NEW YORK (AP) — When Mitt Romney was a good-looking teen in the buttoned-up '60s, corporal punishment was the norm and bullying had a different, more acceptable name: hijinks.
Yet
in today's zero-tolerance world when it comes to, well, just about
everything, things haven't changed all that much for young victims of
bullies. Definitions have tightened, become law, but bullying is far
from over.
"Bullying's never
going to go away," said one crusader, ex-Marine James McGibney, a dad
who founded a new social network, BullyVille.com, where victims can find
help. "What makes it a million times worse is the advent of the
Internet."
There was no
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube or sexting when several fellow students at a
posh Detroit-area prep school say 18-year-old Romney led a boy posse to
hold down one among them perceived as different and snip off his
bleached blond hair.
The victim, John Lauber,
is dead now, but The Washington Post reported when it broke the story
that he was "perpetually teased for his nonconformity and presumed
homosexuality" and screamed for help. Though he eventually left the
school — kicked out for smoking a cigarette while Romney was not
punished — indications are Lauber simply endured, as many of today's victims are forced to do despite the flood of anti-bullying campaigns in schools and out, advocates said.
Lee Hirsch,
director of the recent documentary "Bully" that spotlights several
intense cases, said the Republican presidential candidate's response to
the controversy falls short.
"I
would really invite Mitt Romney to see the movie. This weekend," he
said. "This is an extraordinary opportunity for him to really lead and
to help redefine the way, unfortunately, too many Americans still see
bullying."
Romney has said
that his Mormon faith was deepened and his life's outlook altered for
the better soon after the reported Lauber incident, when a van he was
driving in France was in a crash that killed a passenger and nearly
killed him as well.
And
certainly ideas about bullying have changed in the intervening years,
especially following the suicides of several bullied gay teens.
"Back
in the day you would get beaten up or punched in the yard and you'd
tell a teacher and they'd just tell you to suck it up, you know, or
that's just what boys do or that's just how girls are and 'You two knock
it off,' and that was the extent of it," said psychologist Jerry Weichman, who works with adolescents at the Hoag Neurosciences Institute in Newport Beach, Calif. continue Reading
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