Saturday, 13 April 2013

FAILURE

The recent suicide by Rehtaeh Parsons has many people asking questions. Why didn't the loser fucking pigs do anything? Why didn't the blind and stupid schoolboard do anything? What about the parents of the fucking animals who raped her and posted the photos on the internet? How the fuck do those little death deserving shitheads come to think this is okay? And are they now going to crawl out of their ratholes with false tears and apologies? Fuck them. The bigger question is, why do young men being raised in this society think this is acceptable behaviour? Whose standards are they living up to? How many more rapes and suicides will it take before we throw this society and it's values into the trash where it belongs? We need Revolution, Nothing Less...

Rehtaeh Parsons: Halifax community mourns bullied teen

While more than 100 mourners recall the life of 17-year-old Parsons, who hanged herself after months of depression over alleged rape and cyberbullying.
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A young woman holds onto a funeral program leaflet for 17-year-old Rehtaeh Parsons as she embraces a fellow mourner outside St. Mark's Anglican church in Halifax Saturday. Parsons, a local high school student, was taken off life support on April 7, three days after she tried to hang herself. The teen was bullied after an alleged sexual assault, her family said.
PAUL DARROW / REUTERS
A young woman holds onto a funeral program leaflet for 17-year-old Rehtaeh Parsons as she embraces a fellow mourner outside St. Mark's Anglican church in Halifax Saturday. Parsons, a local high school student, was taken off life support on April 7, three days after she tried to hang herself. The teen was bullied after an alleged sexual assault, her family said.

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HALIFAX, N.S.—Amid the young and old grieving over the shattering loss of Rehtaeh Parsons, the dead teen’s youngest sister Teaghan was getting fidgety, as 3-year-olds do in church.
Remembering that Parsons’ grandfather, a former minister at the very Anglican church where the funeral for Rehtaeh was held Saturday, had a philosophy that “children should move freely,” cousin Angella Parsons got up and roamed about with the young child.
While more than 100 mourners recalled the life of 17-year-old Parsons, Angella and Teaghan came across a collection of cards and gifts that well-wishers had left for the family. Teaghan was drawn to a small stuffed dog, its pink collar embroidered with the name of her big sister.

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  • Glen Canning, father of 17-year-old Rehtaeh Parsons, is comforted outside St. Mark's Anglican church.zoom
  • Leah Parsons, mother of late 17-year-old Rehtaeh Parsons, leaves St. Mark's Anglican church with boyfriend Jason Barnes following her daughter's funeral.zoom
  • Rehtaeh Parsons, 17, killed herself 18 months after she was allegedly raped by four boys in her small town of Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia.zoom
“The little one took this for comfort, so thank-you to whoever brought this little dog,” Angella said later.
Those who loved Parsons, who was taken off life-support last Sunday after hanging herself three days earlier, spoke of their despair, anger, indescribable grief. But others talked of the good, too, that has come in the days since her suicide, which followed months of depression over an alleged rape and subsequent social shunning.
Rev. John Morrell, in a eulogy that urged mourners to use this death to prevent others, acknowledged the positive accompanying the terrible loss.
“Social media contributed to Rehtaeh’s depression and death. Social media have shared her story around the world,” Morrell said. “Given the worldwide attention to the events leading up to this tragedy, it is appropriate to focus on what happens tomorrow, and the day after, and the weeks and years to come.”
After the funeral, at which Parsons’ aunt gave a eulogy and two friends shared memories, a glass-encased box containing Parsons’ ashes was loaded into a hearse as rain pelted down.
Watching in silence were Parson’s mother Leah and her younger sisters, Teaghan and Temyson, 9, both wearing pink outfits bought for the occasion. Parsons’ father, Glen Canning, sobbed and clutched his partner.
Mike Wells, Parsons’ boyfriend since last fall, arrived at the funeral with the family. In an interview Thursday with the Star the 20-year-old pipefitting student had said Parsons “was just way different than any other girl.”
“I still can’t believe it,” Wells said, as he quietly sobbed.
He was thankful that the tragedy has aroused widespread public outrage and calls for justice but felt “it shouldn’t have taken this.”
On Friday, police announced they were reopening their investigation into allegations that Parsons had been raped by a four boys at a house party in November, 2011.
The Parsons family says the teens took turns assaulting Rehtaeh and snapped a cellphone photo that was widely circulated among high school students in nearby Cole Harbour, where they live.
The humiliation and bullying that followed led to an 18-month battle with depression for Parsons. Her family says she turned to drugs and had suicidal thoughts.
RCMP and Halifax police investigated the family’s allegations but did not lay charges, saying there was not sufficient evidence to prosecute anyone. This prompted calls for justice from online “hacktivists.”
Several students at Cole Harbour District High School, which Parsons’ attended, told the Star that her alleged attackers — said to be in Grades 10 through 12 — still walk the halls freely.
Police now say all this may change with the reopening of the investigation: someone with credible new information has come forward. They stressed the information did not come from online sources.
Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter, who attended the funeral, called the family’s loss “unfathomable.” Afterwards he thanked those upset and angered by the tragedy for not taking action into their hands.
The Anonymous group of hacktivists has claimed it knows the names of the four alleged attackers but has not made them public out of respect for the family’s wish to avoid violence and further bullying.
Last week Dexter appointed a minister to oversee a review of the case. On Friday, his government launched an online and TV ad campaign to raise awareness about the resources available to those needing help.
Parsons’ death has also prompted other Nova Scotia high schoolers to take action. Shannon Barry, 16, a student at Dartmouth High, where it is suspected that students also saw the photo, is one of a group that started a campaign to promote positive use of social media and cellphones.
Their philosophy is that students literally have the power in their hands — via their cellphones — to positively or negatively affect another person’s life. Students are encouraged to sign pledges to use that power for good.
They will then tweet, text or post to Facebook their personal pledges en masse.
“It’s to encourage us not call a girl slut on Twitter, not retext a nasty picture,” she said.
Rev. Morrell called for efforts to battle sexual abuse and cyberbullying.
“How can our society create a safe haven for young girls? Why do young men feel that young girls are but objects for their sexual fantasies and pleasure? Why do teenagers avoid seeking help when they are depressed and suicidal? How can our schools deal with physical and now cyber bullying?” he asked.