28 years ago, I graduated from #ShoreSchool - a fact I, frankly, don’t like to admit do. From the first day term 2 year 9, until I had a mental breakdown and tried to quit 2 weeks before my trial HSC, I was subjected to (multiple) daily verbal abuse and physical assault…
…constantly hunted in corridors, and grabbed by the hair, and hurled around, and against walls, labelled a “faggot”, for the crime of a *haircut*.
…what had been going on all these years, and called the school threatening to bring the police in, that anyone on the staff showed even the slightest care about the situation. #ShoreSchool
Gay teachers had said nothing, had watched the abuse, and done nothing, for fear of their own careers. I wasn’t even gay, but I experienced 3 years of daily, sustained violent homophobia. #ShoreSchool
I was the top Visual Arts student most of my time there - first in Visual Art, and recipient of the annual Art Prize in year 9, 10, 11 & 12.
Would the school have tolerated that shit if it was happening to the captain of the Rugby team? Of course not.
Why didn’t I speak out, you ask? It’s simple - every week, often twice a week, we were indoctrinated with the School Verse from the bible - the part of the bible that the school felt best summed up the values it wanted for “Shore boys”… #ShoreSchool
Said bible verse was 1 Peter 2:
“Servants, be submissive to your masters with all respect, not only to the kind and gentle but also to the overbearing…
…For one is approved if, mindful of God, he endures pain while suffering unjustly.
For what credit is it, if when you do wrong and are beaten for it you take it patiently? But if when you do right and suffer for it you take it patiently, you have God’s approval.”
This sermons purpose, was to indoctrinate malleable minds into not speaking out, not standing up for themselves when they suffered the sort of injustice the school’s systems - teachers, Sargent-Majors, Prefects visited upon anyone who wasn’t a perfect “Shore Boy”
A very specific case I experienced… There was a year master there, a Mr Hawkins, and he was the year master for 12th grade. He had a dislike of me, and would express that dislike in front of other students…
One day, as Mr Hawkins and I crossed paths in front of and in earshot of a group of students who had been most responsible for bullying me, for destroying the schooling my family had sacrificed to attain, he pointed at my haircut, which so offended him, and said…
The abuse ratcheted up. No doubt emboldened, my primary bully, a 6 foot tall athlete would grab me by the hair, wrenching me round, often causing my to lose my footing, pushing me into walls in the stairwell corridors.
I simply spun and kicked him in the butt - a mosquito attacking my Everest, he looked at me, said “thankyou” and proceeded to punch me 3 times in quick succession in the face. My ears were ringing, I was seeing stars…
The sum total of repercussions he received was a 3 hour Saturday Detention, which some other students implored me to plead that he be allowed to forego.
And it was this that lead me to give up, and decide to quit…
It was at this point, that my father, whose initial response was outrage that I wouldn’t “tough it out” changed his tone when my mother explained to him just how dire the situation was - and thats when police involvement was threatened…
At that point, the school’s attitude changed, and Mr Hawkins, now my year master, in whatI recognised as being one of the greatest acts of hypocrisy I had ever seen, said “if only you’d told us, we could have done something bout it.”…
I spent 10 years, thinking about these experiences daily. The anger, the guilt that I hadn’t spoken up, wondering what could have been if I had a chance at an actual education without trauma.
It wasn’t until I made a conscious decision not to attend the 10 year reunion of my yeargroup, that I was able to stop thinking daily about what had happened.
Almost 30 years later, and that school’s deeply sick culture has not changed in the slightest.
What’s some other things I remember from my time at #ShoreSchool
Oh yeah, we had one guy in our year who liked being called “Führer”, and wanted to start an organisation called the (IIRC) “Anti Asian Front”, whose primary activity would be “Operation Anti-Slanty”
…I heard secondhand a number of years later, he only dated asian girls… not sure how true that part is.
There was an end of term general knowledge test last day before holidays, and somehow one term, half the kids in the room threw their screwed-up test papers at the asian kid in the class… they seemed to find it terrific sport…
Next term, said kid came prepared - he had a pistol-sized pump-action spud-gun that shot little plastic pellets, must have had dozens of rounds of ammunition capacity…
So after the test, all these kids screwed up their papers to throw them, cause apparently it was a “tradition” now, said kid pulled out his pellet-gun and started firing.
