After graduating with a degree in history, I began my formal work career teaching high school in a ghetto town called Opa-Locka, north of Miami, Florida. There was a fairly intense bullying situation at the school that many teachers ignored.
Not me.
The effeminate boys got it bad. It was a mixed-race school mostly comprised of working-class kids. This was the early 1970s when high school bullying was largely in your face, not done anonymously on a device as it happens today. Continue Reading on BillOReilly.com
|