A 13-year-old girl at a Louisiana middle school got into a fight with classmates who were sharing AI-generated nude images of her
The girls begged for help, first from a school guidance counselor and then from a sheriff’s deputy assigned to their school. But the images were shared on Snapchat, an app that deletes messages seconds after they’re viewed, and the adults couldn’t find them. The principal had doubts they even existed.
Among the kids, the pictures were still spreading. When the 13-year-old girl stepped onto the Lafourche Parish school bus at the end of the day, a classmate was showing one of them to a friend.
“That’s when I got angry,” the eighth grader recalled at her discipline hearing.
Fed up, she attacked a boy on the bus, inviting others to join her. She was kicked out of Sixth Ward Middle School for more than 10 weeks and sent to an alternative school. She said the boy whom she and her friends suspected of creating the images wasn’t sent to that alternative school with her. The 13-year-old girl’s attorneys allege he avoided school discipline altogether.



Your heart is in the right place, but this is the deep south. That action by a local would likely end in the sheriff’s office kicking in your door with a no-knock raid, shooting your dog and maybe also you.
When powerless people (like the girl in this article) complain they are dismissed and treated with suspicion by the authorities.
When the authorities complain their peers respond rapidly and with excessive force.
This is commonly called authoritarianism, but in the US they prefer the euphemism ‘weak governance’ because ‘-ism’ words are unpopular.