“Oh no! It’s the fucking VC” from multiple people…
We had an insane Canadian science teacher, possibly the only aggressive Canadian in the world (off the ice rink), hence why he wasn’t allowed in Canada any more. He would punch the desk hard enough to make the windows rattle to get the class’s attention…
…if he caught a boy not paying attention, he would creep up to them, like a ninja, and physically lift them out of their seat by the hair where sideburns (that were not allowed) would grow.
Well it’s been an interesting 24 hours, to judge from the outpouring of support (and a couple of media enquiries).
So in solidarity with comrades who’ve had similar experiences (cause it’s a depressingly common story with private schools)… #ShoreSchool
So… the Australian edition of The Daily Mail picked up on the story, and asked me some followup questions. Obviously there was some editing of the answers I provided, so here they are in full…
A: I can only comment on my direct experience - I don’t recall any teacher doing anything helpful with regards to bullying, until after a complaint was made… (cont)
A (cont): …when the person, or people doing it are physically larger than you are, when it happens several times a day, day upon day, year upon year, the effect becomes cumulative.
A (cont): …With a good high school experience, I might have gone on to university straight away, who knows where that might have lead - career, family, mortgage, the full suburban horror of “The Australian Dream”.
The sheer amount of response this received, I feel I have to emphasise, my original thread was a stream of thoughts, very late at night, about events that were 28-30 years ago. Details are obviously *to the best of my recollection*. It’s not a forensic history.
Gave the 2009 #MacPro cheesegrater a pre-summer service. Pulled every major component & blasted with the air-compressor. Re-greased the northbridge and processors (x-pattern).
Back together, temps are down about 5-8c, & ready for another year’s work.
Chassis & motherboards from 2009, processors & RAM from ~2011, Wifi from ~2014, spinning storage from 2009-2020, SSDs from 2018-2020, Graphics from 2019.
By a large margin, the most stable #Mac I’ve ever owned.
The sealed & non-upgradable = stability hypothesis is horseshit.
What makes these old #Cheesegrater#MacPro stable in a way the 2013 wasn’t & the 2019 isn’t (go look it up, the 2019 is a crapfest of wake from sleep issues), is that these machines are standard Intel reference designs - they’ve got the least #Apple, of any #Mac, in them.
Hey @Pinterest, I follow boards for metal fabrication, architecture, workshop tools and custom vehicle modifications… so why’s my pinterest feed filled with 4th-rate wannabe anime art?
Been doing #DTP for 26-odd years. Started with Quark Xpress 3.32 (AU$1900), and Photoshop 3.01 (AU$1200), bought Adobe GoLive 4 (~AU$4-500) & PS 6. CS1, & CS2. CS3 was the ruination of CS, with Dreamweaver & Fireworks clumsily replacing GoLive & Imageready, + Flash infection.
Nowdays, I’ve replaced InDesign, Photoshop and IIlustrator with @affinitybyserif Publisher, Photo and Designer, each for about AU$79.
Best description of Publisher, is “Frictionless”. You can be as rigidly process-oriented as you like, or you can also work quickly and loosely.
There a little relearning along the way, but even when you get the natural frustration at things being different, once you get the new methods, they’re just such comfortable apps to use.
My whole email, web hosting, domain rego etc, works out at about AU$10/month. That’s my entire online infrastructure - a single news website suggests it should be worth AU$4/month to me?
So, the workflow: you’ve got dozens, if not hundreds of images to check. You have a finder window on one screen, you Quicklook an image onto a second screen, drag it larger, then go full screen. Every image you click now displays scaled to full screen size. #macOS#Mojave
You can do this one at a time, or as a slideshow - it’s an incredibly powerful workflow for dealing with lots of images. No having to bust out a DAM app, or open them all into Preview, just click and it’s there, you can even apply labels etc as you go. #macOS#Mojave
Well @Apple screwed this up in #macOS#Mojave as QuickLook will only honour an up-scale for the first image. From then on, any image that’s smaller than the pixel dimensions of your display will be at its native size. So the app-less fullscreen slideshow workflow is gone.
what’s wrong with #iTunes has nothing whatsoever to do with it’s “complexity”, and everything to do with incompetent #UI design at Apple.
iTunes doesn’t need features removed, it needs designers removed, and replaced with people who aren’t #Bozos
For example the breaking of the disclosure-triangle list on the left. Previously the conceptual heart of navigation, where everything could be found (even downloads), its mutated into this confusing combination where the first level of the app is modal to the media kind.
Another offender - the downloads / activity window is now a separate entity, that loses its download history on quit, and has no place in the structural order of the app, even though downloading media is one of the primary things #iTunes does.