r/Maliciouscompliance My Professor Mocked a Disabled Student During Class!

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 6. 03. 2021
  • r/Maliciouscompliance In today's episode, OP has dyslexia and joins a college class. OP is allowed to use digital devices due to ADA guidelines. However, when OP tries to bring this up to the professor, the professor flips out and criticizes OP in the middle of class, saying that disabled people don't deserve special treatment just because they were in special ed. When the professor says, "If you don't like it, drop my class," many students are happy to maliciously comply!
    👌 r/Maliciouscompliance Mom: "DON'T DISCIPLINE MY CHILD!" Babysitter: "lol ok" ‱ r/Maliciouscompliance ...
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    #reddit #maliciouscompliance #funnyredditposts
    "Sneaky Snitch" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    License: CC By Attribution 3.0
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Komentáƙe • 1,4K

  • @lonelyanimation9303
    @lonelyanimation9303 Pƙed 3 lety +2016

    "You're not special even if you were in special ed."
    *Who's gonna tell him...*

    • @1985toyotacamry
      @1985toyotacamry Pƙed 3 lety +140

      That's some backward logic and makes my brain hurts

    • @queenofmeme6068
      @queenofmeme6068 Pƙed 3 lety +143

      As a previous kid in special ed growing up... He deserved to get court ordered volunteer work at the very least

    • @edwardsternberg8224
      @edwardsternberg8224 Pƙed 3 lety +99

      At this point, everyone knew: he fucked up

    • @jamesnorman9160
      @jamesnorman9160 Pƙed 3 lety +45

      Lol, nothing like seeing arrogant bastards like this gtting their commupence. Guess he never got tenure in the end...

    • @gerrard1144
      @gerrard1144 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      Ah yes, stupidity at its best

  • @Amarianee
    @Amarianee Pƙed 3 lety +266

    Dude, that professor could have been more than just fired. I hope he faced consequences from the ADA as well. Forcing someone with ADA cert to publicly reveal their disability is a MASSIVE violation of the ADA

    • @pokemonfanj
      @pokemonfanj Pƙed 3 lety +16

      I mean he was also banned from ever working at college level again

    • @petercselik5674
      @petercselik5674 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      @@pokemonfanj Which mybe a huge loss for the whole society depend on the knowledge he has. My most hated teachers for their pompus, narcissistic sociopathic behaviours where most of those who actually gave us anything we can use in real life after we left the school. I mean its not elementary school its a college where you went to be master on your field not to have safe spaces. If you have dyslexia why an earth you get class most of it's part built on you are really good in writing and reading?

    • @michaelmcinerney5620
      @michaelmcinerney5620 Pƙed 2 lety +18

      @@petercselik5674 What's the point of a great teacher if they won't actually teach all students in a way people can learn, It's like a firefighter putting out 2/3 of a burning house, the fact that they put it out well doesn't excuse the fact that he was unable to complete his job fully.

    • @Ajehy
      @Ajehy Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@petercselik5674 - If you’re going to knock on dyslexic people, please check your spelling, punctuation and sentence structure. Refusing to coddle your class as a whole is very different from denying specific students the tools they need in order to learn.
      Those tools also exist in the “real world”. Plenty of jobs will let OP use their iPad, just like they have wheelchair access and let people wear glasses. A few little accommodations let people do their jobs properly and contribute to society much more than one pompous douchebag.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Pƙed 2 lety +8

      Given that he literally threatened all federal funding, both for student assistance, special educational assistance *and* federal student loan guarantees, yeah, he screwed the pooch career wise quite effectively.

  • @ashhinman1919
    @ashhinman1919 Pƙed 3 lety +360

    The first professor broke a pretty major law in a bigoted way in front of millennials and maybe the oldest of Gen Z, and didn’t expect to be reported.

    • @jacthing1
      @jacthing1 Pƙed 3 lety +25

      I mean I wouldn't say I'm a liberal (in the sense of some stuff the left is doing I'm not the biggest fan of) but I would definitely have not been ok with him saying that either and would definitely have reported him. Cause that's just the right thing to do

    • @theplushybros6140
      @theplushybros6140 Pƙed 3 lety +27

      @@jacthing1 I see what you are saying. Even though I am generally more conservative in political thinking/action, I don't agree with people who discriminate against people who have disabilities, or who discriminate in general. What really pisses me off are people who think that they are above the law.

    • @jacthing1
      @jacthing1 Pƙed 3 lety +15

      @@theplushybros6140 yeah. I would say that your average person conservative or liberal would agree that racism is bad. And yeah I agree that people who think their above the law are the worst.

    • @carteradams43
      @carteradams43 Pƙed 3 lety +7

      @@jacthing1 "I wouldn't say I'm a liberal"
      "the Right thing to do"
      It's reaching a bit and was likely not intentional, but it felt like a pun
      and yeah, I agree with that.

    • @varun009
      @varun009 Pƙed 2 lety

      @@jacthing1 what is the left doing? Since when are liberals on the left?

  • @BobBlumenfeld
    @BobBlumenfeld Pƙed 3 lety +437

    In the segment about "non verbal communication," the professor apparently also didn't believe students might somehow have learned something he didn't teach them. Talk about pomposity and delusions of grandeur!

    • @fireballsensei9287
      @fireballsensei9287 Pƙed 3 lety +33

      Seriously though, did he not think that there are some students who read at a higher level than some, and as a result would read further ahead than most, giving them the advantage? This professor is an insult to his title, same with the others in this video.

    • @ekramer2478
      @ekramer2478 Pƙed 3 lety +14

      Delusions of adequacy.

    • @wristdisabledwriter2893
      @wristdisabledwriter2893 Pƙed 3 lety +14

      There’s one other explanation retaking the class for a better grade or because of dropping the class etc.

    • @joshduthie3401
      @joshduthie3401 Pƙed 3 lety +12

      In my experience, universities are pretty much run on "pomposity and delusions of grandeur".

    • @andyallies245
      @andyallies245 Pƙed 3 lety +7

      More like delusions of adequacy!

  • @josiedavis5994
    @josiedavis5994 Pƙed 3 lety +2392

    I’m dyslexic & getting teachers to help was impossible to a point my mom threatened the whole district. Don’t want to help kids who struggle then don’t be a teacher.

    • @balmaur5826
      @balmaur5826 Pƙed 3 lety +118

      It was the same for me. I have Dyslexia too. My mom got escorted off school grounds many times because my elementary school wanted to send me to reform school because that's what they were doing to every kid with special needs, ADHD or any sort of learning disability in order to keep their averages up so the Principle could transfer to the new Magnet School they were building.

    • @kisshufan4ever
      @kisshufan4ever Pƙed 3 lety +80

      I had undiagnosed irlen syndrome till I was 15 my mum finally raised hell when she realised in one of my writing things I'd spelt tennis 7 different ways. Then everyone was finally like hum maybe she hasn't been lying when she said the text blurs as she reads. Don't even get me started on how my uni teachers didn't care one bit that I was struggling with it.

    • @anniecahill5214
      @anniecahill5214 Pƙed 3 lety +26

      Nice to see dyslexics like myself actually trying to write though instead of being lazy. Js ❀

    • @The_Chitrakarist
      @The_Chitrakarist Pƙed 3 lety +43

      Teachers are the ones who are supposed to help you arent they?

    • @tocrispyay
      @tocrispyay Pƙed 3 lety +6

      @1979 😂😅😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @sparkedfires
    @sparkedfires Pƙed 3 lety +434

    The break in the first story where he laughs and goes "Oh no, what have you dONE DUDE?" just had me wheezing.

    • @kasuihikari
      @kasuihikari Pƙed 3 lety +15

      It’s why rslash is my favorite Reddit reader!

    • @salijayehinsen2892
      @salijayehinsen2892 Pƙed 3 lety +6

      I know right?! It was AMAZING!!!!!

    • @zillasaiyan1m274
      @zillasaiyan1m274 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@kasuihikari yah I used to watch emkay but then his channel became very political so I started watching Rslash

    • @ngdieuminh
      @ngdieuminh Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@zillasaiyan1m274 excuse me, can you elaborate? "very political"?
      (sorry if this is rude lmao, i just haven't kept up with emkay; just curious)

    • @zillasaiyan1m274
      @zillasaiyan1m274 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@ngdieuminh it was around election time his channel was highly democratic praising Biden before he became president and calling Trump and all other republicans idiots while he was in office

  • @MatrixRefugee
    @MatrixRefugee Pƙed 3 lety +430

    "There will be no technology of any kind in my class."
    Okay, then get rid of anything in the room that a prehistoric human would not have had or used. Electric lights, furniture, clothing that is not an animal skin wrapped around you, heating that is not a campfire, etc. etc. etc.
    People like that drive me bats.

