I wonder why we NEVER hear a parent say "my kid IS a bully, and I need help with controlling their behavior and/or teaching him/her how to be less agressive toward other children"??? I can honestly say that my kids aren't bullies.... because they don't even exist, yet. Just tossing this out there, though. What DO you do when another parent accuses your child of bullying? Do you get defensive and deny that your child has done anything? Do you put your kid in counseling or work with him/her at home to straighten them out and let them know that it is not o.k. to bully??
Well, I may get blasted for this...but here goes...
If, as a parent, you teach your child to be kind to others, and teach them that it's not ok to hurt someone's feelings on purpose or push, or shove, then you're not going to raise a bully -- unless your child is a sociopath, and you'd probably have some inkling that something wasn't right with them. If you were the kind of parent who took the time to teach them how to be kind to others, then you'd be the kind of parent to take them to see a professional to be evaluated if they needed it. Having said that, if you are the type of parent who feels that fighting between children is ok -- they're kids, they'll work it out between themselves (I'm not talking about arguing over whose turn it is to play the Wii -- I'm talking physcial agression/violence); or that your child "needs to learn how to fight to be a man, or, in the case of a girl, so that they don't get "stepped on" by others, then you're the type of parent who is not going to be able to recognize that their behavior might be out of hand, not normal, etc. because, to you, that type of behavior (physical agression/violence) is not going to seem abnormal to you.
(When I say "you" in these examples, I'm using the word "you" in a general sense, not speaking directly to DogMom).
In a nutshell, you're not going to see parents who say, "my child is a bully, what do I do?", except, perhaps, on Dr. Phil, because if they're proactive, they're already taking care of it...and if they're bullies themselves (see my earlier post), they won't see a problem.
Only my opinion, of course.
I raised a 21 year old son that I taught to be kind and always consider how his actions might affect others, and I'm doing the same thing with his sisters.