Orglethorp
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My sister brought this story to my attention the other day.
Amanda Todd, a 15 year old (would have been 16 next month) from Maple Ridge & Coquitlam, BC, Canada, committed suicide on Wednesday October 10th. On September 6th she uploaded a video to YouTube where she told her story on flashcards, and asked for someone to be her friend.
I won't link to the video, because it's likely to be taken down due to the bullies continuing to post hateful comments, but you can search it if you want.
To summarize:
In 7th grade, Amanda and her friends started chatting on webcam with friends and with strangers. I'm guessing they probably used Chat Roulette or something similar, from the sound of her story. She started getting compliments from strangers about how pretty and cute she was. When someone asked her to flash, she thought nothing of it and did.
In 8th grade, a stranger contacted her saying that if she didn't "put on a show" that a screenshot of that flashing incident would be shared. He knew all of her contact information. Over Christmas break in December, police came to her house at 4AM. A topless photo of her from the year before had been sent to every single friend, family member, teacher and classmate in Amanda's life. She was judged for it. She lost all of her friends and endured bullying. She developed anxiety and depression. She experimented with drugs. She switched schools.
In 9th grade, at a new school, things were going well. She had made new friends. She was moving on. The internet stalker made a facebook page with her topless photo featured as the profile picture and invited all of the students at her new school. The bullying happened all over again. Amanda moved schools.
At her new school, she kept to herself. She ate lunch in the library. Things were going "well" despite her new outlook on finding friends. A boy from her past contacted her and said he liked her. He was luring her into a trap. He had a girlfriend. He set her up and then exposed her. He, his girlfriend, and many of her school mates were then involved in beating her up. When teachers came to break up the fight, she ran to hide and lay in a ditch. Her father found her and brought her home, where she then tried to kill herself by drinking bleach. Luckily her father got her to the hospital in time. Sadly, she was now being told by her classmates to try it again. Drink bleach again. Try a different brand.
Amanda moved cities. She couldn't bring herself to leave the house. She couldn't go to school. She shared her story on YouTube and still her peers were telling her that she deserved to die.
On Wednesday, she did.
I'm disgusted. This is just half an hour's drive from the high school I graduated from 6 years ago. There are always bullies, yes, but enough that three high schools of kids turned against this poor girl? This would not have happened in my high school. Even if some bullies were teasing her, far more would have protected her. My own group of friends self identified as the social outcasts of the school, and many of us were subject to bullying, but we stood up for each other. Is it really possible that things have changed so much in 6 years that this one poor girl couldn't find a safe group like mine in 3 schools?
What were the teachers doing? More importantly, why wasn't anyone doing anything about the stalker with the photo?
If our justice system actually worked the way it's supposed to, then this person is guilty of possessing and distributing child pornography on top of the regular stalking issues.
Amanda Todd, a 15 year old (would have been 16 next month) from Maple Ridge & Coquitlam, BC, Canada, committed suicide on Wednesday October 10th. On September 6th she uploaded a video to YouTube where she told her story on flashcards, and asked for someone to be her friend.
I won't link to the video, because it's likely to be taken down due to the bullies continuing to post hateful comments, but you can search it if you want.
To summarize:
In 7th grade, Amanda and her friends started chatting on webcam with friends and with strangers. I'm guessing they probably used Chat Roulette or something similar, from the sound of her story. She started getting compliments from strangers about how pretty and cute she was. When someone asked her to flash, she thought nothing of it and did.
In 8th grade, a stranger contacted her saying that if she didn't "put on a show" that a screenshot of that flashing incident would be shared. He knew all of her contact information. Over Christmas break in December, police came to her house at 4AM. A topless photo of her from the year before had been sent to every single friend, family member, teacher and classmate in Amanda's life. She was judged for it. She lost all of her friends and endured bullying. She developed anxiety and depression. She experimented with drugs. She switched schools.
In 9th grade, at a new school, things were going well. She had made new friends. She was moving on. The internet stalker made a facebook page with her topless photo featured as the profile picture and invited all of the students at her new school. The bullying happened all over again. Amanda moved schools.
At her new school, she kept to herself. She ate lunch in the library. Things were going "well" despite her new outlook on finding friends. A boy from her past contacted her and said he liked her. He was luring her into a trap. He had a girlfriend. He set her up and then exposed her. He, his girlfriend, and many of her school mates were then involved in beating her up. When teachers came to break up the fight, she ran to hide and lay in a ditch. Her father found her and brought her home, where she then tried to kill herself by drinking bleach. Luckily her father got her to the hospital in time. Sadly, she was now being told by her classmates to try it again. Drink bleach again. Try a different brand.
Amanda moved cities. She couldn't bring herself to leave the house. She couldn't go to school. She shared her story on YouTube and still her peers were telling her that she deserved to die.
On Wednesday, she did.
I'm disgusted. This is just half an hour's drive from the high school I graduated from 6 years ago. There are always bullies, yes, but enough that three high schools of kids turned against this poor girl? This would not have happened in my high school. Even if some bullies were teasing her, far more would have protected her. My own group of friends self identified as the social outcasts of the school, and many of us were subject to bullying, but we stood up for each other. Is it really possible that things have changed so much in 6 years that this one poor girl couldn't find a safe group like mine in 3 schools?
What were the teachers doing? More importantly, why wasn't anyone doing anything about the stalker with the photo?
If our justice system actually worked the way it's supposed to, then this person is guilty of possessing and distributing child pornography on top of the regular stalking issues.