    • @lisakaz35
      @lisakaz35 Pƙed 3 lety +20

      Those people exist but the point was also that people can use technology to not pay attention (read email; watch a video and such). That's a legitimate concern. But there's a difference between using a phone to cheat (perhaps) and using something to stay on task. Trying to spot the difference is challenging.

    • @JM-mh1pp
      @JM-mh1pp Pƙed 3 lety +27

      Holy shit you managed to make his class far more interesting, imagine a group of naked humans outside (hey, no buildings!) listening to guy standing on a small rock.

    • @erickpoorbaugh6728
      @erickpoorbaugh6728 Pƙed 3 lety +19

      While I can see what you’re saying, ultimately, students who choose not to pay attention won’t pay attention even without electronics (daydreaming, doodling, etc.). This is college, and it’s the students’ responsibility to be diligent in their own work. If a student spends class browsing the internet, that’s their choice, and will affect them when the tests or other assignments come, just like if a student chooses to cut class or ignore assignments (as many do) that’s their choice, and they have to live with the consequences as the adults they are. This isn’t grade school where your teachers and parents are watching over you to make sure you do the work-adults need self-discipline and if instead they goof off and fail a class, well, hopefully now they know to do better in the future. It's better than continuing to hold their hands until they get fired from work, etc.

    • @lisakaz35
      @lisakaz35 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      @@erickpoorbaugh6728 Indeed. Which is why there are varying ideas on what to do about it. The phones are a bigger problem imo. An instructor walking around and calling out someone usually stops the technology abuse.

    • @jamesonweimann4720
      @jamesonweimann4720 Pƙed 3 lety +10

      I would have gone in the next day wearing a caveman costume and have a satchel of some kind with the best animal hide represent to write on and a stick of charcoal then tell the teacher he did say no technology of any kind on his class

  • @user-sh3kv1lk7d
    @user-sh3kv1lk7d Pƙed 3 lety +143

    I had a professor like that in college. She told me “the real world doesn’t care about your disabilities”

    • @Goodgu3963
      @Goodgu3963 Pƙed 3 lety +52

      That professor has clearly never seen a handicap parking spot.

    • @JM-mh1pp
      @JM-mh1pp Pƙed 3 lety +27

      The funniest thing is hearing this from college professors who are considered the most sheltered group in almost any chosen profession. My friend who is a lawyer openly said "You know, when I get tired I am going to teach at uni, at least they will have a professor who actually saw courtroom from the inside and I will see what this concept of "free time" is"
      The same goes for programmers, double for any kind of economist or bussines major teachers.

    • @Goodgu3963
      @Goodgu3963 Pƙed 3 lety +18

      @@JM-mh1pp An old quote I heard about college professors: "Those who can do, those who can't teach" Seems to be pretty accurate from my experience.

    • @purplesvet
      @purplesvet Pƙed 3 lety +5

      True.

    • @Ajehy
      @Ajehy Pƙed 2 lety +14

      @@JM-mh1pp I’m a professor’s brat, and I’ve seen both sides of this spectrum.
      My dad had to work his butt off to pay for his own education (in the 70’s-80’s) and while his head is still a little in the clouds his feet are firmly on the ground. He’s also got ADHD and two disabled kids, so he knows what it’s like.
      Our neighbor is also a (retired) professor, and he’s a textbook entitled narcissist. He’s manipulative, misogynistic, and given the way he browbeats and cows every woman in his life I don’t want to imagine being his student.
      He’s terrified of my mom, though. She’s immune to his BS and very protective of my dad.

  • @fanfictiondreamer7836
    @fanfictiondreamer7836 Pƙed 3 lety +498

    Professor: "I won't accommodate for disabled students. If you don't like it, then drop out of my class!!!"
    Student: "OK." *drops out of the class*
    Professor: *surprise pikachu face*

    • @Joplas99
      @Joplas99 Pƙed 3 lety +29

      College: follow my rules or I fire you
      Professor: but I hate special ed kids!! 😭😭
      College: *fires him*
      Professor: hold up

    • @Oxios
      @Oxios Pƙed 3 lety +21

      @@Joplas99 Exactly. I worked disability services and whatever we said was gospel. We weren't giving suggestions, we were declaring accommodations with the force of federal law. With $75k fine for first violation of accommodations and $150k for each subsequent violation the professors were told quite plainly that if they didn't play along the conversation would be incredibly short.

    • @lisakaz35
      @lisakaz35 Pƙed 3 lety +15

      @@Oxios Indeed. Y'all are excellent. I've dealt with students with a number of issues and needed accommodations. I tried to work with 'em. Getting access and the ability to learn to me was an admirable goal. Sadly, it doesn't work out as well in hiring/working. I now have mobility issues and as they began to grow, I found myself without work. So much for the universities being "liberal." There ARE limitations. How many professors do you see needing a rollator or wheelchair?

    • @fightingfaerie
      @fightingfaerie Pƙed 3 lety +11

      @@Oxios Maybe I should've reported my sociology teacher instead of just dropping... First day I was telling each teacher my accommodations. I told him I would need something like the printed out powerpoint. He just told me he doesn't have powerpoint to print or he doesn't print them (he definitely used powerpoint everyday). But the worst thing was we would be working on one subject and area of the book and tell us what we would be going over next class and to read that chapter. Next class- he's doing an entirely different topic. He changed his mind or something without telling us and now I'm lost and confused because I read for this thing but we are going over something else. And I needed to have read it beforehand to understand better in class.

  • @theloudartist
    @theloudartist Pƙed 3 lety +1396

    I hear so many stories of teachers ignoring accommodations for Special Needs Kids, and every time I’m like why tho?????? The most common thing I hear is that they won’t have accommodations in the “real world” but the thing is they already do have certain accommodations

    • @Joplas99
      @Joplas99 Pƙed 3 lety +131

      The real world they built for them. It's just a form of discrimination that they don't want to accept.
      On this case, what kind of boss will forbid you to use your tools to get your work done? Only one in favor of segregation, for a fact.

    • @RiveroftheWither
      @RiveroftheWither Pƙed 3 lety +87

      As someone that had an IEP all thought Elementary, Middle and High school for ADHD, dyslexia and ASD. My dad had to fight and threaten the school system every damn year to get me the help I needed. Because I could most pass for " normal" despite my difficulties they would constantly try to drop my plan and remove my benefits ( I was supposed to have an aid with ME but the school made her be a general teachers aid and regularly tried to excuse removing her position to save money). It wasn't until 11th grade that I was able to have free reign to go to the special ed room for help with school work. This was between 98-2010...

    • @QuiteSpiffing
      @QuiteSpiffing Pƙed 3 lety +58

      Yeah, and the only reason why they don't have accommodations in the "real world" is because of those same ableist douchebags. I hope to see the world change for the better in my lifetime, but with how bad capitalism had gotten over the past decades I don't think it will happen.

