Friday, August 27, 2010

Response to Bianca`s Odd Girl Out Reflection

     I am responding to Bianca`s post because she applies what she read to in the excerpt to current events. I especially enjoyed reading her post because the exact same thought crosses my mind every time I hear a commercial promoting a candidate for governor.    

     From my point of view, this type of bullying happens when with the two California Governor candidates, Meg Whitman and Jerry Brown compete against each other through the media. Meg Whitman uses numerous and repetitive commercials to make citizens believe that Jerry Brown will lead California to destruction, while she will lead it to success. Whitman uses an underhanded way to make herself look better by making her opponent look worse. Like the girls who turned others against one girl, yet another question arises: If she has time to shoot all these commercials, why not put that energy into planning how to give teachers back their jobs. Also, commercials costs money, and she has several commercials too, so why would she waste her money on making Jerry Brown, when she can donate to the California Treasury. In my mind, doing all of this unnecessary stuff is a waste of time and money.  

     In her Reflection, Bianca addresses how bullying doesn't stop in the adolescence stage and it continues on to adulthood even in the political world in the form of mudslinging. I think this violates the ASTI Constitution in many ways. The biggest thing that aggressive commercials violate is Think before you speak or act. When politicians, such as Meg Whitman, make up or personify things that the other candidate has done to make them look bad to possible voters. As explained in the essay, Meg Whitman spends millions and millions of dollars just so she can put down her opposing candidate when she could be doing something productive. This can also happen in a school setting when students spread rumors, they usually are not thinking before they speak. By spreading a rumor that can really hurt a persons feelings and affect what other people think of them. To an unsuspecting kid, bullying seems like something that ends when you get older, but in reality, bullying is a never ending cycle.

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