> Everyone is accountable to someone. Escalate where needed.
Frankly, this isn't really true-- and shows our immense privilege that we can often act with this assumption and have it come true. Most people don't have this experience.
And especially a couple decades ago this was much less true for the type of circumstances we're discussing.
I take this to mean that you don't believe people are capable of understanding the system in which they live, nor advocating for systemic changes.
This said, I don't see how this tangent ties to addressing the fact that a community leader abuses their presumed power to protect a bullying child. Outside of doing nothing and letting bad behavior happen, one can address tears in the social contract through a variety of escalation approaches. But the key word is to act. I don't think any human system will protect you without your initiative.
I'm saying it takes enormous effort to escalate, and one's results in doing so are pretty closely tied to indicators of social class.
And then, there's litigation, which is expensive and out of reach of most. It's the only functional mechanism that prevents 55% of the population from oppressing some chunk.
edit: I misjudged which thread I was in, and had a bunch more of a reply here that isn't relevant.
For example, going to the press is an option.