Rotorua Daily Post

Bullying at all levels a sad aspect of modern society

- Rob Rattenbury

Telling a young man to “harden up” is bullying and a really uncaring approach to what may be a really

serious issue.

One of the prices of living in the 21st century is the influence social media can have on our lives if we partake.

In some ways it is a great tool, a brilliant way to keep in touch with family and friends, engage with your community, become part of closed groups on subjects that you enjoy, hobbies and pastimes.

I spend a lot of time on Facebook. I have no interest in Twitter or Instagram or any other social media site.

As an administra­tion person of a small but lively private group my day is sometimes kept full sorting issues out, vetting invitees and, sadly on occasions, closing people down or kicking them off the group for their behaviours towards others and for breaching the group rules about bullying, racism, sexism, homophobia and generally being annoying.

The group is for adults who are all well-educated, mature, worldly-wise people who should know the social barriers and norms.

One or two slips for whatever reason, incurs the attention of the group’s administra­tion team.

This goes on all over the world every hour of the day now.

Facebook has become the new Friday night drinks venue for people who live far apart but enjoy each other’s company and their shared experience­s in whatever activity the group is about.

I find Facebook a pleasurabl­e pastime generally and as someone who has an opinion about most matters I enjoy reading the opinions of others, often getting a different take on a subject which occasional­ly causes me to rethink my position.

Sadly the most common cause for people to move on from our wee group is bullying.

Every member of the group is an adult, no teenagers or children, mature, responsibl­e, supposedly rational law-abiding older members of our community.

A very few just cannot help themselves and attack others verbally, either straight out abuse or unkind needless remarks. They go of course.

Group members need protection and that is the role of a decent administra­tion team look after your mates.

On the odd occasion Facebook has intervened before we are aware of a problem.

The problem with this is that if it happens too often Facebook will take the group down so constant reminders to people about behaviour are needed.

It is a sad comment on society that bullying exists across the age spectrum and across all levels of our community.

In 2017 New Zealand had the highest youth suicide rate out of 41

countries in the developed world, at 15.6 suicides per 100,000 people aged between 15 and 19.

This rate is twice the suicide rate for the comparable cohort in the United States and almost five times that of Britain.

There are several identified causes of these appalling figures, among them poverty, unemployme­nt, and being a young Ma¯ ori or Pasifika male.

Bullying and the need to “harden up” features amongst these figures.

Sorry, telling a young man to “harden up” is bullying and a really uncaring approach to what may be a really serious issue.

That is absolutely shameful and those comments and attitudes alone show there is something very unhealthy in the minds of many New

Zealanders, people who can, either inadverten­tly or deliberate­ly, go out of their way to make another person’s life such a misery they end it.

For most, especially adults, bullying on social media is usually easy to deal with. Block the person and report the comments.

Children and teenagers are very vulnerable to negativity and being shamed by their peers.

Sadly Shaun Robinson of the Mental Health Foundation of New Zealand provides data that shows reported bullying in New Zealand schools is amongst the worst in the Western world.

It could be argued that identifyin­g bullying as an issue encourages reporting and maybe these results are a good thing but I suspect the opposite is the truth.

Some New Zealand children, for whatever reason — peer-pressure, a fear of being bullied themselves and a desire for popularity — become bullies of others. What they do can mark a person forever.

Social media is the easiest and safest way to be a bully, it’s not faceto-face so no fear of instant and maybe painful retributio­n, it is instantly seen by all the others in the bully’s group of friends and receiving the message is usually devastatin­g for the child.

Many childhood bullies become adult bullies which probably explains why there is a steady stream of these people leaving Facebook groups every day.

They simply cannot acknowledg­e and change their behaviour even if they do have an insight into it.

Perhaps they should form their own Facebook group — Bullies Anonymous.

They can spend their days venting their spleens on each other instead of on people who maybe do not have the ability to deal with them.

 ?? Photo / File ?? Facebook has become the new Friday night drinks venue for people who live far apart.
Photo / File Facebook has become the new Friday night drinks venue for people who live far apart.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand