March 16th, 2012
LatinaLista — Bullying is an issue that, in spite of the increase in media awareness campaigns, it’s getting worse. According to bullying statistics for 2010, there are about 2.7 million students being bullied each year by about 2.1 students taking on the roll of the bully.

It’s revenge for school bullying that leads to the majority of school shootings according to the bullying statistics. And those students who just can’t take the physical taunts and abuse anymore and end up committing suicide are contributing to the creation a new word in the vocabulary — bullycide.
According to bullying statistics:
- Over half, about 56 percent, of all students have witnesses a bullying crime take place while at school.
- A reported 15 percent of all students who don’t show up for school report it to being out of fear of being bullied while at school.
- There are about 71 percent of students that report bullying as an on-going problem.
- About one out of every 10 students drops out or changes schools because of repeated bullying.
- Some of the top years for bullying include 4th through 8th graders in which 90 percent were reported as victims of some kind of bullying.
- There is a strong connection between bullying, being bullied and suicide, according to a new study from the Yale School of Medicine. Suicide rates are continuing to grow among adolescents, and have grown more than 50 percent in the past 30 years.
- About half of young people have experienced some form of cyber bullying, and 10 to 20 percent experience it regularly
- Cyber bullying affects all races
There’s no argument that bullying, both online and offline, is a problem. Experts say if those being bullied would tell their parents or teachers, and together they confront the bully, the likelihood is that the bullying stops.
The problem is educating more students and their families about the issue. Though the upcoming film Bully (due to be released March 30) has received a lot of attention and praise — and is the centerpiece of a new anti-bullying campaign called The Bully Project, it’s a film to be shown in theaters where not everyone who needs it may be able to see it.
So news that the Cartoon Network has created their own documentary about bullying provides a more accessible option to thousands of more children and their families who need the information. The documentary, Speak Up, airs this Sunday, March 18 on the Cartoon Network.
The 30-minute film opens with an introduction by President Obama and showcases everyday stories of kids who have been bullied and the youth who helped them get through it, but the best part is the show will live on via the Cartoon Network’s web site and through social media and online video platforms.
Before, during and immediately following the telecast, renowned bullying prevention expert and author Rosalind Wiseman will provide further explanation of key bullying issues for kids and adults, answering viewer questions online at www.StopBullyingSpeakUp.com. Speak Up also will be posted in its entirety on the website for ongoing viewing by students, parents, educators and community leaders. Further viewing of Speak Up across multiple digital platforms will be facilitated free of charge to customers through Comcast Xfinity, Facebook, iTunes and YouTube.com, each for at least two weeks following the world premiere.
Bullying is preventable. It’s just a matter of empowering children, and anyone who is bullied, to know that no one has the right to treat them less as a person.
Tags: featured
Category: Life Issues
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March 16th, 2012
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March 13th, 2012
While the Weinstein Co. continues to wrangle over the MPAA rating for its documentary “Bully,” Cartoon Network is offering its own look at the problem with a half-hour special titled “Speak Up” as part of its “Stop Bullying: Speak Up” public-service campaign.
Production-wise, the special — which features testimonials from kids as well as encouraging words from various celebrities — basically feels like an extended PSA, though if exposure to it helps one kid, that’s worthwhile. President Obama will tape an introduction for the telecast, which will air commercial-free on March 18.
Although I can appreciate that the special is aimed at younger children, what’s frankly missing from “Speak Up” – even with kids discussing how bad being bullied made them feel — is an exploration of the most serious consequences of bullying, which seems to cry out for blunter treatment. In a sense, that makes the half-hour a sort of watered-down companion to the Weinstein release, which is due to open next week.
Cartoon Network is supporting the telecast with ancillary materials that include an interview with an expert on the subject and posting the spec for later viewing, available via the website www.StopBullyingSpeakUp.com.
