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Emotional bullying video: Mom addresses backlash over Confederate flag posts

Bullied student speaks out
Boy speaks out on viral bullying video, mom addresses backlash 03:26

An east Tennessee middle-schooler is speaking out after an emotional Facebook video about being bullied. In the widely-shared video, Keaton Jones describes how fellow students poured milk on him and stuffed food in his clothes. Support in the form of comforting messages flooded in for the student over the weekend. 

Now, his mother is addressing the backlash on social media over some of her other posts which show her and her son with Confederate flags.

"I had enough of it. They had said that someone was going to beat me up in lunch so I texted my mom and I said 'what do I do here?'" Keaton told CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann.

Celebrities rally around bullied boy after he shares emotional story 02:32

 Asked whose idea it was to make the video, Keaton said, "It was mine."

Keaton, who says he was targeted by five fellow middle-schoolers, said he never complained to a teacher for fear that the bullies would "for sure attack."

"He became more and more agitated and didn't want to go back to school," said Keaton's mother, Kimberly Jones.  

Jones was behind the camera and posted the video to her Facebook.

"I knew that it could be great and I knew that it could be awful, and it has been," Jones said of the public response to the video.  

The spotlight on Keaton also cast attention onto Jones's prior social media posts including one where she is holding a Confederate flag – a symbol of pride for some, and racism for others. Her daughter's Twitter also contained a family photo with a Confederate flag.

"The only two photos -- the only two photos on my entire planet that I am anywhere near a Confederate flag. It was ironic. It was funny," Jones said.

ctm-121217-bulliedkid.jpg
Keaton Jones CBS News

"It didn't have anything to do with racist intent?" Strassmann asked.

"No. No. Absolutely not. I've said I spent most of my life being bullied and judged because I wasn't racist," Jones said. 

Thanks to the video, Keaton went from a bullied middle-schooler to a boy with friends around the world.

"It made me feel like I had accomplished something real. Something that could actually change the world," Keaton said of his video.

While the Union County Board of Education told CBS News they "do not and will not tolerate bullying," Keaton's middle school is said to be holding an anti-bullying assembly on Monday. Keaton said he doesn't plan on returning to classes until after the holiday break in January.  

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