    • @angeliki5135
      @angeliki5135 Pƙed 3 lety +33

      I can add to the many experiences shared here. I was documented as a asperger's kid with the rare case of being something of a genius but having a truly disabled social mind, something my high school counselor later nicknamed as error code 29.
      I didn't know it back then, but kids bond allot in homeroom class. The class the school specifically took us special ed kids away from everyone else to have extra time to study, or do tests in a room with other special ed kids. Now, I was deemed a mild case, meaning I could still attend the normal classes since I didn't have anything too serious. Just a learning disability that makes my thought process slower because I misunderstand things allot and get distracted easily. Zoom in 300% on that sentence. Now sharpen, and enhance. **Get distracted easily.** The school had this in their notes about me, and yet still thought it was a good idea to put me in a class full of other kids like me, who shuffle, talk outloud, walk around the class, bite pencils, and just in general make noise; for me to be in "quiet room" to focus on a test. It made me so mad they thought this was fair treatment for anyone with mild special ed needs, but at least I could request to go back to class where it **actually was quiet** and use my lunchtime to take a test in the now empty special ed room.
      Now the effect this had? I basically had no social life because 1. I was never there in homeroom to social because we were required to be with the other awkward kids 2. My lunchtime was now "catch up on test time" so I never got to socialize during lunch when I was in school (this led to what friends I did have to spread rumors and betray me) 3. The whole student body in general seemed to dislike any special ed kid, mild case or severe or even just a disability. They ignored us as if we were some disease. Avoiding eye contact, never saying hi when we wave at them cause we know them, and if they do there is an exaggerated (ugggggh) look on their face (I was too oblivious to notice so I just continued being positive and waving), and never talking to us unless we spoke to them. 4. The teachers. The. Teachers. Some were nice, then you had the ones that obviously had it out for you, didn't care you needed a toy clock beside you on your desk to help time management and also didn't let you wear your hat even though the school **principle** gave you special permission because they understood it boosted your confidence and you were going through a weird phase of not wanting them to see the baby hairs. It's things like that teachers don't understand about special kids. And it leads to almost every student doing the same in responding to us as if we are a bother, some disease to avoid, instead of an actual person.
      My experience was always more socially bad because of the rumors people would spread for no reason other then "she is retarded." I showed my quirkiness so early on by predicting it would rain, when the teacher asked how I said "I can speak to the sky." This was elementary and it caused some guy to call me a witch thats evil. I was right though, it did rain.
      I do not know what caused the rumors in middle school, probably that guy somehow ended up in the same school.
      But high school I suspect was because I never really showed up to lunch, and when I did this one girl ensured she got me to say something bad about someone because they did something she didn't like, she would then take my words and twist the situation around to make it seem like I hated everyone. So no one talked to me, no one even told me she was saying that. I found out 2 years later!
      *sigh* Hearing the story of the girl stand up for him, a mild special ed needs kid, filled my heart with warmth and happiness that there are people who would accept us special ed kids as we are. I just wish I could've met her or anyone similar when I was in high school, it would've taken allot of heart break away if I could have a friend like her. I'm happy she stood up for him. đŸ˜Šâ€

    • @eleanorcooke7136
      @eleanorcooke7136 Pƙed 3 lety +14

      I have chronic fatigue and my boss is really great about it. He is really understanding and lets me have flexible shifts. There are adjustments, people just have to be understanding enough to make them.

  • @gerrard1144
    @gerrard1144 Pƙed 3 lety +680

    Professor: I don't care if you're disabled follow my rules
    OP and one girl: you know the rules, and so do i. Say goodbye!

    • @abdullahmansoor1
      @abdullahmansoor1 Pƙed 3 lety +22

      A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
      You wouldn't get this from any other guy

    • @lavissa9596
      @lavissa9596 Pƙed 3 lety +22

      I just wanna tell you how i'm feeling,gonna make you understand

    • @alaras
      @alaras Pƙed 3 lety +21

      Deffo gonna give you up, you just had to let us down, you just had to run around and hurt us.

    • @jaythebluegamer5922
      @jaythebluegamer5922 Pƙed 3 lety +8

      Never gonna give you up,
      Never gonna let you down.
      Never gonna run around and hurt you.

    • @geeky8693
      @geeky8693 Pƙed 3 lety +8

      Never gonna make you cry
      Never gonna say goodbye
      Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you

  • @hopegallows1392
    @hopegallows1392 Pƙed 3 lety +275

    Who else is old enough to remember teacher confiscating insulin pumps thinking they were cellphones?

    • @laurentalbot3793
      @laurentalbot3793 Pƙed 3 lety +4

      Me lol

    • @LordGarlicBread
      @LordGarlicBread Pƙed 3 lety +6

      Not me! I’m 12!

    • @gaxalee7392
      @gaxalee7392 Pƙed 3 lety +7

      I think that still happens.

    • @SpaceDuckQuack
      @SpaceDuckQuack Pƙed 3 lety +12

      @@gaxalee7392 rarely but it does

    • @jacthing1
      @jacthing1 Pƙed 3 lety +23

      @@SpaceDuckQuack probably also confiscate EpiPens too...it wouldn't surprise me....I can hear the Karen now. "How DARE you bring drugs into MY classroom, I'll be taking that and reporting you to the principal after class as well as calling the police."

  • @angeliki5135
    @angeliki5135 Pƙed 3 lety +333

    "You are not special even if you are in special ed."
    Can I just say, that phrase gose against the whole point of special ed. Special ed kids need the class because they require more attention, different tools, bending of the rules for either medical reasons or sanity reasons or to help calm their mentaliy and lots of patience. The fact he told off a student that requires that, shows that he is not accepting of special ed kids and shouldn't have been tolerated for as long as it has been.
    Props to that girl, I was hoping someone stood up to him and so someone did. As part of the special ed kid club (I have my documents as a special learning disability adult in college) I want to give my sincere thanks. It means allot to me to see people stand up for the rights of everyone, including special ed. Special ed kids were so overlooked, even looked down on; in my high school/middle school years. An act like this is one of those valuable gems that can help me sleep well at night, smile in the morning and have the warm feeling of hope. Thank you so much for the generosity, kindness, caring for the fairness/equality and bravery shown for standing up for that kid.
    May many good vibes be sent your way, along with the students who decided to leave on the kid's behave to support the confrontation to the professor. 😊
    Thank you all for reading. ❀

    • @chikncordonbleu
      @chikncordonbleu Pƙed 3 lety +10

      I didn't have the same challenges as a kid, but have since had them as an adult. Both mentally with memory and learning, and physically becoming disabled. It's a different feeling and interaction. We aren't asking for much. But when someone blatantly disregards our accommodations, it's flabbergasting!
      I have become much more of an advocate for myself, and for those around me. It's been a journey. Most of the time, my disabilities are 'invisible'. But the sheer force of will it takes for someone like that girl in the first story to stand up for someone she doesn't even know? It brings tears to my eyes.

    • @angeliki5135
      @angeliki5135 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      @@chikncordonbleu Tears of joy. I can understand you loud and clear because whenever I tell someone I have a learning/social disability, they do not believe me. Either they are trying to be polite and say "You seem normal to me" (which I take as a compliment because of how long it took for me to work on myself to understand the complicated vortex that is the human mind and social interactions), or they are being sarcastic and cheesy and don't actually mean it. Its all about the tone in their voice and how close they are to you, equals how much they care to say something nice that might boost your confidence in being yourself with them. Tell one of us "you seem normal to me" can be translated so differently by each individual, some of us like that we are quirky and get offended that its not seen how indifferent/different we are. Others feel upset because we see it as "oh so our disability is invisible and dosent matter to you", which is a understandable train of thought but can prove to be harmful to you and those around you who are trying to support you. And some few just laugh it off, having an understanding that it's inclusion (depending on the person, their bond to you, and the tone used) because people like to joke "what is normal anyways?"
      Sorry I went on a tangent. But I truly relate with your train of thought, the idea of our disabilities being invisible. But, I instead choose to see it as a compliment that represents just how much journaling my thoughts have worked, having someone I can vent every letter of every frustration has helped me to cope, and just how much having a creative outlet has allowed me to have room in my mind for more adult-like thoughts instead of abstract and distracting creative thoughts that will keep me holed up until I've made them become real in some shape or form. Its so much work to care for your mind, when your two hands are both left, you are wearing a blindfold and any instruction given to you only causes the opposite to happen. Trust me I know that deep hole, I've been in so many times and always had to remind myself that right is right and left is left, realign my morals by watching some psychological videos, and remind myself that my friends giving me instructions/advice do so because they care about me. Removing the blindfold is always the hardest part for me, because that blindfold is one of "I'm not worthy of these friends." And is a difficult thing for me to take it off and admit I am worthy to have friends, when my childhood was filled with nothing but bullies, rumors, and fake friends who lied and alienated/avoided me.
      Seeing someone not only step outside of their comfort zone to confront a teacher for someone who probably has gone through a struggle much similar to ours, but also dropped that class just to show the professor she'd rather not be there supporting his ideas of injustice was absolutely incredible. I hope they befriended her and went out for pancakes or something fun to get their minds off that teacher. Teachers like him are the reason why people like us have negative stigmas attached to us, because kids do what they see adults doing whether they are aware of it or not. A man like him shouldn't be a teacher, he lacks the understanding to see that a student needs a tool to work efficiently and instead of providing said tool, instead prohibited said tool!
      People like that girl are understanding just how many difficulties we have gone through as a small community that always felt rejected and unwanted just because we were told "you're too dumb" or "you learn differently" or "there is no way you're this talented" and because they cannot comprehend how our minds work, surely there's something wrong with *us?* No. There is nothing wrong with any of us, we just need the right tools, patience, kindness and some understanding. Maybe a gentle nudge of encouragement that is well meant. Someone like her is someone I'd love to befriend myself...
      *looks up* Oh my I've rambled again.
      My bad! Basically, I 100% relate to you and hope all gose well for you.
      And I while heartedly agree, that girl is amazing to be considerate to other and stand up for him. ❀

    • @butter4934
      @butter4934 Pƙed 3 lety +5

      We do have a special Ed Class, but it's only for Math or Ancient Greek Language (we're on Greece) honestly, I *love* the special Ed Math class, I can actually understand what to do, and it makes me feel extra smart, which we can all agree is an awesome feeling

    • @Manglethefox238
      @Manglethefox238 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      I'm in special ed.

