • Concur by sbeitzel (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:35AM
  • Re:He's off by a bit. by razorwire (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:00AM
  • Re:He's off by a bit. by kamileon (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:38AM
  • Re:Remember who "Jane Dark" is... by Aiantes (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:45AM
  • Conformity as solution to problem by Mentat21 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:14AM
  • The Race Card by NME (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:02AM
  • Re:Cryptonomicon by dblslash (Score:1) Friday June 18, @05:53PM
  • Re: Godwin's Law by seanson1 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @12:33PM
  • Selection effect? by coyote-san (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:35AM
  • Re:My letter to the editor of the Village Voice by coyote-san (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:50AM
  • Re:In defense of the Village Voice article by coyote-san (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:51PM
  • Abusers have more rights than abusees. Really. by coyote-san (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @08:15AM
  • by coyote-san (38515) on Thursday May 27, @05:51AM (#1877652)
    I think the most offensive aspect of that article, which is saying a lot, is the implication that geeks choose to be outcasts.

    Sucks to be a kid. Sucks especially if you decide againt the moves for playing along with the popularity game.

    I guess the editor will also dismiss antisemitism; you can't help Jews who decide against adopting the dominant religion.

    I know the editor dismisses homosexuality. At least, homosexuality among white males, the only other example of an identity group driven by the white middle class. I guess white male gays wear the jackboots used to put down other gays.

    And why do I keep thinking about the charming old tradition of "passing"? A black kid with light skin tones who doesn't attempt to "pass" as white deserves what he gets, neh?!

    I guess I've been deluding myself by seeing people as individuals, not as official minority groups and the oppressive overclass. Where I see Bob, a nice guy who happens to be an athlete, I should see a jock -- can't reserve the latter term for athletes with attitude problems vis-a-vis non-athletes. And Sue, the math genius, must always be referred to as Sue, black coed.

    And I must never, ever, recognize that Bill is being beaten up because other students have labeled him a 'snortzball.' A 'snortzball' is not a Recognized Political Correctness "identity group" and his bloody nose is therefore his own damn fault for running into Allen's, Sam's, Jim's, John's, Roger's, and George's fist. Repeatedly.

    With Focus on the Family and other "right thinking" religious groups headquartered within 100 miles I've always identified myself as liberal. But I find this shit far more offensive than anything I've seen come out of the conservative camp.
  • Re:In defense of the Village Voice article by mvc (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:41PM
  • In defense of the Village Voice article by mvc (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @10:46AM
  • by werdna (39029) on Thursday May 27, @06:30AM (#1877655)
    (http://www.lawhacker.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday July 26, @10:14AM)
    It is one thing to say "being a kid is hell, so what?" It is another thing entirely to say that geek profiling can be justified or tolerated when applied by the state, for example school administrations.

    While it does appear that I hold greater empathy than does the author for those geeks (regardless of gender and race) who are alienated in our schools, that issue is to me quite irrelevant in comparison with the real issue: People are being meaningfully discriminated against by the government just for being different; for dressing different; and for acting different.

    I do not discuss the social treatment of these kids, I am discussing suspensions, counselling and worse (we had arrests in Tampa), merely because of geeky identity or an unwillingness to make superficial change to suit the officious passions of an asshole school bureaucrat.

    This shouldn't happen anywhere, but it certainly shouldn't happen in America.

    It is *this* discrimination I am concerned about, and for two reasons: (1) it is wrong; and (2) it won't help the "problem" the school administrators and politicians propose to address.

    But more important, official discrimination is in many ways more invidious than de-facto segregation into social castes. Official government-sponsored "geek profiling" provides further justification in the minds of those who would stereotype the "different" students -- that's precisely the definition of profiling!

    No longer necessary is resort to the innumerate illogic that because a pair of geeky, game-playing kids went postal, all geeky, game-playing kids are risks to society, and therefore all are fair game for ridicule and ostracism. Geek bigots no longer need to engage in vacuous demagoguery to justify or defend their cruel alienation of the "differents." They can now point to the law.

    I should think that the Voice author who first raised the race and gender cards would be peculiarly sensitive to government-sponsored stereotyping.

    But then again, perhaps that is why he chose to conflate these points in the first place, sweeping everything under the rubric of "white boys unjustly playing identity politics?" If so, I wonder whose cynicism is the worst, the supposed white-boy-victim-wannabes' or the author's?
  • Once again the voice misses the point.

    First, they use this as an excuse to pick on white males. It seems to me that they didn't actually read the Hellmouth section or the would have seen that there were many comments from non-white males. Last time I checked I was not one of those.

    Also, they seemed to miss what was happeneing. We are not upset because were were simply picked on. If it had been just name calling it wouldn't have been a big deal.

    But let's fact it, it never stopped at simple taunting. Most of the people (myself included) indured far more than that. We were physicly assulted, spit on and in some cases sexually harrased.

