The Victims’ Race - about 1-in-20 middle- and high-school-age students have bullied themselves online.

  • ⚙️ Performance issue identified and being addressed.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

On August 2nd, 2013, 14-year-old Hannah Smith of Leicestershire, England, took her own life. She had been receiving cruel messages on the social networking site Ask.fm for months, and her parents concluded that cyberbullying was the main cause of her suicide. But then evidence emerged that the hatred Hannah had been receiving came from … herself—98 percent of the messages were posted from the IP address of the computer she was using.

This tragic event inspired a research project by Sameer Hinduja and colleagues at the Cyberbullying Research Center in Florida. Their analysis of around 5,500 teenagers produced some surprising results: “We knew we had to study this empirically,” Hinduja remarked, “and I was stunned to discover that about 1-in-20 middle- and high-school-age students have bullied themselves online. This finding was totally unexpected, even though I’ve been studying cyberbullying for almost 15 years.”

Boys reported digital self-harm more often (7.1 percent) than girls (5.3 percent). Asked why they participated in such behaviour, their replies included: “I already felt so bad with myself that I wanted to make myself feel even worse” and “I wanted to see if someone really was my friend.” However, there were also those who claimed that they did it to justify their aggressive behaviour towards others, or just for fun, to see how others would react.

If teenagers are prepared to harm themselves in cyberspace to attain the status of victim, it should not be especially surprising that some adults do so in the real world. In the most notorious example of this behaviour, actor Jussie Smollett told police he had been the victim of a racist and homophobic attack on January 20th, 2019. He immediately found himself at the centre of media attention and public opinion. But the subsequent investigation revealed that Smollett had paid two men to assault him and that he had sent himself the threatening letters he had received the week before.

This was not an isolated incident. In his book Hate Crime Hoax, political scientist Wilfred Reilly analysed 346 alleged hate crimes and found that fewer than a third were genuine. He provides detailed descriptions of almost a hundred high-profile cases that never actually happened, most of which were supposed to have taken place on university campuses. Reilly concludes that, contrary to popular belief, we are not experiencing an epidemic of hate crimes, but an epidemic of hate crime hoaxes perpetrated by people searching for public attention and sympathy.

Nor is it only hate crimes that are the subject of hoaxes and false accusations. A meta-analysis conducted by Australian scholars Claire E. Ferguson and John M. Malouff in 2015 revealed that as many as 5.2 percent of all reported rape cases are false. The authors note, however, that their analysis only accounts for accusations that were disproven in the course of investigations—many others were never confirmed or were withdrawn for reasons unknown.

The evolution and development of victimhood

The advantages of victimhood are by no means unique to 21st-century millennials and Generation Z-ers, bored with life and addicted to social media. Indeed, they are not unique to humans. The Austrian zoologist Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt has written about the discovery of an adult frigate bird with only one wing in a breeding colony, and a blind adult pelican at another breeding site. Both were mutilated long before they were found by researchers, which indicated that they’d survived by depending upon the help of other birds. Weaker, disabled animals are also sometimes used by others in a manipulative manner. Eibl-Eibesfeldt observed that male maggots would use borrowed offspring to mitigate the aggression of others. Most mammals also make effective use of the innate behavioural patterns of expressing humility and submission.

Victimhood is of evolutionary importance, because it improves the chances of survival in difficult circumstances. In many different cultures, people cry and submit themselves in a similar way, not only in their movements and gestures but also in the use of similar wailing sounds. Even children born deaf and blind cry, and the body language of submission is remarkably similar across cultures—an individual signifies submission by becoming smaller, kneeling, and bowing. These gestures are sometimes accompanied by helplessness, weakness, and childlike behaviour, the aim of which is to release the protective instinct that inhibits aggression.

Victimhood may confer ancient and effective advantages, but researchers are nonetheless alarmed by the scale of digital self-harm in adolescents, and the recent recourse to false accusations more generally. In the past, adopting the mantle of victimhood was usually a situational strategy—apart from professional beggars, people tended to avoid being permanently identified as a victim. But in modern culture, victimhood is increasingly becoming an attractive life choice.

In his prescient 1992 book, A Nation of Victims: The Decay of the American Character, journalist Charles Sykes estimated that if all groups who claimed to be victimised or discriminated against were added together, they would constitute almost 400 percent of the US population. An in-depth analysis by the psychologist Tana Dineen, in a book tellingly entitled Manufacturing Victims: What the Psychology Industry is Doing to People, shows how the strategy of assuming the role of a victim is disseminated by junk science. And in their 2018 book, The Rise of Victimhood Culture, American sociologists Bradley Campbell and Jason Manning argue that Western cultures of dignity are becoming cultures of victimhood.