    • @erikmckoul2478
      @erikmckoul2478 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@chikncordonbleu Yeah it was really kind of her to do that I'm glad there are kind people who stand up for others like that. I have had a severe physical disability my entire life and some people are just plan rude I remember some people that trapped me in a restaurant by parking on the only ramp to get down the curb and tried walking in to eat without giving me a second glance as I was trying to leave.

  • @strikeforce1500
    @strikeforce1500 Pƙed 3 lety +25

    The first teacher sound like the type of guy who choose that career, not because he likes teaching or kids, or learning new stuff, but just because he wants some power trip over anything.

  • @toribarlow1000
    @toribarlow1000 Pƙed 3 lety +64

    I had a professor like that. The disibillity department took action against him for not following rules and discriminarion against a student with a disibillity.

    • @Nerobyrne
      @Nerobyrne Pƙed 3 lety +7

      I hate these assholes who think they're above the law. Like, all that matters is if the student can do the work. If they need some extra time due to proven medical conditions, why care?
      But they view it as a personal attack or something -.-

  • @fermitupoupon1754
    @fermitupoupon1754 Pƙed 3 lety +125

    This whole idea of people not getting paid overtime or crap like that is so insane to me. I'd have gladly taken the job getting called over false alarms, because in my country that means that for every incident they have to pay me 3 hours and all kinds of overtime, nighttime and weekend surcharges apply. Getting 3 calls a night would probably earn me more than working a full day.

  • @fealubryne
    @fealubryne Pƙed 3 lety +38

    The non-verbal communication one is just... no. Education doesn't work that way. Obviously some students will be aware of things BEFORE you cover them, welcome to life.

  • @lancelaq2652
    @lancelaq2652 Pƙed 3 lety +491

    "You're not special even if you're in special ed"
    HUH? 👁👄👁

    • @anapeglar4602
      @anapeglar4602 Pƙed 3 lety +28

      He clearly doesn't hear himself. He might need the special Ed too, instead of being the teacher.

    • @SakuraAmy1293
      @SakuraAmy1293 Pƙed 3 lety +11

      When Rslash knows you effed up XD

    • @Exodon2020
      @Exodon2020 Pƙed 3 lety +8

      Class A narcicisst. Zero Self-Awareness, zero compassion, zero thoughts about other people. Dude wanted to reenact the 1960s in his class so he went right for it. I just hope there aren't any children who have to suffer through this and have no Dean to complain to...

  • @vampier97
    @vampier97 Pƙed 3 lety +129

    Me disabled person hearing what the teacher said: oh he is so fired... hopefully they dont get away with this
    Me then hearing that the teacher got fired: *evil smile* gooood

    • @Nerobyrne
      @Nerobyrne Pƙed 3 lety +6

      some people will say it's "going to far" or whatever, but in reality it's just people being fired who were too unprofessional to be teachers in the first place.

    • @geraldgrenier8132
      @geraldgrenier8132 Pƙed 3 lety +4

      @@Nerobyrne Unable not to break federal law = walking lawsuit = unfit to work there

    • @joshuabrown3361
      @joshuabrown3361 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      He kinda deserved it. You don't say stuff like that. Period.

  • @name-uh5ee
    @name-uh5ee Pƙed 3 lety +38

    Teacher: You copied other students work
    OP: why
    Teacher: You used a term that is easily figured out by anyone with a brain

  • @AmusementLabs
    @AmusementLabs Pƙed 3 lety +10

    An old physics professor implied to me that him giving me my federally sanctioned accomodations on a test were up to his decision.... Yeah, no buddy. You can given me my accomodations or you can start looking for another job...

  • @thecommunity6654
    @thecommunity6654 Pƙed 3 lety +84

    For the first story I was hoping that every student would drop the class.

  • @SaikiKFann
    @SaikiKFann Pƙed 3 lety +27

    OP: I have adhd and dyslexia
    My nerdy ass brain: Percy Jackson

    • @omarsoub_._
      @omarsoub_._ Pƙed 3 lety

      you and those other 8 really need to develop a better sense of humor

    • @SaikiKFann
      @SaikiKFann Pƙed 3 lety +5

      @@omarsoub_._ what

    • @cjoeRR
      @cjoeRR Pƙed 3 lety +3

      I thought it was funny

    • @misslovedog8177
      @misslovedog8177 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@omarsoub_._ Look man, just because you're too stupid to read a book meant for 6th graders, doesn't mean we have to keep our nerdy references to ourselves.
      Side note: @The book penguin GOAL IS 1K I freaking love PJ, my favorite book is the Mark of Athena, what about you?

    • @SaikiKFann
      @SaikiKFann Pƙed 3 lety

      @@misslovedog8177 sorry for the lat repsonse mine is House of Hades

  • @Ragehunger
    @Ragehunger Pƙed 3 lety +69

    First story: I'm not even surprised by how little people care about the seriousness of breaking laws, especially federal laws, with the current toxic culture in the US. They're so quick to make their own opinions about things, but never takes the time to think if their opinions are even morally plausible until they're facing the repercussions. Way too many people have meandered their way into positions of power just to become bullies, and the fact that they can get away with it for years is nothing short of despicable. Every one that is weeded out is one less obstacle in the progression towards a better future.
    Second story: Anything involving business security should, as far as I'm concerned, pay pretty dang well for the job you have to perform. But as with any job, if they don't pay you properly, you have no obligation to put in quality work, let alone do any additional work outside of what's in your job description or outside working hours. It's sad if you have to resort to that kind of negotiation, but some snobby pencil-pushers just won't understand your requests through mere words.
    Third story: I sure hope cultural sexism will die out in a not-too-distant future along with all the old, decrepit and bigoted people who desperately clings to such outdated viewpoints. And to take it out on a _juvenile_ of all people is such a pathetic example of poor self-esteem. Allowing people like him to be in the presence of women at all is an insult to good men everywhere. Throw him into a pit of other men who values women as little as he does and let them brag about their patriarchal opinions among themselves for all it matters.
    Fourth story: Big yikes on the follow-up, but besides that fact it was a wholesomely devious act. At least OP created a hilarious moment out of an otherwise tedious task, and as someone who had to do household chores a lot in my childhood, I can understand that it doesn't always feel as rewarding as adults would make it out to be. Sometimes you have to spice up the tasks a little, or maybe add encouragement of some kind, in order to make the tasks feel satisfying. The end result isn't always what a kid seeks in tasks that they don't feel benefits or entertains them.

    • @Nerobyrne
      @Nerobyrne Pƙed 3 lety +4

      I remember reading about a bill that was passed in Alabama that would force kids to play in the "team matching their genetic sex".
      Well, okay, you'd think that's no big deal.
      Until you realize that the wording literally requires a DNA test of every single child, due to the various genetic abnormalities that exist. And the more you read it the worse it gets, to the point where people are going to end up lying about having cancer to get hormone therapy or some weird shit.
      That's just the last in the long list of laws that people just slapped together who had no clue what the hell they were doing.
      It's like we're watching a whole country fall apart in front of our faces.

    • @joshduthie3401
      @joshduthie3401 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      @@Nerobyrne No, it doesn't. Those laws are stopping biological boys cheating girls out of prizes. Even a very average person can tell what sex people are.

    • @greenapple9477
      @greenapple9477 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@joshduthie3401 tf?

    • @Everlucky_Clover
      @Everlucky_Clover Pƙed 3 lety +4

      @@joshduthie3401 there are male cross dressers that actually look more like a woman than other women...... so no its not so easy to tell gender.

  • @kennethloyall5085
    @kennethloyall5085 Pƙed 3 lety +111

    At least the dad could realize his own mistake, and didn't blame his son

    • @LordGarlicBread
      @LordGarlicBread Pƙed 3 lety +9

      I know he sounds like a good dad

    • @manxgirl
      @manxgirl Pƙed 3 lety +8

      I wish we could more stories like that. It's fun to have the occasional story where all that happens is a good laugh.

