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Today’s blacklisted American: 15-year-old kills himself after school ignored cruel bullying based on false rumor he hadn’t gotten COVID shots.

Nate Bronstein, dead because of lies
Nate Bronstein, now dead because of a mob’s lies, and the
willingness of The Latin School of Chicago to ignore them.

They’re coming for you next: A 15-year-old boy, Nate Bronstein, hung himself in January after months of cruel and ceaseless bullying at his private school — which the school, the Latin School of Chicago, apparently refused to stop — based on the false rumor that he had never gotten any COVID shots.

The boy’s parents, Robert and Rosellene Bronstein, are now suing both the school and the instigators of the bullying, demanding $100 million in compensatory damages. You can read their complaint in all its horror here [pdf].

This story illustrates two terrible but fundamental components of today’s blacklist culture. First, that mob is quite willing to oppress the weak and helpless based simply on lies. From the Chicago Tribune report of this story:

A student at the school, whose parents are named in the suit, spread a false rumor that the boy was unvaccinated, the suit alleges. Though he was vaccinated, the boy was harassed about his perceived vaccination status.

Even though the Bronstein’s met with this student’s parents in an attempt to end the bullying, nothing changed, and in fact it worsened, so that the boy even started receiving text messages saying he should kill himself.

Second, the mob’s emotion-driven and hateful conduct often means that those who could stand up to it and stop it are generally unwilling to challenge those lies, and will often instead team up with the mob to encourage the oppression.

Nate met with a school administrator at that point, but none of the students involved in the cyberbullying were disciplined, his parents allege. Rosellene Bronstein had also contacted a counselor about the bullying, saying she feared her son may hurt himself, but the school downplayed her concerns as “family issues,” the lawsuit claims.

Nate’s mother contacted the school more than 30 times in October and November alone, but administrators allegedly turned a “blind eye” to the family’s pleas for help. The teen also reported the bullying to a school dean, but was disregarded, according to the lawsuit.

Worse, at least one teacher, Andrew Sanchez, added to the bullying by attacking Bronstein in front of his entire class, saying that Bronstein “was going nowhere in life.”

A full reading of the complaint suggests that this bullying was not solely because the others believed Bronstein hadn’t gotten any COVID shots. According to two surveys of the school’s students in 2014, bullying was apparently common at the school, with the second survey finding that 92.3% of the respondents saying they had been bullied at the school. Despite this evidence, the school apparently did little to address the problem.

Essentially, the root of this tragedy is the willingness by everyone everywhere now to allow bullies to rule. Fear rules all. Fear of COVID. Fear of attack. Fear of the mob. Adults who should know better and have the courage to act properly on that knowledge are instead afraid to act. Instead, these adults conclude it is better to let a helpless 15-year-old be driven to suicide than risk bringing the mob’s hate down upon them.

Though lawsuits such as this will certainly help by making it clear that the long term consequences of such cowardly behavior might actually be far worse, lawsuits are not the real solution. What must really begin to happen is that for everyone everywhere to no longer sit back and “go along to get along.” People have got to begin to stand up and say, “No more! This must stop now!” Until we all do this, in every situation, no matter the risk to ourselves, the blacklisting and cancelling and bullying will continue, until all of civilization is lost.

Have you seen a friend or neighbor blacklisted? Have you sat back and done nothing to stop it or correct it? Then you are an accessory to the blacklisting, little better than the bullies who did it.

Genesis cover

On Christmas Eve 1968 three Americans became the first humans to visit another world. What they did to celebrate was unexpected and profound, and will be remembered throughout all human history. Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8, Robert Zimmerman's classic history of humanity's first journey to another world, tells that story, and it is now available as both an ebook and an audiobook, both with a foreword by Valerie Anders and a new introduction by Robert Zimmerman.

 

The print edition can be purchased at Amazon. from any other book seller, or direct from my ebook publisher, ebookit. The ebook is available everywhere for $5.99 (before discount) at amazon, or direct from my ebook publisher, ebookit. If you buy it from ebookit you don't support the big tech companies and the author gets a bigger cut much sooner.


The audiobook is also available at all these vendors, and is also free with a 30-day trial membership to Audible.
 

"Not simply about one mission, [Genesis] is also the history of America's quest for the moon... Zimmerman has done a masterful job of tying disparate events together into a solid account of one of America's greatest human triumphs."--San Antonio Express-News

7 comments

  • Jeff Wright

    So very sad…he was so young….we should teach that it can be noble to be unpopular.

  • Joe

    What a tragedy.

    I was bullied relentlessly at school, from first grade to college. It didn’t help that I was a small scrawny kid who liked science and math and built rockets and other things. Even some of my teachers were in on it.

    I also contemplated suicide but decided against it. We need to be better people than what we have become. Teach kids to protect themselves as well. I told my kids that I would rather they defend themselves and suffer school suspension than suffer through bullying. It does help.

  • pzatchok

    I was in a large high school. 2000+ students.

    We didn’t have any of this problem. Yes we got in fights but we stuck up for each other. Teachers didn’t let bullying go on. The bully was confronted by someone, often by other students. We could always gather a larger group than the bullies could. Our group would even call in friends and family from other schools.

    As it seems typical the athletes and popular people would do the bullying. But one rule in the school was if you got into a fight in school you were off the sports team plus suspended for a number of days. Imagine a freshman ‘nerd’ getting tired of it one day and saying “here hold my glasses” as he went after the baseball teams top pitcher. He got suspended for a week but the pitcher was off the team and had to move schools to get back onto a new team.
    No more bullying for the four years I was there.

    Either kids are sissies now and far too emotional or kids are animals just attacking the weak.

  • Fantum2

    As a substitute teacher years ago, I told a bully to knock it off, and she did, and she then realized that she was wrong. Nobody had told her before not to do it to another girl who just wanted to be a friend.
    I feel that kids today are not taught how to be strong and independent, and that produces more suicides than in the past. Accomplishment after effort is important, and recognition of accomplishment is important, but participation trophies don’t help. Hiding behind a cell phone doesn’t help.
    Society itself, as in this school, didn’t help this boy.

  • Sez1

    Sad to hear about such a young kiddo.

    What happened to the anti-bullying efforts? Bullying is not ok for any kid….regardless of age, color skin, beliefs.

    They should sue the school, win, and name it after him.

  • Jamie

    Schools siding with Bullies is nothing new…. we’ve all seen it. Never fails… the victim becomes the instigator.

  • Alton

    What happened to the anti-bullying efforts?

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