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March 13th, 2012
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March 10th, 2012
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March 10th, 2012
Alan Caruba’s blog is a daily look at events, personalities, and issues from an independent point of view. Email: acaruba@aol.com or acaruba1321@gmail.com
Copyright, Alan Caruba, 2012
With attribution, posts may be shared. A permission request is welcome.
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March 7th, 2012
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March 7th, 2012
The following ratings highlights cover Cartoon Network and Adult Swim across March 2012 Week 1:
CARTOON NETWORK
* Again claiming television’s #1 network for the week among boys (2-11, 6-11, 9-14) in Early Evening Prime (7-9 p.m.), Cartoon Network also charted double-digit delivery growth across all kids demos in both Prime and Total Day vs. the same time period last year. In Prime (7-9 p.m.), average kids 2-11 delivery (952,000) grew by 14%, kids 6-11 (670,000) by 17% and kids 9-14 (527,000) by 21%. In Total Day, average kids 2-11 (535,000) grew by 10%, kids 6-11 (341,000) by 13% and kids
9-14 (271,000) by 19%.
* Cartoon Network also won every weeknight (7-9 p.m.) among boys 2-11, 6-11 and 9-14-Monday through Friday. Fueled by original animated comedies, Monday night’s premiere of Regular Show (8 p.m.) was the #1 telecast of the week among boys 9-14, and #1 telecast of the day among boys 2-11 & 6-11. Tuesday night’s premiere of Level Up (8 p.m.) was the #1 telecast of the day among boys 6-11 & 9-14, earning double and triple-digit gains across the board. Wednesday night’s presentation of Ninjago (8 p.m.) was the #1 telecast of the day among boys 2-11 & 6-11 on all television, posting double-digit gains across all demos.
* The Saturday morning premiere of the new DC Nation block, featuring Green Lantern (10 a.m.) and Young Justice (10:30 a.m.) earned significant double and triple delivery gains across all kids and boys demos vs. the same time period last year. Green Lantern’s kids 2-11, 6-11 & 9-14 average delivery grew between 95% and 105%, while Young Justice’s kids demo deliveries grew between 33% and 88%.
ADULT SWIM
* Across the first week of March, Adult Swim ranked #1 on basic cable for Total Day Delivery of all young adult and young men demos-adults 18-34, 18-49 & 18-24, as well as men 18-34, 18-49 & 18-24. Average young adult delivery increased versus the same time last year: adults 18-34 (512,000) grew by 1%, adults 18-24 (283,000) by 11% and men 18-24 (176,000) by 6%.
* Adult Swim programming-including Family Guy, Robot Chicken and American Dad-accounted for 17 of the top 50 telecasts for the week on basic cable among adults 18-34 (more than any other network), and 22 of the top 50 among men 18-34, also more than any other network.
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March 4th, 2012
March 03, 2012 — CAIRO (AP) — An Egyptian court on Saturday rejected the second of two lawsuits brought by ultraconservative Islamists accusing a Christian media mogul of insulting Islam when he relayed a cartoon online of Mickey Mouse with a beard and Minnie in a face veil.
The judge ruled the plaintiff was not eligible to file the religious defamation lawsuit and sent the case back to the state prosecutor’s office for further investigation. The first lawsuit against Sawiris was thrown out by a different court earlier this week on similar grounds.
Businessman Naguib Sawiris Saturday used his Twitter account — the same way he spread the original images — to express relief. “I thank God for this ruling because I feel that there is still hope,” he wrote. “Congratulations to an open, free and smiling Egypt that respects all religions.”
Sawiris angered Muslim hard-liners in June by relaying the Mickey and Minnie cartoon, which parodied the growing influence of Islamists in Egypt. Sawiris tweeted an apology and removed the post after the uproar among conservatives, but that did not deter some from pursuing legal action.
The cases are two of many brought by conservative lawyers in recent months seeking to punish individuals they deem as having offended Islam. They highlight the newfound sense of empowerment among followers of the ultraconservative Salafi trend of Islam in Egypt since the ouster of longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak last year in a popular uprising.