  • @spydersoup8447
    @spydersoup8447 Pƙed 3 lety +7

    Wow, so in the first story, OP's speech about his disability and the professor not caring about it, even though he was given a warning about it earlier actually managed to have the girl finally speak up and it got him fired. Goes to show that one new person can help others finally stand up against the selfish people.

  • @Badartist888
    @Badartist888 Pƙed 3 lety +15

    The thing about getting people like that prof slaps on the wrist is this: You help out the people who come later who can't prove their case as well. And then when something major happens, well the authorities have already used up a lot of slaps on the wrist and now they are legally liable for not taking enough action.

  • @Nevermore-Nevermore
    @Nevermore-Nevermore Pƙed 3 lety +11

    As a person with ADA accommodations in college, the minute I heard that professor I thought “lawsuit”

    • @asheditzz
      @asheditzz Pƙed 3 lety

      Me: It's ADHD but I get you misspelled it

    • @jld12er30
      @jld12er30 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@asheditzz no he spelled it correctly ADA or americans with disabilties act

  • @jerryeubanks3177
    @jerryeubanks3177 Pƙed 3 lety +44

    My grandpa moved in to help raise my siblings and me after my parents' divorce. I would be a smart ass like the last story to my grandpa. It was fun. To be fair he was a smart ass back.

  • @Drew-zp8dp
    @Drew-zp8dp Pƙed 3 lety +12

    First story op needs to find that girl, thank her to hell and back, and see if she is single because she is about as tough as they get a true badass in my eyes and someone worth living your life with

  • @evadedenbach1226
    @evadedenbach1226 Pƙed 3 lety +26

    Good thing that professor was fired. He blatantly ignored the American with Disabilities Act. Also, it wouldn't have hurt to get a lawyer.

    • @TRak598
      @TRak598 Pƙed 3 lety

      You'd be surprised by how little it takes to hurt a college student's wallet.

    • @Everlucky_Clover
      @Everlucky_Clover Pƙed 3 lety +4

      @@TRak598 disability lawyers love to sue. a case like this is guaranteed win so easy money. they often do it for free with a % payout from the case winnings money. NEVER mess with disability laws. they are the fastest way to lose in most cases.
      otherwise totally yeah. college wallets are more shallow than fast food worker wallets >_

    • @RemsHusband
      @RemsHusband Pƙed rokem

      ​@@Everlucky_Cloverthats what I was thinking. Mess with the ADA and you will be fucked by the courts.

  • @SpaceDuckQuack
    @SpaceDuckQuack Pƙed 3 lety +26

    That professor also broke a privacy rule of making the student talk about their disabilities infront of others.
    Tl;Dr: "woke" professor calls me out for having a disability and gets in trouble.
    I had an instance like that too actually. I took a gender studies class. (unfortunate and stupid tbh because it was hellish) usually on the first day, I wait till after class to speak to each of my professors about my disabilities and make sure they received the email from the student disabilities office.
    The professor started talking about the syllabus and then stopped. She looked around and said "someone in here has permission to record the lectures. Who is it?" Everyone looks around, a little confused. I was sitting on the front row sweating a little cause I was like wtf why would she ask that.
    She presses the question again and I shyly raise my hand. She looks at me and asked simply "why?" I hesitated as everyone was watching me now. So I stumble over my words but say "I have sickle cell and adhd. . . I need to record the classes because of my adhd."
    She said ok but then presses on, asking why. I reiterated it and said "its so I can keep track of the lecture for my notes. I listen to them again to make sure I got everything...." this was my senior year, I've never had ANY professor confront me infront of the entire class about why I record the lectured. She then retorted with "well i ask because we may talk about things that people have opinions about and I want everyone to know who's recording." And I just stared at her like why the fuck, literally no one else would hear the recording because there's no way for me to even upload the audio to my computer. And the class ain't important enough to put online anyways jesus.
    So after all that, I didnt speak to them after class because she did the job for me. I went straight to student disabilities(sds) about this and told them what happened. I told them about the first quiz of the class where she asks questions like pronouns, orientation, and what disabilities you have. The first two are fine but maybe unnecessary, but SDS said she was not allowed to ask about disabilities at all and what she did to me in class was absolutely a violation of privacy and SDS policies.
    Long story short, she was reprimanded and the entire department received training on ableism or some shit like that. I didnt want her to get fired or anything because I do like to educate people about Sickle cell but what she did was so uncalled for. I would've thought she'd have been woke enough to not call out a students disability infront of a class of 25 to 30 but this isn't the first time I've been disappointed lmfao.
    I have many more instances and stories from that class tbh. But some more fun facts about her. Shes an admin of AO3, she only married her husband and had kids to get into the states and actively hates the fact that I said "Hermione isn't a superhero" because she had a laptop cause that had all the women super heroes on it but Hermione was also there and said some shit like "my favorite super heroes"

    • @Bendylife
      @Bendylife Pƙed 3 lety +3

      I'm working on getting an official diagnosis paper of ADHD so I can apply for disability aid and that kind of situation is something I'm so scared of 😣 I'm hoping the school serves at my applied school can be that supportive. I'm glad they helped you when that happened. It's hard enough just having these issues, let alone having all your classmates know with out your concent.

    • @SpaceDuckQuack
      @SpaceDuckQuack Pƙed 3 lety +5

      @@Bendylife there are a lot of students that have adhd that get help from their disabilities office. Im sure they will let you apply and accept without fail. If they don't accept, then you need to continuously press them about it and guard yourself.
      And also, good luck with school. Balance your schoolwork and fun time so you don't end up like me hahaha

    • @phantomflair5546
      @phantomflair5546 Pƙed 2 lety

      Someone that dumb managed to become an admin for Ao3? How?!?!!

  • @theplushybros6140
    @theplushybros6140 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    It's hilarious that teacher's think they can pull BS on students and think that nothing will happen to them. It is so satifying when liars are caught in the act.

  • @RETRO-DEV
    @RETRO-DEV Pƙed 3 lety +1163

    morning everyone.. i mean its 2pm here in ireland but i just woke up so im calling it morning :D

    • @ppdecayman
      @ppdecayman Pƙed 3 lety +51

      A fellow Irish man! :D

    • @deprimentium9892
      @deprimentium9892 Pƙed 3 lety +133

      Why is the fbi in Ireland lmao

    • @RETRO-DEV
      @RETRO-DEV Pƙed 3 lety +95

      @@deprimentium9892 idk I just made my account that for an inside joke years ago and never bothered changing it back đŸ€Ł

    • @CARb0n1700
      @CARb0n1700 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      5 for me

    • @chriscarpenter3370
      @chriscarpenter3370 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      I don't have anything on my laptop!

  • @nicoleb695
    @nicoleb695 Pƙed 3 lety +8

    As soon as the prof said that in the story I yelled, "finish him!" at my phone. I have the Canadian equivalent to the ADA and if profs get reported for not abiding by it - hooboy.

    • @matthewjones2095
      @matthewjones2095 Pƙed 2 lety

      Im glad to hear Canada has a version of the ada im an American and have an aunt with brain damage living in Canada

  • @michaelhughes8784
    @michaelhughes8784 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    As a disabled person myself I am so glad that none of my college professors treated me in that way.

  • @rkoncenasupporter
    @rkoncenasupporter Pƙed 3 lety +8

    hearing all these college stories makes me SO grateful I've NEVER had ANY professors that way, my goodness

  • @kyliviie2903
    @kyliviie2903 Pƙed 3 lety +12

    LMAO THE PART WHERE RSLASH JUST LAUGHED AND GOES "Oh no... What have you done dude?!"
    I WHEN I TOLD YOU I WHEEZED--

  • @92jwiener
    @92jwiener Pƙed 3 lety +10

    Meanwhile, that professor's syllabus has a disability section. Also, yes, federal laws and all that useless stuff...

  • @bread9173
    @bread9173 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    I had my professor mock my anxiety in public speaking, she also did it with a guy with autism and a stutter. I am also autistic too but it isn't as noticable. The class basically tore her a new asshole each time. She was always against discrimination but did it herself. People in the class reported her but nothing happened.

    • @asheditzz
      @asheditzz Pƙed 3 lety

      I also have Autism...I have a hard time dealing with emotions...I also have a hard time with human interactions...I also have ADHD

  • @paull8678
    @paull8678 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    That last story brings back memories. When I was a teenager, my family moved into a house with an HOA. The HOA dictated where we were to dig the hole for our mailbox post, so my stepdad and I measured it out and started digging. After a while, I noticed tiny wires and bits of plastic in the dirt pile, shortly followed by some neighbors peeking out their front doors. We'd dug straight through the phone cable, just missing the main power line PVC by a few inches. A huge portion of our front yard needed to be excavated to fix the cable. I guess the HOA didn't call before they told us where do dig!

