I just forced myself to sit here and watch every second of the 13 minute unedited version.
I'd like everybody to do me a favor - I would like you all to do the same. Sit and watch the whole thing. It doesn't matter what race you are, I'd like you to close your eyes for a minute, and put yourself in this boy's shoes.
You're seventeen years old. You are probably not very popular, for whatever reason. You're quiet, passive... you just want to get through each day and get home. Every day, you have to get on a bus full of rowdy, aggressive kids. Every day, you try to find a place to sit, and every day, you are rejected over and over again.
Finally, you just make a decision that you're just going to sit someplace. We've seen what happens from here. Now if you've put yourself in this boy's shoes, you can identify what that boy might have felt. Fear, anger, shame, embarrassed, alone, betrayed (the bus driver - the one person who might have been able to help him - did nothing), powerless... I could go on and on.
This was most likely the longest 13 minutes of this boy's life. Imagine having to sit there.
Trying to shut it all out; trying not to cry.
Waiting for the next attack.
He must have been terrified! He had no way of knowing how bad it might get... how many times he was going to be attacked. All he knew was there was a mob mentality on that bus, and he didn't stand a chance.
Now, if you have children, I'd like you to think about them in this position.
I wonder what would have happened if he would have done more to try to defend himself. Would the attackers have backed off, or would the attack have gotten worse? Knowing what we know about mob mentality, would more people have gotten involved with the attack itself? There's a good chance of it.
I guess for me, I don't even care anymore if it was driven by race or not. I cannot imagine my child ever riding that bus or attending that school. The fact that this is allowed to happen in schools (and on busses) in our country AT ALL just makes me really sad.
If I were that kid, there's no possible way I would make it to graduation in that school. It's very sad that kids have to face things like this in order to get an education.
I guess I must really live a sheltered life, as I just didn't even realize that this kind of thing was going on. It seems clear to me that this wasn't an isolated incident. The other kids on the bus hardly even seemed affected by it. They have no respect for others. No empathy. If these are the children of our future, I am very afraid.
This is what terrifies me - these children will some day be adults.