In the broad spectrum of Islamic thought, Salafism is very conservative and is partly inspired by Saudi Arabia’s puritanical Wahhabi interpretation of the religion. Many Salafis were jailed and tortured during Mubarak’s three-decade rule. Their newly-formed Al-Nour party won 25 percent of seats in parliament in the first elections since his toppling and has emerged as the second most powerful group in Egypt after the more moderate Muslim Brotherhood.
The mere filing of such blasphemy cases by Salafi lawyers has raised concern among rights groups and liberals who are concerned about threats to freedom of speech. In his ruling, the judge dismissed Saturday’s suit and fined the plaintiff a little less than $10 for the court’s time. The judge said the cartoon did not cause the plaintiff, a hard-line lawyer named Ali Dergham, any harm.
Ishak Ibrahim, a religious rights researcher at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, said the country’s vaguely worded blasphemy laws allow anyone who disagrees with someone’s beliefs to use the courts to prosecute that person.
“People come and try you because of your belief or your expression of that belief,” Ibrahim said. He said that according to Egyptian law, contempt of religion cases should be filed by the state prosecutor’s office, particularly if the case is to be reviewed by a criminal court.
Egyptian law contains a principle called hisba, which allows any Muslim to take to court anyone thought to be harming the Muslim community. The law was amended to limit who can file such cases after a group of ultraconservative lawyers accused a prominent scholar of apostasy in 1995 for his contemporary interpretation of Islam.
An Egyptian court ordered that Nasr Hamed Abu Zeid divorce his Muslim wife on the grounds that his writings made him an apostate from Islam. The couple refused and fled Egypt for fear of being attacked.
The case outraged Arab intellectuals, who saw it as an attack on freedom of expression. Abu Zeid later appealed the ruling and won, but spent most of his remaining years abroad. Islamist lawyers continued to file suits throughout the Mubarak years, but Ibrahim says the practice has increased since the former president’s ouster.
State prosecutors also sporadically bring to court cases of defamation of religion. Ibrahim said the state prosecutor’s office filed a suit against a Christian teacher from the southern province of Assiut last month after a Muslim colleague claimed he had insulted the Prophet Muhammad. Ibrahim said the man was sentenced to six years in jail.
Also in February, one of Egypt’s best known comedians was sentenced to three months in jail for offending Islam in his films. Adel Imam, who has appeared in dozens of films and 10 plays in a career that spans nearly 50 years, was convicted in absentia and has the right to appeal.
Sawiris is a favorite political target of the ultraconservatives. In an attempt to offset their power, he helped found a secular-leaning political after last year’s uprising. It is part of a liberal coalition in the newly elected parliament that won just nine percent of the seats in the lower house of parliament.
After the cartoon incident, Salafis launched a campaign calling on Muslims in Egypt to boycott his mobile phone company, Mobinil. Shares of Mobinil and Orascom Telecom, which Sawiris founded, fell briefly on the Egyptian stock exchange that month.
Salafi lawmaker Mamdouh Ismail, who filed a complaint to the attorney general’s office regarding the cartoon, maintained Saturday that the cartoon was offensive and harmful. “He posted caricatures mocking Islam, and we see this as a contempt of Islam,” Ismail said.
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March 3rd, 2012
March 03, 2012 — CAIRO (AP) — An Egyptian court on Saturday rejected the second of two lawsuits brought by ultraconservative Islamists accusing a Christian media mogul of insulting Islam when he relayed a cartoon online of Mickey Mouse with a beard and Minnie in a face veil.
The judge ruled the plaintiff was not eligible to file the religious defamation lawsuit and sent the case back to the state prosecutor’s office for further investigation. The first lawsuit against Sawiris was thrown out by a different court earlier this week on similar grounds.