  • @kenshinflyer
    @kenshinflyer Pƙed 3 lety +11

    "My Professor Mocked a Disabled Student During Class"
    This is a mortal sin for ANY teacher/instructor. #SmugPowerTrippingSOB

  • @LoudAngryJerk
    @LoudAngryJerk Pƙed 3 lety +9

    To the first story, you're forgetting something. He'd been doing it for YEARS. I'm baffled it took that long, but of course he's gonna be that brazen if he'd done it for years with no repercussions whatsoever.

  • @kpalzrhein2378
    @kpalzrhein2378 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    I feel for the person in the first story. I have epilepsy, and on the day of a math class I had a seizure and wasn’t present. I asked if I could take the test and he said no because he doesn’t take excuses. I went to the head of the math department and Vice President of the school, and was essentially told tough shit. So happy I dropped out. That place was toxic as fuck.

  • @gribly
    @gribly Pƙed 3 lety +23

    I took a writing class that was required for my degree. The teacher was MTF trans, and very open about it. My close friend who is fairly obviously gay also took the class with me, I am straight. Anyways, I knew I would do terrible at this type of writing, and so would my friend. We decided to show up to class together, sit together, work on assignments together, and always talk to the teacher together. Well, she got the impression we were together, and so she went very easy on us for the grading. I could turn in the worst papers ever and get at least a B. Yeah, I know it was wrong to play the system like that, modern problems require modern solutions.

    • @PolymorphicPenguin
      @PolymorphicPenguin Pƙed 3 lety +8

      I don't think you did anything wrong, but professors should not have different grading standards for people of different demographics. This only happened once in my college experience, but I was in an astronomy intro course where the professor instructed us to write our name on the blank reverse side of her tests only. She said it was easier for her to grade tests impartially if she didn't know who the student was until she finished grading the test.

    • @Harry-zz2oh
      @Harry-zz2oh Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@PolymorphicPenguin I think that is a very good way of doing things. One class I had used numbers but the class quiz's were graded in class by other members of the class. No one knew who had what number so it was an easy way to ensure everyone had honest evaluations.

    • @threecards333
      @threecards333 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@PolymorphicPenguin When I was an AI/TA we split tests between all of the AIs to grade problem a piece and that significantly helped anonymize the students as we had no reason to look for the student's name as we passed around the tests to grade. The first few pages were Multiple choice so no subjective grading there either. It worked well, but humorously this also meant that the my rubric was mistaken for a student's test and my PI proclaimed how well the student [rubric] did when he was reviewing our grading.

    • @PolymorphicPenguin
      @PolymorphicPenguin Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@threecards333 Wow, this student "Answer Key" is really smart! I'm going to have get Answer to work in my lab this summer!

    • @threecards333
      @threecards333 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@PolymorphicPenguin Ironically I was yelled at because "if you understood the problem, then why did you give all the students so many points". The problem was that all the students failed this question, and my PI was questioning my competence in both the subject matter and the grading, then came across my answer key and was like "see, this student understood the question better than you"... At the time I nearly quit the group, now it is a hilarious memory. That said I still am working under him in a research compacity... I will get my PhD one of these days....

  • @galactic7458
    @galactic7458 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    I like hearing your reactions to the stories. I can’t put my finger on it, but the “Oh my god, what have you done dude!?” Adds something.

  • @Nikita_Akashya
    @Nikita_Akashya Pƙed 3 lety +9

    I'm watching this inside my train, while waiting for the police to finish dragging this weird person outside. The was smoking inside the train and apparently doesn't have a ticket.

  • @marinelaortiz3202
    @marinelaortiz3202 Pƙed 3 lety +11

    Wow, that professor kind of reminded me of a professor I had one summer. This was before I knew that braille technology existed that summer and I brought my Perkins Brailer to class every day do you take notes because I was able to pick up everything that I knew in braille. First day of class why I started typing while someone was reading something to be on the board. The teacher hears me typing on the Brailer and he comes over and asked me if that was necessary? I was like, excuse me? Then he repeated it if that was necessary to type with the Brailer in front of me. And it even says only accommodation letters that I prefer braille and he had to send me to the back of the class to use my Brailer and he has a talk very loud in order to get his point across during class. When he kept on saying that he hated my Brailer I wanted to leave the class but told myself on the inside that it was only just for six weeks and then once the six weeks were over I put in my teacher evaluation that what are you did was really bad and that when something is on the accommodation letter had to except it.

  • @jaspr1999
    @jaspr1999 Pƙed 3 lety +41

    I love that dads' reaction to his sons' posthole. I love the kid having fun with his instructions too. That's just a fun, good sport, attitude all around. I'm VERY glad they didn't his the power main! Talk about a very different subreddit posting about it from someone else.

    • @Harry-zz2oh
      @Harry-zz2oh Pƙed 3 lety +5

      I may be wrong, but I think underground power lines are run through a PVC pipe to protect it from dirt & water. I know the electric from the power pole to my shop goes through a pipe since we dug the trench for the pipe.

    • @Everlucky_Clover
      @Everlucky_Clover Pƙed 3 lety +3

      @@Harry-zz2oh a pole digger is one of the sturdiest tools ever though. so it is one of the few tools that can break lighter forms of pvc pipe while still being used correctly......... plus if you cant see into the hole you generally assume its rock and PUSH HARDER TO DISLODGE IT! >_<
      death was certainly in a forgiving mood that day.

  • @jasminemarie9071
    @jasminemarie9071 Pƙed 3 lety +38

    “Digs too greedy, digs too deep”
    Was that a Lord of the Rings reference I hear?

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Pƙed 3 lety +5

      Christopher Lee would be proud.

    • @Nerobyrne
      @Nerobyrne Pƙed 3 lety +2

      It wasn't a Balrog he found, but a Balvolt!
      Okay I'll see myself out.

    • @nikkiofthevalley
      @nikkiofthevalley Pƙed 3 lety

      @@Nerobyrne No no, stay, that's hilarious!

    • @halo129830
      @halo129830 Pƙed 2 lety

      Digging a hole diggy diggy hole!

  • @mehn7370
    @mehn7370 Pƙed 3 lety +35

    "You're not special even if you were in special ed"
    what

  • @Bean-kh9cu
    @Bean-kh9cu Pƙed 3 lety +86

    Still really wanna hear him make a episode of r/ihadastrokeđŸ„°

  • @alexander349
    @alexander349 Pƙed 3 lety +6

    For the last one, most post hole diggers have wooden handles and some have rubber grips. Unless the entire post hole digger was made of metal, handles and all, hitting the power line wouldn't have done anything except knock out power to the general area. It wouldn't kill the kid or the dad.

    • @michaelterrell
      @michaelterrell Pƙed 3 lety +1

      You have no clue. If it was a HV underground line, it would create an arc flash that can easily kill you. It is a ball of conductive plasma, that produces a shock wave along with intense heat. A line like that can carry enough current that the released energy would be like a stick of dynamite. Even 480V industrial arc flash can, and has killed. Those who survive are covered with third degree burns that can take years to heal. They are badly scarred, if they do heal. He stated that it was a main power line, for the area. Not a 120V, 15A circuit. Even those breakers are rated for 10,000A interrupt capability.

    • @alexander349
      @alexander349 Pƙed 3 lety

      @@michaelterrell OK boomer

    • @michaelterrell
      @michaelterrell Pƙed 3 lety

      @@alexander349 Yawn. Did you fill your diaper, again? Did the little baby make a boomer?

    • @alexander349
      @alexander349 Pƙed 3 lety

      @@michaelterrell coming from the generation that leeches off my tax dollars through social security, ruined the economy multiple times and now relies on my generation of scientists to fund better boner pills and hair grow tonics, I'd keep my geezer comments to myself. You need my generation a hell of alot more than we need yours, boomer.

    • @Everlucky_Clover
      @Everlucky_Clover Pƙed 3 lety

      @@alexander349 people could always go back in time and make sure your parents use birth control during your conception month. you do know it takes one generation having sex to put out the next generation right? also the current generation is by far and wide the most socially poisonous entity ever so i'm sure your input and comments wont be missed.