Campbell and Manning argue that in a such a culture, victimhood ensures moral and social privileges, and victims are awarded special care and respect. On the other hand, those who were hitherto socially privileged become morally suspect as responsible for the harm done to victims. In the ancient culture of honour, every insult had to be expiated, even if it involved bloodshed or armed conflict, and preferably without recourse to the legal system or the state. The model of such behaviour was the duel. Over time, honour culture was replaced by a culture of dignity, which emphasised the equal and inalienable value of all persons, which cannot be devalued by insult. According to the principles of this culture, grievances should be dealt with by the legal system and social regulations.

However, today that culture of dignity has been replaced by a victim culture, which combines aspects of the cultures of honour and dignity. Those who are part of the victim culture insist upon respect, and are extremely sensitive to its violation. Insults are not trivial matters, and even if they are small and unintentional, they can cause serious conflict. As in a culture of dignity, people generally refrain from violent retribution in favour of intervention by some authority or third party.

The cultural patterns described determine social hierarchy and status. Brave, strong, and violent people, not their victims, were at the top of the culture of honour. Today, we are witnessing the reversal of that order—the position of victim now ensures privileged status in the social hierarchy and guarantees relative impunity. It is unsurprising that in such a culture people compete to belong to disadvantaged groups.

The victim race and the victim industry

Exploiting the role of victim to obtain support from others in an unjustified way is a manipulation, the widespread use of which has fateful consequences, and not only for those deceived. Those who lose the most are those who really do need support from others. When so many play the victim and compete for that status, the genuinely disadvantaged are lost in the crowd of pretenders, and the omnipresence of the aggrieved and their growing persistence leads to compassion fatigue.

Medical services report that “phoney” sick leave is being granted when mental disorders are offered as the reason for an inability to work. In some countries, it is now the fourth leading cause of incapacity for work. Such exemptions are difficult to diagnose with certainty and do not force patients to stay at home and lie in bed. They are also easy to obtain, because doctors fear the possible consequences of scepticism. But does this kind of sensitivity help those who are really suffering from serious mental illness? In the race for compassion, they may soon have to first convince those jaded by charlatans that they are not also frauds.

An even more serious consequence of victim culture is the appropriation of suffering by politicians and professional groups who aspire to the title of aggrieved and discriminated representatives. This is a clever development of the trick employed by maggots described earlier—politicians “borrow” whole groups of victims to win voters’ support, and then forget about the interests of those victims immediately after the election.

Victimhood presents an opportunity for others to obtain a status higher even than that of victims themselves—after all, can there be any behaviour more noble than the provision of help for the suffering? And so, cohorts emerge—psychologists, psychotherapists, psychiatrists, social engineers, politicians, and activists—with a perverse interest in manufacturing victims and inflaming grievance and resentment.

In 1992, a 79-year-old named Stella Liebeck accidentally scalded herself with a McDonald's coffee. Amazingly, her lawyers managed to convince the court that she was the victim of an irresponsible company, and she was awarded $2.9 million in damages. Inspired by Liebeck’s absurd suit, Colorado humourist Randy Cassingham established a prize named after her, awarded for the most insane, outrageous, or grotesque court verdicts. Among the winners of the Stella Award was Kathleen Robertson of Austin, Texas, to whom a court awarded $780,000 in damages for an ankle fracture as a result of tripping over a boy running around a furniture store. The unruly toddler was Mrs. Robertson's own son.

The lawyers of Terrence Dickson of Bristol, Pennsylvania were also recognised for their work in this area. Dickson had managed to trap himself in the garage of a house he was burgling, and since the homeowners were on vacation, he remained locked in there for eight days. He survived thanks to a crate of Pepsi and the large bag of dry dog food he found there. He sued the homeowner's insurance company, claiming that the situation had caused him excessive mental suffering. The court found Dickson to be a victim and awarded him $500,000 compensation.

It is hard not to admire the skill of these lawyers in turning careless, stupid people—even careless, stupid criminals—into victims. However, a simpler method is available, presented in an amusing way in the 1921 film The Kid. Charlie Chaplin plays a glazier who ensures demand for his services by getting the small boy under his care to throw stones at windows. In the same way, psychotherapy creates victims and then offers to treat them. This is tempting for the patient—victimhood allows us to shed the burden of responsibility for our own lives. However, when we decide to regain control of them, we will find the not entirely disinterested hands of the professionals there to help.