Businessman Naguib Sawiris Saturday used his Twitter account — the same way he spread the original images — to express relief. “I thank God for this ruling because I feel that there is still hope,” he wrote. “Congratulations to an open, free and smiling Egypt that respects all religions.”
Sawiris angered Muslim hard-liners in June by relaying the Mickey and Minnie cartoon, which parodied the growing influence of Islamists in Egypt. Sawiris tweeted an apology and removed the post after the uproar among conservatives, but that did not deter some from pursuing legal action.
The cases are two of many brought by conservative lawyers in recent months seeking to punish individuals they deem as having offended Islam. They highlight the newfound sense of empowerment among followers of the ultraconservative Salafi trend of Islam in Egypt since the ouster of longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak last year in a popular uprising.
In the broad spectrum of Islamic thought, Salafism is very conservative and is partly inspired by Saudi Arabia’s puritanical Wahhabi interpretation of the religion. Many Salafis were jailed and tortured during Mubarak’s three-decade rule. Their newly-formed Al-Nour party won 25 percent of seats in parliament in the first elections since his toppling and has emerged as the second most powerful group in Egypt after the more moderate Muslim Brotherhood.
The mere filing of such blasphemy cases by Salafi lawyers has raised concern among rights groups and liberals who are concerned about threats to freedom of speech. In his ruling, the judge dismissed Saturday’s suit and fined the plaintiff a little less than $10 for the court’s time. The judge said the cartoon did not cause the plaintiff, a hard-line lawyer named Ali Dergham, any harm.
Ishak Ibrahim, a religious rights researcher at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, said the country’s vaguely worded blasphemy laws allow anyone who disagrees with someone’s beliefs to use the courts to prosecute that person.
“People come and try you because of your belief or your expression of that belief,” Ibrahim said. He said that according to Egyptian law, contempt of religion cases should be filed by the state prosecutor’s office, particularly if the case is to be reviewed by a criminal court.
Egyptian law contains a principle called hisba, which allows any Muslim to take to court anyone thought to be harming the Muslim community. The law was amended to limit who can file such cases after a group of ultraconservative lawyers accused a prominent scholar of apostasy in 1995 for his contemporary interpretation of Islam.
An Egyptian court ordered that Nasr Hamed Abu Zeid divorce his Muslim wife on the grounds that his writings made him an apostate from Islam. The couple refused and fled Egypt for fear of being attacked.
The case outraged Arab intellectuals, who saw it as an attack on freedom of expression. Abu Zeid later appealed the ruling and won, but spent most of his remaining years abroad. Islamist lawyers continued to file suits throughout the Mubarak years, but Ibrahim says the practice has increased since the former president’s ouster.
State prosecutors also sporadically bring to court cases of defamation of religion. Ibrahim said the state prosecutor’s office filed a suit against a Christian teacher from the southern province of Assiut last month after a Muslim colleague claimed he had insulted the Prophet Muhammad. Ibrahim said the man was sentenced to six years in jail.
Also in February, one of Egypt’s best known comedians was sentenced to three months in jail for offending Islam in his films. Adel Imam, who has appeared in dozens of films and 10 plays in a career that spans nearly 50 years, was convicted in absentia and has the right to appeal.
Sawiris is a favorite political target of the ultraconservatives. In an attempt to offset their power, he helped found a secular-leaning political after last year’s uprising. It is part of a liberal coalition in the newly elected parliament that won just nine percent of the seats in the lower house of parliament.
After the cartoon incident, Salafis launched a campaign calling on Muslims in Egypt to boycott his mobile phone company, Mobinil. Shares of Mobinil and Orascom Telecom, which Sawiris founded, fell briefly on the Egyptian stock exchange that month.
Salafi lawmaker Mamdouh Ismail, who filed a complaint to the attorney general’s office regarding the cartoon, maintained Saturday that the cartoon was offensive and harmful. “He posted caricatures mocking Islam, and we see this as a contempt of Islam,” Ismail said.
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