  • @floridacooking7018
    @floridacooking7018 Pƙed 3 lety +219

    This is like cocaine but it can’t kill me and I am definitely addicted

  • @bellerain381
    @bellerain381 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I was picked on by a professor in college because I was Conservative, a tomboy AND a wildland firefighter. He thought it was hilarious that I fought fire and would say things like “you must be used to volunteer work” and “why are you in a college class instead of fighting fires? Do you fight fires in the winter?”
    ....none of what he said made sense and he was just overall disrespectful to me and other students.
    I was too scared to report him because I really thought he would either hold back my grade or even my degree. So on my last day, I did one last passive aggressive move towards this guy: I printed off teddy Roosevelt‘s the man in the arena speech and slipped it under his office door before I went to graduation! I never knew what his reaction was but I definitely know that I made my voice heard!

    • @Harry-zz2oh
      @Harry-zz2oh Pƙed 3 lety

      Nothing wrong with being a conservative or a liberal. Being a tomboy? All depends. My brothers nieces were not tomboys but they could handle the cattle, feed the pigs, etc. Now they are married and enjoying having the careers they have along with the families. People change as they age. Hopefully they get better than they were before.

  • @gandydancer823
    @gandydancer823 Pƙed 3 lety +9

    Student should have given the professor the middle finger and said..."no verbal communication!!"

  • @grimsley9989
    @grimsley9989 Pƙed 3 lety +18

    Okay, so I just watched a video about the Mythbuster's lead baloon. Haven't often heard the term before.
    Suddenly, within 2 minutes of watching this video, "Well that went about as well as a lead baloon".
    Btw, Lead baloons are dumb, but they work.

    • @ninjabluefyre3815
      @ninjabluefyre3815 Pƙed 3 lety +4

      It's where the band Led Zeppelin got their name from.

  • @rainbowwriter672
    @rainbowwriter672 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    He tells a whole class that he ignored a federal law....Bright dude.

    • @Harry-zz2oh
      @Harry-zz2oh Pƙed 3 lety

      Some people think they can ignore Federal laws with impunity. Sooner or later it will catch up with the person.

  • @popoffs5273
    @popoffs5273 Pƙed 3 lety +8

    As a disabled person, this one hits home real hard.

    • @jaleelwalker219
      @jaleelwalker219 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Same here bude

    • @popoffs5273
      @popoffs5273 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      @@jaleelwalker219 we gotta get all the help we can get and power right on through. A little legal blindness could never stop me

    • @wolftitanreading5308
      @wolftitanreading5308 Pƙed 3 lety

      Really Adhd isn't really even a disability and really even I don't consider it one. i found it was bullshit they went for that now if the girl was blind or literally couldn't use her hands sure. But really she could handle doing what he said, and not use the laptop for the class, and wrote stuff down. It was more of an overreaction. the only thing he did wrong in my eyes was comparing her to Special ed (Reason I have a none verbal learning disability, might not be ADHD but the fact is. I honestly felt worse for the professor over them.)

    • @Everlucky_Clover
      @Everlucky_Clover Pƙed 3 lety

      @@wolftitanreading5308 i dont think you really know what dyslexia does to your brain. it seriously compromises your outgoing writing ability. it also heavily compromises incoming information from writing. so yes this is a case where using a electronic device is the best way to assist. machine based electronic material can be looked at or resized on a device so that better understanding/comprehension can be achieved for dyslexia.
      the ADHD is the lesser disability that further enhances the dyslexia and how much of a disruption to learning it can be.
      please never assume where disability issues are concerned. there are varying degrees of each kind of disability.

  • @TheSpaceKnights
    @TheSpaceKnights Pƙed 3 lety +6

    R/, you don’t get it. He was probably inches from the city electrical line. His dad feels guilty because he dropped a sharp, metallic pole into the hole. If that pole would have pierced the wire, BOOM.

  • @toritori2299
    @toritori2299 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    If a teacher started screaming at me and calling me scum, I'd either record and go higher up to report it (or just report it) or start screaming back at him. He takes me to the office? Good luck explaining why you were calling me insults in the first place đŸ€·đŸ»â€â™€ïž

  • @Iflie
    @Iflie Pƙed 3 lety +3

    Reminds me of my mom and cousin digging in the yard and they kept finding these bits of paper and thought nothing of it until they hit a waterline. Turns out that was the warning that you are getting too close. Luckily it wasn't a bad leak and got fixed fast. In the guy's case the fact that the clay was suddenly loose sand may have been a clue that something had been digging before.

  • @tiredman99
    @tiredman99 Pƙed 3 lety +6

    1:50 r/slash starts laughing.
    Me: this is where the fun begins

  • @nogoat
    @nogoat Pƙed 3 lety +11

    That last story went from 0-100 in the update.

  • @luisbarboza2042
    @luisbarboza2042 Pƙed 3 lety +10

    I loved the "Oh no!! What have you done?!" Moment

  • @iihamza7049
    @iihamza7049 Pƙed 3 lety +40

    Rshlash: uploads
    Me: so anyways I started watching the video

  • @ladyofthemasque
    @ladyofthemasque Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

    If I were in that professor's class, the moment he said "...but I don't care! You can do the work just like everyone else. You're not special even if you were in special ed!" I would be shouting, *"WITNESSED!!* Come see me after class and I'll get you *a notarized deposition!"*

  • @michaelmyers5496
    @michaelmyers5496 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    The story about the safety alarm reminds me of my dad. He used to take calls whenever our previous church had an alarm go off. You know. Security reasons. Something tripped the alarm, heavy winds blew against the windows( we live in Oklahoma. So tornado alley= strong winds) he’d have to wake up in the middle of the night sometimes to go check it out and to reset the alarms if needed. I don’t think he ever had to call police but that was about 12-15 years ago. I can’t remember.
    Also the story about the post hole digging..... that would be me. I would do that had my dad asked me to do that. I’m a malicious little bastard.

  • @tessiesmith3926
    @tessiesmith3926 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    when i worked in a college, a teacher made fun of disabled students that relied on mobility aids, what happened later, he ended up shattering his leg and ended up using a mobilidy aid. sweet sweet karma

  • @samirasorchiaireland2133
    @samirasorchiaireland2133 Pƙed 3 lety +8

    ‘You told me to keep digging!’ Epic!!! Well done! I laughed so hard on that one.

  • @Ajehy
    @Ajehy Pƙed 2 lety +2

    Telling the dyslexic student not to use an iPad is exactly the same as telling students to take off their glasses. It’s ridiculous!

  • @jefffoo6891
    @jefffoo6891 Pƙed 3 lety +154

    Day 15 of telling him he's making everyone day better

  • @primrosevale1995
    @primrosevale1995 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    First story is why there's a reason things like autism and ADHD are now considered as "learning differences."

  • @jaksgirl1977
    @jaksgirl1977 Pƙed 2 lety +7

    I'm glad to hear that ppl still stand up for the right causes. I hope that teacher never taught again.

  • @Questknight12
    @Questknight12 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    An ADA violation is both a federal violation, and, a FIRING OFFENCE! The man deserved what happened to him.

  • @koopatroopa7968
    @koopatroopa7968 Pƙed rokem +2

    I’m just imagining Patrick in bed and his alarm going off and he says “oh boy 3AM!” Then donning a full black suit and smashing in a window

  • @MusizKanuck
    @MusizKanuck Pƙed 3 lety +14

    “What’s this? Extremely high voltage? Well, I don’t need safety gloves, because I’m HOMER SI-“ âšĄïž

    • @Lycan_Jedi
      @Lycan_Jedi Pƙed 3 lety

      RIP Frank..

    • @MusizKanuck
      @MusizKanuck Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@Lycan_Jedi Frank Grimes, or “Grimey”, as he liked to be called...

    • @ScooterBond1970
      @ScooterBond1970 Pƙed 3 lety

      @@MusizKanuck oh yeah! How is ol' Grimey these days?

    • @MusizKanuck
      @MusizKanuck Pƙed 3 lety

      @@ScooterBond1970 I wish I could say he’s in his mansion eating his lobster...

