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No, my parents would beat the hell out of me if that ever happened. I think most guys on this net, that would have happened. That's one course of action. But I don't know, you know, it's funny, I come from PS-101 Brooklyn, when we immigrated here. It was a tough place. 50 years later, 40 years later, my daughter was involved in a bullying incident. Whereas she didn't prevent a bully. There was a bully in her class and she didn't tell on him. That was a problem, I went to school. So they said it was a bullying incident, and it was this, this, or that. It seemed so ridiculous, Ron. It was something so ridiculous, insignificant. It's funny, when I commented I said, you know, in my school, there's no blood, there's no bullying. But it was a very, it was exaggerated, you know, what the so-called bully did. But yeah, I remember once my daughter, like 8 years old, was running after a pigeon at her school there in Columbia. And she got reprimanded for that, you know, something against animals, you know. But yeah, I think these things have irrational extremes, you know. Back to you. Yeah, at St. Edmunds, Brooklyn, you know, they, there was a certain amount of that that went on, pacing. You know, it happens everywhere. I think a little more it was kept a little more in check at Catholic school. That's why, you know, they sent me there, because they wanted me to have that education. And that stayed with me all the way through college, even Catholic college, Catholic high school, too. I had nuns and brothers, Christian brothers as for the most part as teachers. They did have some some, you know, lay teachers that weren't, you know, like Dominican nuns or Christian brothers. But that didn't start until I got to high school.

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