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Aaron Carter blocked me when I called him out for cyberbullying

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By AMBER GORDON

Sunday night I was scrolling through my Twitter stream when I came across a tweet from one of my childhood celebrity crushes, Aaron Carter.

Aaron tweets and retweets a lot, so normally I would have scrolled right by his tweet, except I saw the words "miserable bitches" in it and was confused. I thought someone must be majorly trolling for him to be so upset. Reading his timeline, I discovered he tweeted "I always tried to be the _______ kid on the block" two hours earlier and was mad because someone replied with "crackhead."


 

I can understand being upset or annoyed by this, but someone who is a "public figure" (that is, has almost 400,000 followers) asking his rabid teen fan base to "chime in on what these miserable bitches had to say" is not the proper way to deal. I was upset because I knew this poor girl was definitely going to be harassed (and she was; her account is now locked), so I called bullshit and tweeted about what he was asking his fans to do.

Shortly after I tweeted that, he retweeted me and said, "looks like that comment back fired on you," whatever that means.

I was suddenly flooded with tweets from his fans attacking me. 

Then I was blocked. big LOL. 


 

I've always been a fan of Aaron Carter. I even tweeted at him almost 50 times to get him to follow me when he joined Twitter (me, a 23-year-old!). But asking your followers to cyberbully a girl who made a harmless joke is not OK.

Photo via Wikimedia Commons


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