Oregon
Welcome! Alternative to Oregon Reddit on Lemmy.
Here you can post anything about Oregon State.
Active stats from all instances
Created on July 7th, 2023
Subscribers: 336
User Guide
https://join-lemmy.org/docs/introduction.html
c/Oregon Rules
1. Server Main Rules
The main rules of the server will be enforced stringently.
2. No brigading/ harassment/ usernames, etc.
All usernames and display names must be censored, unless it's a well known public figure.
Do not:
Encourage the brigading or trolling of other communities. Harass/mass ping. Use racist language. Post about getting banned on other communities.
3. No spam or reposts + limit off topic comments
Discussion is healthy.
However, spamming posts will be removed. Reposts will be removed with the exception of a repost becoming the main hub for discussion on that topic.
Off topic comments that do not pertain to the post at hand may be removed if it is deemed they contribute nothing and/or foster hostility at users. This mostly applies to political and religious debate, but can be applied to other things at the mod's discretion.
4. Post must have Oregon explicitly involved
Post must have Oregon explicitly involved in some capacity. This can be talking about oregon, a city in Oregon, laws, and ext.
5. Educate don’t attack
No mocking, demeaning, flamebaiting, purposeful antagonizing, trolling, hateful language, false accusation or allegation, or backseat moderating is allowed. Don’t resort to ad hominem attacks against another user or insult other people, examples of violations would be going after the person rather than the stance they take.
If we feel the comment is uncalled for we will remove it. Stay civil and there won't be problems.
6. No Advertising
Under no circumstance are you allowed to promote or advertise any product or service
8. No factually misleading information
Content that makes claims or implications that can be proven false or misleading will be removed.
8. No Editorialized Headlines
Please try and keep headlines similar to the source articles headlines.
9. No Political Ads or Posts
No political ads of any type are to be posted on r/oregon. Discussion is fine. This includes Oregonians' posts telling people who or what to vote for.
No "vote for" No “vote yes/no”
Other Communities
view the rest of the comments
I know this is going to sound horrible to some people, but what 3rd grader identifies as nonbinary? IMHO sex and gender may as well be treated as the same thing until puberty, at least.
Really, 3rd grade huh? Shit that sounds way to young to be worried about all that. That must have been a pretty difficult time for you. I guess I had assumed assumed it would correlate with puberty, so around age 12, or 6th grade.
It's unintuitive for me because I never felt like I came to "identify" as my gender, so it's difficult to imagine about what age I would have noticed a difference.
For some kids that's true. For a surprisingly large percentage though, gender identity can be known before they start school. Most will conform to their birth-assigned gender, so for those people, it isn't something they express clearly.
Wow before school ? I never would have guessed.
What social situations are kids put in that make them confront the question of their gender? Is it mostly like marketing and toys and stuff? Or more like family/social pressure to conform to "roles" (baseball v ballet)?
Just seems so odd for a kid to have to think about gender in general, I'm trying to imagine non-creepy situations where it would come up lol
I think it feels creepy to me because I have 30+ years of brain wires telling me that sex and gender are the same thing. I know they are not, but my brain doesn't.
In this scenario who cares? The real issue is the kid was being bullied. Schools need to stop that as much as possible.
I have heard people say it'll make them stronger but in the work force, they would get sued for allowing bullying behavior.
Woah, no one here said anything about bullying being good for the kid. The article doest even mention the reason for the bullying, but it claims that the school didn't do enough/anything to address it.
My surprise came from a 3rd grader self-identifying as "non-binary". I've never heard that term come from a child, only ever from adults and in academic settings.
It's not hard to guess the kid is weird, which is why they were bullied. It is an assumption, but I think it's a fair assumption.
I suspect the parents told them they were non-binary. When I was in third grade, I wanted to be a cat. Hell, if my parents told me I could be one, I might have thought I was a cat.
Instead, they told me to play with my transformers and stop being weird.
Honestly, my heart goes out to the kid. I had some very "weird" (read: abusive) parents growing up, and I suppose that was about the age I figured it out.
Mine would make up medical problems and constantly pull me out of class and lied to me about not having a middle name for years and years before we went to live with my older brother at 16 (little bro came too, he was 14).
Circa 2004ish I tried to reach out to my HS counselor about being bullied. She offered to do mediation between me and the bully, that made things much worse.
Same here.
I’ve always heard the argument it’ll toughen them up. I just think it’s abusive.
I know we can’t make a life free of bullying but we should try to minimize it.
This one do.