Today, we can choose one of a number of roles offered by modern psychotherapy—and there is something for everyone. If your parent abused alcohol, you can be a vicarious victim of alcoholism. If your parents were not heavy drinkers, you may be the adult child of a dysfunctional family. As many as 96 percent of the population are victims of a disease they call co-addiction. Psychotherapists will be happy to tell you that childhood trauma is responsible for your failures, and if you don't remember it, they will help you recover your repressed memories! If that doesn't work, you can still hold your childhood relationships with your parents responsible for your present life.

The victims of alleged sexual abuse have become multitudinous. The image of American society created on the basis of surveys and reports of therapists shows that every fourth woman has been raped at least once in her life, every second or third person has been sexually abused in childhood (most often by a family member), 50–60 percent of patients in psychiatric wards were physically or sexually abused in childhood, 50,000 out of a total of 255,000 therapists are convinced that their patients were sexually abused in their childhood, although most have denied it.

And if you don’t fit into any of these roles, you can always be a victim of workplace bullying, social isolation, or discrimination on the basis of race or gender. Alternatively, it may turn out that you are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder because someone close to you has died, or you have had to spend two weeks at home in quarantine. You can even compare your experiences to the suffering of Holocaust survivors—many patients do this, encouraged by therapists, as documented in Judith Herman’s book Trauma and Recovery.

An effect of the mass manufacture of victims is the accompanying manufacture of abusers. Only some of the aggrieved parties can attribute their fate to chance. Wherever the discriminated against appear, there must also be discriminators; where the aggrieved appear, there are those who aggrieve; the oppressed have their oppressors, and every victim must have their victimiser. This process is bound to deepen divisions between people and result in societal strife when practised at scale.

There is not much research into the number of false accusations resulting from memory retrieval therapy, but what there is paints a rather disturbing picture. The False Memory Syndrome Foundation was established in the US in 1992 to help people falsely accused of abuse, most often families whose children "remembered" during therapy that they were victimised by their parents. Similar organisations were quickly established in Australia, Great Britain, France, Germany, Israel, New Zealand, Belgium, Canada, the Netherlands, and Sweden. Most of the members of these organisations are the accused relatives of the alleged victims of sexual harassment and abuse. In the United States alone, from the establishment of the Foundation in 1992 up to 2001, more than 4,400 people came forward, for whom the false memories of their relatives became their nightmare reality. Of course, it cannot be ruled out that among them are real perpetrators of actual harm, but the number of withdrawn accusations and damages awarded for unjustified accusations is constantly growing.

The fact that so many victims today can count on interest and support is probably also due to economic factors. In the Western world, this enables access to goods unprecedented in history. We can simply better afford to take care of them. But in helping them, we must remember that in the race of victims there will be losers, including those wrongly accused of being victimizers, and those who will be denounced as false victims who need help most. The latter usually do not have the strength or the ability to jump in the queue for help.
 
On August 2nd, 2013, 14-year-old Hannah Smith of Leicestershire, England, took her own life. She had been receiving cruel messages on the social networking site Ask.fm for months, and her parents concluded that cyberbullying was the main cause of her suicide. But then evidence emerged that the hatred Hannah had been receiving came from … herself—98 percent of the messages were posted from the IP address of the computer she was using.
Did anyone else think the article kind of glossed over the point that the person bullying themselves actually went through with suicide rather than just farming the sympathy for asspats? If they were faking it for attention, then what the hell was the end goal with this?

A mass epidemic of people bullying themselves seems like it should be more cause for concern than "oh those zoomers and their victim culture". This looks more like a plague of fucking schizophrenia if you ask me.
 
Did anyone else think the article kind of glossed over the point that the person bullying themselves actually went through with suicide rather than just farming the sympathy for asspats? If they were faking it for attention, then what the hell was the end goal with this?

A mass epidemic of people bullying themselves seems like it should be more cause for concern than "oh those zoomers and their victim culture". This looks more like a plague of fucking schizophrenia if you ask me.

Since it was a chubby teenage girl, I’m going to say she was just a proto-Borderline. All early teens girls have Borderline traits, but this one was probably an actual Borderline.
 
Last edited:
The coffee lady had over ten grand in hospital bills and third degree burns. I never understood the people who always seethe about her getting her payout, totally deserved. We need to focus on real cases of fakers or else the water is muddied.

