Many Students Experience Hazing in High School, Study Says
Reader Comments
The fine line
There is a fine line between martial arts and bullying. Martial arts are traditional and historic. It is to teach the mind and body of self-discipline, not to scare or "beat up" another person.
Hazing is showing dominance and also a very strong weakness. When someone wants to show who is dominant, in charge or power of authority over another shows weakness because they cannot find an effective way to earn respect. Finding hazing in ROTC groups is very understandable because those programs are there to teach young adults to be adults and grow responsibility in rank.
For ranking ROTC groups/cadets, hazing can come from anger and frustration. As a Civil Air Patrol Cadet Officer, I have done a little bit of hazing when I was a Senior NCO because I was frustrated that my group was making the same mistakes repeatedly when in the past they have done it correctly. Hazing a lower Cadet will make him/her afraid of you and will cause confusion and no respect.
You know when hazing has occurred when that victim feels humiliated and embarrassed. It can cause physical and mental pain. Bullying is linked to showing corwardness and weakness, or just being plain stupid. There is no reason to haze in high school. Bullies could have been victims of hazing themselves, come from an abusive home, or just have the need to feel like they have the power. It is natural to want to have the authority or power over others. But hazing is certainly not the way to do it. The only effective results you will get are negative responses and hardships.
Hazing is a sign of weakness that can be stopped and helped professionally. From home, teachers, coaches, military leaders, etc. It is all part of “growing up” if we want to be responsible adults and also leaders.
Hazing and Bullying
Bullies and those who haze others always pick on those least able to stand up or defend themselves. America of today disapproves of the barbaric behavior of fighting in schools (or after school). Students are taught "proper behavior" to not bully or haze others. However, students are not taught to defend themselves or to stand up to bullies. One wonders why some students resort to guns as a way of asserting themselves, which always becomes a tragedy.
What is wrong with martial arts training? Teaching a youngster the art of combat and self discipline? Weapons are bad, fighting is bad, improper language is bad, American has raised a generation of wimps!
My high school experience years ago was of violence by bullies to those students afraid to stand up for themselves. Myself being of peaceable nature was challenged twice in high school and fought once (I won). The other fight was nipped in the bud when my aggressor learned from friends of my karate and judo belts. Preparedness trumps fighting.
Standing up to bullies will not scar a youngster for life, but cowering will.
There is NO hazing
quite like what one has to endure to become a member of many of the street gangs. Does this tell us anything?







