UnSubRocky
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Crocodile Hunter: Origins
Posts: 24487
Rockhampton
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I have been assaulted by a teacher, when I was 12 years old. The first week of high school, and this (former heroin-addicted) sociopathic teacher decided to take the side of a pederast primary school teacher about an incident that did not involve me. When I was 9 years old, I reported a parent of a fellow student about the student being abused by her father. The teacher, being the white guilt teacher that he was for his era, decided to call me a liar. A month later, the student was taken out of school to leave town. Not long later, the abuse took a turn for the worse. You could imagine that I would have expected people to side with me because I reported the abuse to a teacher. But no. The teacher, fearing a loss of his teaching position (and probably access to young children), did the biggest deflection in history and tried to blame me claiming that my report just provoked the situation.
Three and a half years later, and with no word to my parents about what happened, Mr ex-junkie decides that a fellow pederast is just as credible as he is. He calls me out in class to berate me on something he never witnessed, and would not accept that perpetrators have to accept responsibilities of their own actions. The fact that the teacher allowed abuse to happen and continue would imply that the teacher is complicit in the abuse.
Imagine getting dragged out of class by someone 30kg heavier than you and forced to the ground so that some out of touch 26y.o. could blame you for what his bs artist ****** buddy had alleged.
In these sorts of situation, if something serious happens, the most that a teacher needs to do is to use physical force in self-defence. Even if the student is acting up, you don't use physical force on the student. You get the principal or vice-principal to deal with the matter, if the matter cannot be dealt with in class. And if the student refuses to go to the principal, the principal can issue a suspension to the student. A teacher, even with the support of other witnesses, will have a difficult time undoing the stigma of assaulting a student, if the likelihood that not using physical force was probable to resolving the situation.
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