Suicide

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Suicide Claims Another LGBT Youth
The story of Eric James Borges is not for the faint of heart. Eric was a 19-year-old filmmaker from Visalia, California who was constantly tormented and bullied for the fact that he was different. The bullying of Eric Borges began in kindergarten when many of the other students began to see Eric as different as he didn’t like girls. Eric’s experience progressively got worse as he reached higher education. His middle school and high school years consisted of him being mentally, physically, verbally assaulted by other students on a day-to-day basis for his sexual orientation. Students ostracized, stalked and physically assaulted Eric leading to the development of his severe migraines. Eric dropped out of high school and graduated early by independently studying after other students in a classroom physically assaulted him with a teacher present. The beginning of college was not any better for Eric as his mother performed an exorcism on him in an attempt to cure him from being gay. College simply caused Eric’s suicidal thoughts, self-loathing and mental depression to increase. After officially coming out as a sophomore in college, Eric’s parents told him that he was a disgusting and perverted. Only two months after Eric came out, his parents kicked him out of his own house. Eric began working as a freelance speaker, a published writer, a supplemental instructor at the College of the Sequoias while working as an intern for The Trevor Project. Eric soon filmed a video called “It Gets Better” in support of LGBTQ youth but took his own life one month after filming the video.
The Need for Change
Eric James Borges story describes how important it is for LGBTQ individuals to have a supportive family members...

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...festyles. Many religious parents think, “Why should I talk to my child? My child is living a life that is against the Bible”. Parents do not understand that the child is still their child. The child is a person that still needs parents. In order to prevent parents from ostracizing their children, governments should establish laws that prevent parents from ostracizing their children based on their sexual orientation or gender identification. Specific scenarios in which parents want to ostracize their children based on their sexual orientation may be presented in a court of law. The United States government needs to reinforcement the prevention of ostracism of LGBT children from their parents. The establishment of new government policies preventing ostracism based on sexual orientation or gender identification will lower the rate of suicides among the LGBTQ community.

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