Nathan Isaac Bronstein

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Nathan Isaac Bronstein's Biography :

The #SameHere movement, within the Global Mental Health Alliance, consists of multiple groups including the #SameHere Influencer Alliance, Advocate Alliance, Celebrity Alliance, and Authors. Darren Rovell founded the Influencer Alliance, leveraging his large following to promote mental health awareness globally. The Advocate Alliance celebrates those working on mental health issues across various conditions, while the Celebrity Alliance showcases prominent figures sharing personal stories of overcoming life challenges. The #SameHere Authors highlight how life struggles shape their storytelling, emphasizing the shared impact of trauma on mental health.

About Nathan Isaac Bronstein

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Nathan Isaac Bronstein
June 6, 2002; 15 years-old
Nate was warm, loving, witty, intelligent and had a great sense of humor, he loved sports and hanging out with his friends.
Nate was bullied and cyberbullied by teammates and classmates at the Latin School of Chicago via a group iMessage thread and via Snapchat. He was relentlessly harassed, humiliated and threatened with physical and deadly harm. He received a Snapchat message with a suicide-baiting message that read “go kill yourself.” Nate reported the cyberbullying to the Dean of Students at the Latin School of Chicago on December 13, 2021 and the Latin School of Chicago never notified us that Nate had reported cyberbullying. We did not find out about the cyberbullying until January 27, 2022 after we lost Nate to suicide on January 13, 2022. The information about the cyber abuse was shared with us by a parent and child from the school, but it was too late. If we would have been notified by the school when Nate reported the abuse, we would have had the opportunity to intervene and protect our son. We were denied that right.
How dangerous and deadly bullying and cyberbullying has become. And, how schools, specifically independent private schools like the Latin School of Chicago turn a blind eye to the dangers of bullying and cyberbullying and choose not to include parents in the notification process when these dangerous incidents occur.
To heighten awareness of the bullying and cyberbullying crisis. This is a true crisis. Our precious children should not reach the point where bullying and cyberbullying leads to suicide. We must hold big tech, schools and parents of bullies accountable for their egregious behaviors.
In many cases, adolescents and teens are lost to suicide because they feel helpless and hopeless and this has been driven by the dangerous consequences of bullying and cyberbullying both online and offline. It is not because our children are “troubled” or have “mental health issues” beyond what has been traditionally been reported. Society chooses to victim blame the child and the parents who are victimized rather than hold perpetrators and enablers accountable. Digital devices and social media platforms have become weapons of mass destruction for our youth.
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