I thought it was deliberately McDonalds painting it as unreasonable?
Literally, McDonald's launched an effective propaganda campaign.
Yeah, tort reform became a meme from this particular case because it was very easy to describe it in a way that made it look ridiculous, and it took getting the whole picture to find out why it was, in fact, eminently reasonable. It wasn't just McDonalds - a lot of large corporations have an obvious interest in making it harder for them to be held liable for some of the shit they do, so they pushed the idea that there were legions of nuisance suits getting big payouts to stoke public outrage.

I haven't watched the documentary about the case, 'Hot Coffee' (nothing to do with GTA), but that's my understanding of the situation, and funnily enough it hasn't gotten better. The true grifters are, ironically, less of a concern, because they're inevitably cheaper to pay to go away than someone who has incurred serious injury from a corporation and can fight for their rights in court. One hundred bullshit artists who can be paid off with ten grand a piece is a lot cheaper and a lot more likely to accept a non-disparagement agreement than someone with a real grievance that could end up costing them millions of dollars.

That those millions of dollars are still often a complete drop in the bucket is a problem that is very hard to reckon with; as was mentioned the actual woman involved in the Hot Coffee lawsuit won $3 million, which is only the value of one item from the entire McDonalds menu being sold in one day. Punitive damages are very hard to reckon with when a company with billions of dollars of profit annually has to cough up for their malfeasance; even the bakers who won the case against Oberlin College falsely accusing them of racism, who won something like $33 million in punitive damages, are being considered against a nearly billion dollar endowment.

This doesn't really have anything to do with the rise in status of the victim, but then I'd imagine the Farms is pretty much in agreement about how destructive that has been. A large number of lolcows are posted about here because they constantly play the victim while actively making things worse for themselves, and/or holding themselves hostage against almost entirely fictional haters. Studies coming out that people lie about this shit is just scientists telling us what we already know.
 
They're doing it for pitty

It's the same mentality where you've got someone who gets knocked down and decides to just lay there in the dirt and cry rather than get up, they want others to feel sorry for them and react because they've given up on having any pride and dignity
 
Well no shit, people are desperate for love and attention and see the main way to get it is to be a victim. It's going to get worse before it gets better because it's still seen as sacrilegious to point out how many of these claims of victimhood are silly and attempts to attention whore. It also doesn't help that many claims of victimhood are done over someone interacting with them in benign ways, like the fuss over Elevatorgate a few years back when someone invited Rebecca Watkins to their hotel room for coffee while at a conference, sparking Richard Dawkins to mock it and being declared a misogynist for doing so.
 
The point is good and the first half is good, but anyone who thinks the Hot Coffee payout was bad hasn't done their research. The other two cases, sure, but Stella herself was an actual victim rather than an idiot/criminal looking for a pay day.

Honestly, though, the one in twenty figure for cyberbullying yourself seems low. I seem to remember another UK study where it was higher than that.

The article links to a site that states several of the news stories it discusses are fabricated lol
 
The point is good and the first half is good, but anyone who thinks the Hot Coffee payout was bad hasn't done their research. The other two cases, sure, but Stella herself was an actual victim rather than an idiot/criminal looking for a pay day.
Oh? Your next task is to explain to a retard like me how exactly the case is so cut and dry and how Stella wasn't an idiot in this case because yeah it was a pretty frivolous lawsuit. I mean I hate McDonald's as much as anyone can but I don't think they were in the wrong.

The facts to me seem to be that Stella was the one who decided to place hot coffee in her own lap while opening the lid to add things in. It's not like a server spilled the coffee over her when serving it so you have to concede that Stella played a major role in the injuries she suffered. What McDonald's did do was supply her with the coffee and also did not warn her in any way as to how hot it was. The mitigating factor in my mind to this is that most adults don't need to be warned about this kind of thing. Coffee is hot, it's somewhat how that beverage tends to work and that fact shouldn't really have come to a surprise to a 79 year old. The only other thing I can think of is the design of the cup and lid could have been a contributing factor. Maybe it was a bit of a struggle for someone of her age but in that case don't put it in your lap. I can absolutely sympathise with how horrific her injuries were but I don't understand how you can say that Stella was a victim of McDonald's and not her own stupidity.
I don't know, maybe I'm wrong.

One thing for certain is that there are many warnings on products now that you know are put there because a lawyer said so.
 
Oh? Your next task is to explain to a retard like me how exactly the case is so cut and dry and how Stella wasn't an idiot in this case because yeah it was a pretty frivolous lawsuit. I mean I hate McDonald's as much as anyone can but I don't think they were in the wrong.

