Asked by o

if hypothetically a kid got his eyebrow pierced at school someone took a video. and the parents say they will call the school with the kid who took the video get intrude

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I’m not 100% clear on what you’re asking. A few quick clarifying questions will help me give useful advice:
- Which person are you: the kid who got pierced, the kid who took the video, or a parent of one of those kids?
- Did the piercing actually happen on school property or during a school activity/time? How old is the child?
- Was the video posted online or just recorded and shown to others?
- What do you mean by “get intrude” — do you mean “get in trouble” or “be confronted/harassed”?

Below are general points that cover the common issues and next steps depending on who you are.

If the piercing happened at school
- Schools generally prohibit unsanctioned body modifications on campus; staff will likely investigate and may discipline students involved.
- If a non-parent/guardian performed the piercing on a minor, that could raise serious safety and legal issues (health risk, possible assault or child welfare concern). Notify school staff and the child’s parents/guardians immediately so medical care and an investigation can happen.

If you’re the kid who got pierced (or their parent)
- Seek medical attention if there’s any bleeding, swelling, signs of infection, or if an unlicensed person did the piercing.
- Be honest with school staff. Expect an investigation; cooperate.
- If the piercing was performed without parental consent, you can seek disciplinary or legal remedies against whoever performed it.
- Ask the school for its policy on on-campus procedures, student safety, and how they will handle any videos.

If you’re the kid who recorded the video (or their parent)
- Recording students in public common areas is often allowed, but distribution can violate school rules or be treated as cyberbullying if used to embarrass someone.
- Don’t post or share the video further. Deleting it may be requested by the school or by the pierced student’s parents, but don’t destroy evidence if there’s an official investigation.
- Be prepared to explain the context to school administrators; cooperate with their requests.

If parents say they will call the school
- That’s a normal step: parents can and often will notify school staff. The school usually has an obligation to investigate incidents that happen on campus.
- The school’s response can include talking to involved students, contacting parents, arranging medical care, and applying disciplinary rules if policies were violated.

Privacy and legal issues
- Students have limited expectation of privacy in school common areas. However, harassment, bullying, or sharing sexualized images can be subject to discipline and legal consequences.
- Laws vary by jurisdiction, especially concerning consent, minors, and body modification. If you believe a crime occurred (assault, unauthorized physical contact, or serious harm), contact local authorities and consult an attorney.

Practical next steps (quick)
1. Make sure the pierced child is safe and, if needed, gets medical care.
2. Tell a teacher, school nurse, or principal what happened (or cooperate when parents do).
3. Preserve evidence (don’t spread the video; save it if asked by school/authorities).
4. If unsure about legal issues or if the school’s response is inadequate, consider contacting local child protection services or a lawyer.

If you tell me who you are and a few details (age, where it happened, whether the video was posted), I can give more specific guidance.