    We aren't looking for ppl to feel sorry for us, that part of my life is over and I'm over it. I just hope that someone might sit up and listen the next time a kid is beaten up for being different, rather than just ignoring it the way most school officals do now.
  • You need a shrink by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:36AM
  • Re:But of course by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:39AM
  • Re:Afraid of losing oppressed status by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:43AM
  • Re:And again, "they" don't get it. by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:23AM
  • Re:Afraid of losing oppressed status by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:26AM
  • Re:And again, "they" don't get it. by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:54AM
  • But of course by L1zard_K1n6 (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @04:26AM
  • Let's think about this right fast.. by Medieval (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:40AM
  • Re:Remember who "Jane Dark" is... by Afrosheen (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:39AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by _Sprocket_ (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @07:38AM
  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by B.B.Wolf (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @04:28PM
  • My Letter to "The Void" by B.B.Wolf (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:18PM
  • Re:The Race Card by Steve B (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:34AM
  • Re:But of course by Steve B (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:15AM
  • Re:Letter to the editor by Steve B (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:54AM
  • Re:Remember who "Jane Dark" is... by gonzocanuck (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:00AM
  • VV sad day for new journalism by gonzocanuck (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:41AM
  • *LOL* by fable2112 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:24AM
  • Girls Who Wear Glasses by fable2112 (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:46AM
  • Re:Subdivisions by fable2112 (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @09:26AM
  • Re:Once again because it's in a school by fable2112 (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @09:53AM
  • Ah, but there's a difference: by fable2112 (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @11:31AM
  • Well you see, it's not that simple ... by fable2112 (Score:2) Friday May 28, @06:46AM
  • Some things never change ... by fable2112 (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @05:06AM
  • Here's mine! Let's keep them coming. by fable2112 (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @06:13AM

  • Being called names and having lunch money taken (although they suck) is NOT the same thing as being thrown up against a wall and threatened with rape, having slime dumped into your locker, or being beaten up and THEN suspended even though you didn't fight back.

    Typical high school for me and my friends.

    If you think we're just bitching about being called names, perhaps you need to read more clearly.

    *shrug*

  • So the only thing wrong with us is that we don't "fit in," and otherwise we're overprivilged whiners?

    I think not.

    The gay-community parallels are perfectly appropriate here. In fact, "faggot" and "sissy" and "dyke" are typical insults directed at outsider kids, even if they are straight.

    Many les/bi/gays are born in "priviliged" families, and some homophobe or other is always eager to kick around statistics that "prove" gay people earn more than straight people. (No, not all gay people, fools, just the ones comfortable enough to tell some random stranger that they are gay.)

    As it happens, the suffering of the different and intelligent is nothing new. I'm a third-generation Hellmouth survivor: My grandfather suffered literal physical abuse at the hands of the nuns at his Catholic school because he's left handed. My mother, the smartest kid by far in her class, was denied the chance to be an exchange student because "she's just a steelworker's daughter." I've discussed my own experiences previously -- suffice it to say that I'm well aware of the cruelty of peers and teachers, having lived through it.

    If you like, you can go read Oh No, Not Again! [geocities.com], which was my original reaction to Littleton, and Confessions of a Redhead [geocities.com], my follow-up after seeing Star Wars. The second one might not make much sense unless you're familiar with the Chronicles of Amber, though.

    Maybe it's time to write another essay, and send it someplace where it'll do some good. Like the Village Voice, which I would have expected to have had better sense.

    *disgusted sigh*

  • perhaps Jane Dark should move to Ethiopia by CheapVerbiage (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @10:49AM
  • Oppression of geeks by Mr. Slippery (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:09AM
  • Re:Tougher is right by duckbill (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:08AM
  • Re:Remember who "Jane Dark" is... by duckbill (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:33AM
  • Re:Giving the article it's due... by duckbill (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:39AM
  • GEEKS can be the oppressors too. by the_v (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @01:34PM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by afeman (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @06:16AM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by Betcour (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @09:54AM
  • Guns - read this : by Betcour (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @10:27AM
  • Re:Once again White Males are descrimination targe by Betcour (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @11:06AM
  • Re:Guns - read this : (Neglect your kids!) by Betcour (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @12:45PM
  • Re:Maslow's pyramid? by Betcour (Score:1) Friday May 28, @09:44AM
  • Re:Minimize my pain! by Paradox !-) (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @05:49AM
  • Community and Common Welfare by Paradox !-) (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:18AM
  • Truth about Geek Profiling by ronfar (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:36AM
  • Re:Asian Americans don't matter by ronfar (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @01:10PM
  • Re:Village Voice article makes a good point by ronfar (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @04:27PM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by The Phantom Mensch (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @06:15AM
  • Re:Huh? by HarpMan (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:32AM
  • Not that easy by Mr H (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @05:33AM
  • My letter to the editor of the Village Voice by Jules Agee (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @06:20AM
  • Re:Afraid of losing oppressed status by krisen (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @08:45AM
  • Re:Village Voice fails to get it by Lynnaea (Score:2) Thursday May 27, @08:36AM
  • Re:Insecure kids? by Attack Samoyed (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:44PM
  • Re:I give the Village Voice props on this one by zantispam (Score:1) Friday May 28, @03:46PM
  • Re:Not the worst article, but... by kelcoleman (Score:1) Thursday May 27, @07:57AM
  • Trivial Torture by ghstwrtr (Score:3) Thursday May 27, @06:43AM
  • 63 replies beneath your current threshold.
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