The facts to me seem to be that Stella was the one who decided to place hot coffee in her own lap while opening the lid to add things in. It's not like a server spilled the coffee over her when serving it so you have to concede that Stella played a major role in the injuries she suffered. What McDonald's did do was supply her with the coffee and also did not warn her in any way as to how hot it was. The mitigating factor in my mind to this is that most adults don't need to be warned about this kind of thing. Coffee is hot, it's somewhat how that beverage tends to work and that fact shouldn't really have come to a surprise to a 79 year old. The only other thing I can think of is the design of the cup and lid could have been a contributing factor. Maybe it was a bit of a struggle for someone of her age but in that case don't put it in your lap. I can absolutely sympathise with how horrific her injuries were but I don't understand how you can say that Stella was a victim of McDonald's and not her own stupidity.
I don't know, maybe I'm wrong.
They served coffee that was so hot that spilling it caused third degree burns and permanent disfigurement to human skin. That's not something you could reasonably expect as a consumer when you buy coffee. Who hasn't spilled coffee on themselves before? You can expect it to hurt, maybe even blister, but you don't expect to end up in hospital requiring skin grafts. Then it came it light that Mcdonalds received hundreds of reports of people being burned by their coffee to varying degrees, and that they had already settled claims in the past for a lot of money.

McDonalds served coffee that was so dangerously hot that it could severely hurt people, and had indeed hurt people in the past, and they knew it and didn't take action or warn people. They fucked themselves.
 
Oh? Your next task is to explain to a retard like me how exactly the case is so cut and dry and how Stella wasn't an idiot in this case because yeah it was a pretty frivolous lawsuit. I mean I hate McDonald's as much as anyone can but I don't think they were in the wrong.

The facts to me seem to be that Stella was the one who decided to place hot coffee in her own lap while opening the lid to add things in. It's not like a server spilled the coffee over her when serving it so you have to concede that Stella played a major role in the injuries she suffered. What McDonald's did do was supply her with the coffee and also did not warn her in any way as to how hot it was. The mitigating factor in my mind to this is that most adults don't need to be warned about this kind of thing. Coffee is hot, it's somewhat how that beverage tends to work and that fact shouldn't really have come to a surprise to a 79 year old. The only other thing I can think of is the design of the cup and lid could have been a contributing factor. Maybe it was a bit of a struggle for someone of her age but in that case don't put it in your lap. I can absolutely sympathise with how horrific her injuries were but I don't understand how you can say that Stella was a victim of McDonald's and not her own stupidity.
I don't know, maybe I'm wrong.

One thing for certain is that there are many warnings on products now that you know are put there because a lawyer said so.
If you read the link from the article, to this specific link, you'll see it gets discussed further. Now, the guy doesn't provide citations for anything he says (except possibly his book), but the gist is that McDonalds essentially were held only partially liable as Stella was seen to have caused some of the injuries herself by her actions, but the main issue seemed to be that McDonalds assumed absolutely no liability for serving their coffee at that temperature and wasn't willing to cover the medical costs of her third-degree burns, which was a much smaller amount, so it went to trial where she was given more, including punitive damages.

Now, I'm not sure how much of what he says on the site is true, again due to the lack of cites; as @Manah pointed out he debunks the other examples listed in the OP but doesn't say why, and his own suggestions for the awards are mostly cases where the plaintiff filed something dumb rather than a case where someone did that and won - the whole LLP section of the Farms and the existence of Jonathan Yaniv shows that people can file all sorts of bullshit lawsuits, it's whether they win or not that's the issue.

In the Hot Coffee case, I think to a lot of people the severity of Stella's injuries and the fact that McDonalds claimed 0% liability for serving her something that could cause that much damage, is the reason why it's seen as a legitimate complaint. If you accidentally spill your coffee, sure, suing the place that sold it to you seems stupid, which corporations used to their advantage. If you accidentally spill your coffee and it's at a temperature that can hurt you that badly, though, that seems to put at least a little responsibility on the place that keeps it that scaldingly hot. McDonalds had to be taken to court to acknowledge that little bit of responsibility, and a jury believed that, yes, they weren't 0% responsible. Anything more relies on a documentary I haven't seen, a deep dive into court documents I haven't done, or by proxy reading a website that doesn't cite its sources and hasn't been updated in over a decade.

tl;dr: I think for a lot of people, they've spilled hot drinks on themselves, sure, but they've never been particularly hurt by doing so, let alone that badly - so once they know how badly Stella was injured, their sympathies go from thinking she's a scammer to thinking she's a victim. And likely with just as much nuance of thought applied whichever side they're on.
 
Back
Top Bottom