Facebook Update Has Middle Schooler in Hot Water

Screenshot of Mother and Daughter in bin Laden Facebook Brouhaha

The concept of parents complaining about their children being disciplined at school has been of increasing concern over the past decade or so.  Whether it’s moms freaking out about a kid’s mouth being taped shut, taking issue with a double entendre-loaded exam,  or even the slippery slope of how to handle a kid who’s outed his school secretary as a porn star, educational institutions are having to contend with some interesting stuff.

This might just be the topper.

Yup, it seems that a 13-year-old kid received a five-day suspension after recently posting on Facebook that she “wished Osama bin Laden killed her math teacher”, and her …

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Baseless Accusations on College Gossip Site Harms Students Nationwide

The increasingly popular website JuicyCampus.com is totally changing college life (and I refuse on general principle to either visit it myself or link to it here because of the utter repugnance I’m feeling). The site, founded by Duke University graduate Matt Ivester, is a forum for college students to anonymously post the latest gossip about their postgraduate peers. There are horrible stories coming out, some lies, some gross exaggerations, and some, worst of all, the private confidences given by classmates to someone they believed to be their friend.

Perhaps the most extreme example is that of Vanderbilt student Chelsea Gorham, who was violently attacked and raped while getting a cup of coffee on a Nashville street. The devastated young lady, whose experience has heartbreaking shades of Alice Sebold’s memoir Lucky, left college for the rest of the semester to come to emotional grips from the comfort of her home. She returned to college in the fall, determined not to let her horrible experience ruin her education.

From ABC News:

“It was very difficult to go through the routine of going to classes, going to my different activities. I had a few panic attacks. I wouldn’t go anywhere by myself after 5, and I sort of felt detached from the rest of my friends, even the ones who knew, because there were some of them that I still hadn’t told about what happened,” she said.

“I wasn’t ready to tell anybody about it yet. My friends that knew respected my decision, and I needed to be OK with myself before I let anybody else know.”

It turns out that Chelsea Gorham’s faith in her friends was horribly misguided, as she learned to her grief that spring about her status as hot gossip on JuicyCampus.com.

At first she was shocked that someone could be so ignorant as to blame a rape victim. Then she felt betrayed, knowing it must have been someone close to her because so few people knew. She said it felt almost like a second rape — a total loss of control over her situation, just as the wounds were starting to heal.

The post started to spread, and soon the whole campus seemed to know about the girl who’d been raped, and the posting on Juicy Campus.

“That was probably the hardest part — that people would come up and ask me about the post. In one case I came up to a group of people that I heard talking about the post, and they had forgotten whose name it was, but they were talking about the post that they had read on Juicy Campus, about somebody who had been raped,” she said.

“It takes the control away again,” said Chelsea. “It’s my story to tell, and no one else has the right to tell it. And that something like this was considered gossip is disgusting.”

Wow. Just … wow. The thing is, it isn’t just like someone wrote, “This girl at Vanderbilt got raped. Sucks to be her.” No, it went like this:

“Chelsea Gorman Deserved It.”

and

“what could she expect walking around there alone. everyone thinks she’s so sweet but she got what she deserved. wish i had been the homeless guy that f***** her. [sic]“

Gorham’s story is especially horrific, but she’s not alone as a victim of this disgusting site that exists “under the guise of ‘entertainment’.”

Want to find out who does drugs? Who’s gay? Who has STDs? What about the most promiscuous girls? The prettiest? You can find all of this information and much more on JuicyCampus.com.

Names and sometimes phone numbers and addresses are posted on the site, which has now spread to about 60 schools around the country. It was an instant hit, jumping from a few thousand to more than 250,000 page views in a matter of months. Students across the country couldn’t get enough of what was being written, and many were constantly checking to make sure their names didn’t appear.

“People can say things about someone they don’t know and there’s nobody out there to stop them,” said Rachel Wilkerson, a student at Michigan State University. “A lot of things I read on there are calling girls fat, or saying girls are sluts. Those are horrible things to say about women, and any Web site that promotes it and any person who would say those things, I just feel like is incredibly sexist and it just plays on girl’s insecurities, and I thought we left that behind after high school graduation.”

You know, I love the internet, I really do, but …

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Sarah Palin’s Speech: The Constitution and Bendable Straws

Photo of a Palin 2010 Poster
Sarah Palin’s recent speech at CSU, Stanislaus has received a great deal of media attention, although not necessarily for reasons she might be thrilled about. A Turlock, California newspaper, though, is giving her some good press, and in the interest of fairness it seems like a good opportunity to address Palin’s sense of humor.

From The Turlock Journal:

After a brief introduction from University President Hamid Shirvani, who termed Palin a “great American,” she took the stage to chants of “Sarah” and a standing ovation.

“I’ve got my water, do I have my straws? I want my straws,” Palin said as she took the stage, acknowledging the leaked rough draft of her contract found by two CSU Stanislaus students amid shredded documents in a university Dumpster. That contract required the university to provide Palin with “bendable straws.”

You know, Palin has taken a lot of flak over the straw demand. To be fair, though, I think we all have particulars about how we drink. If I order a beer in a restaurant, for example, the frosted glass they bring out just sits on the table because I prefer my cervezas straight from the bottle. I also drink my soda out of an aluminum can, and I have to admit that for several years I insisted on using a straw. When I’d go to the store with friends and they’d run in to grab a drink, they’d say, “Coke in a can with a straw, right, Katie?” Damn straight. So yeah, if I was powerful enough to command a six figure speaking fee, I’d probably ask for straws. And Coke in a can. And beer in a bottle.

Palin continued in this humorous vein:

Palin said she was happy the foundation stuck with her through the controversy, though, because California has always been a special place to her. It’s Reagan country, she said.

Palin quickly delved into thanking the local community for hosting her with great hospitality. She said she appreciated meeting local farmers, who taught her a thing or two about pronunciation.

“I’ll never call an almond an almond again,” Palin joked

The speech wasn’t without a focus on issues though, particularly in the area of civics.

The remainder of Palin’s speech centered on the topic of civic education for America’s next generation, a problem she singled out as the biggest challenge facing the country.

“My biggest fear is that we’re not passing on what it means to be an American to the next generation,” Palin said.

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