  • @kimchicurls
    @kimchicurls Pƙed 3 lety +4

    That plagiarism story reminded me of this class I had in grad school.. we had this semester long paper and the idea was to submit it in increments but we had to submit it in addition to whatever we already had done. Our professor gave us a zero on one cause the system flagged it as plagiarism... because the content in this new submission was the same as our previous submission... OBVIOUSLY... the worst part was we had to explain it to our professor several times before they finally understood how dumb this was

  • @MusicGirl881
    @MusicGirl881 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    As a senior college student that first story got me riled up because I have teachers with that same attitude and I guarantee if I was in that situation people in that class including myself would have recorded the entire thing to ensure that man got fired and would send a copy to OP for a lawsuit

  • @espurrbuns4881
    @espurrbuns4881 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    That story about the professor denying ADA accommodations hit me hard. I had two professors who treated me like shit cause I was an ADA student. One was seriously reprimanded. I should probably post this on reddit but if it does not get picked up on there then here it is:
    Dumb Professor One: Possibly Entitled?
    This particular professor was teaching an upper division pure math course at my university. Most of my class were retaking the course because the previous quarter’s professor was reeeaaally bad at teaching (about 50% of the class failed).
    Now I usually hand in my accommodation letters in person on the first day of a class. Most professors acknowledge the papers exist and put it away for further reading knowing that to speak of it in front of a class room violates the law.
    So, I go up to this professor one the first day and hand him my accommodation letters. In blue text on each letter says something akin to “You are not allowed to ask the student why they need these services as it breaks several laws”. He ignored this warning while glancing through my requested services.
    He paused at the accommodation section while looking the paper work over and asks me out loud, in front of the class, why I needed a note taker. I first tried to quietly explain that he is not allowed to ask. He wanted an answer though so I told him that I have an auditory learning disability and anxiety disorder. This means means that I have a really hard time processing stuff taught in class and that I needed someone to write everything down while I recorded the lecture. I would then go back to my dorm and study the material for hours, crafting beautiful perfect notes.
    Fortunately all went well after this exchange and despite his lack of teaching skills I barely passed. Real Analysis is really hard to understand if you have not prepared your brain for it ahead of time.
    Dumb Professor Two: Petty Revenge
    So I had to take Complex Analysis for my pure math degree at my university. Sadly only one teacher taught it and I had already had issues with him in a lower division class. So despite knowing what I was getting into, I signed up for it since I wanted my BA in pure math.
    Now this guy is a straight up narcissist. He dislikes students that don’t bow down to him or that he sees himself in. He wouldn’t offer to help during office hours if the students he deemed unworthy came to speak with him. Now, me being an outspoken advocate of my own health and others, we had bumped heads a few times in the lower division course and it was clear that the feeling of dislike was mutual.
    Well the final eventually happened and while I enjoyed the topic my grades were not great. I had numerous borrowed books from the library to fill in the holes left by his shitty teaching. I eventually got a pinched nerve and artery from carrying too many books. I studied hard for that class but had nothing to shows for it. My final grade would determine my overall grade as finals were generally like 50% or more in all math courses at the university.
    I studied like crazy and took the exam in a quiet room. I had an extra 1.5x class time to take the exam. I used it all. Now the testing room was really close to the classroom so I could see it on my way back to my dorm. As I am walking past it after completing my exam, when I saw the whole class exit the classroom. I stood there for a few seconds in utter confusion l.
    Why was I confused? Well students with testing accommodations receive extra time based on what a class gets. Thus if the class gets a time extension the teacher is legally responsible for informing the DRC (disability resource center) proctor that the overall time has changed and to edit the DRC student’s time to match whatever their extra allotted tome is.
    This guy...he did not do that. I asked a fellow peer wtf was going on and he told me the professor stated that it was unfair that DRC students got the extra time and that the whole class should “reap the benefits” of DRC students.
    I. Was. Pissed. I walked up to the professor and kindly asked him why the class got out at the same time as me. He repeats what the student said. I told him that was illegal. He basically bad mouthed me and I left crying.
    Later he replied to an email that I had sent regarding ADA laws. His reply was pages long and was just god awful. He claimed that he had been ignoring ADA laws for 11 YEARS. The rest of the email (which screamed that it was written by a narcissist) was his explanation of why he did it. He also didn’t believe that I was disabled and chastised me for abusing the system. He tore me apart in that email. He also didn’t believe that disabled people should be in the math program. Note that a ton of students in his class were in DRC as it turns out that most math enthusiasts are crazy af (its true) or have mental health problems as intelligence correlates to triggering anxiety and depression (hence why they say ignorance is bliss) in people. Look into the history of math and you will be surprised by the shear number of suicides, murders, and the number of mathematicians being committed to insane asylums. Math be crazy.
    Fed up with being treated like trash because I had medical and mental health issues, I marched straight over to the DRC and showed them my evidence of him breaking ADA laws. They were shocked. They sent me upstairs to the judicial department to get the issue sorted out.
    The people in the judicial department immediately sided with me once I told them the professor’s name. Apparently he was not liked by the math department and he had several issues with students over the years. Everyone hated him.
    When I showed the Judicial guy the email that the professor sent me he was flabbergasted. Just in awe at how ludicrous this guy sounded. The email turned out to be the final nail in the coffin. They immediately started working on finding an appropriate solution for me and a punishment for him.
    We worked with advising to edit my plan so that I would not have to take Complex Analysis (it was required for the degree but he was the only one who taught it). I replaced Complex Analysis with Topology after visiting rate my professor and seeing that the topology professor had very high ratings. My plan was updated and they filed an academic restraining order against him.
    Basically he could not approach, talk to, teach, or interact with me in any way. It was understood that if he broke the restraining order then the consequences would be very very bad.
    Happy with the resolution, I continued on to complete my BA in Pure Math. I very much enjoyed the Topology class and I actually got a really good grade. The professor for it was a sweet and kind man who drew lots of pictures He helped me when I needed itHe had a great sense of humor too. He was also the head of the math department at the time so he definitely knew about what happened. I miss that guy. Great teacher. Here’s hoping he’s still alive and well (he was a bit old) and enjoying life.
    Tldr; don’t be a dick teacher to anyone and honor disability requests.
    Ps: I really do enjoy complex analysis. I kept the book so that I could eventually teach it to myself. Once I am done with my topology notebook (its so shiny and pretty) I plan on creating notes for complex analysis. Also, I hope to be a college professor before I die as I really really wanna teach pure math (I even have a degree in education!) someday.

  • @JRDev4All
    @JRDev4All Pƙed 3 lety +5

    I want Scott accused of cheating in my world history class all because when I sense my test to my teacher via email, as I did all of my tests with my computer because of my individualized education plan (IEP) gave me the ability to do, The test took three days to go through due to I would assume congestion on Google end. So I had to redo the entire test with her looking over my shoulder and it was super creepy and weird And uncomfortable

  • @Josh_the_jester
    @Josh_the_jester Pƙed 3 lety +18

    Professor: there will be no phones, laptops or technology of any kind in my class!
    The millenial in the back: okay boomer

    • @osto4240
      @osto4240 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Hewlett and Packard, were and are Boomers. What’s your point you ageist poc?

    • @Joplas99
      @Joplas99 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Wait for him to realize that markers, notebooks, boards and pens are tech also

    • @samuelding7854
      @samuelding7854 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Also the door

  • @LostAngel907
    @LostAngel907 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Scary thing about the college professor is that he was blacklisted from teaching at the college level but his teaching license was not revoked meaning there is a good chance he would go to teaching at a high school with children that unlikely to stand up for themselves when the IEPs for their learning disabilities are being ignored

  • @mariokingtana6399
    @mariokingtana6399 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    It would’ve been so cool to had a whole class protest/storm out for the treatment of the person in the first story.

  • @mrtotaldrama13
    @mrtotaldrama13 Pƙed 3 lety +28

    No one:
    Not even Yugo:
    rSlash: [[insert weird/funny/wacky quote here]]

  • @moonjoke
    @moonjoke Pƙed 3 lety +3

    God I have ADHD and dyslexia, the first story was a mix of anger and disbelief

  • @ArtemisKitty
    @ArtemisKitty Pƙed 3 lety +1

    "You don't believe I understand the meaning of non-verbal communication?" *slowly raises middle finger*

  • @faeriefire78
    @faeriefire78 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Had to laugh a little on that first story. When he said that about special ed, I was like, "Ohhhh, no!" and two seconds later rSlash is like, "Ohhhh, no!" 😄

  • @leandrogaldeano7731
    @leandrogaldeano7731 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    16:00 what a dark timeline!
    Did they roll a die or something???

  • @RyuKaze
    @RyuKaze Pƙed 3 lety +11

    Posted 29 seconds ago with 50 comments WTF?

  • @jenniferadams9480
    @jenniferadams9480 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    People should be taught that most bosses don’t give a flip about them and they shouldn’t feel obligated out of some sense of loyalty. Cause they’d drop you like a hot potato if they had to.

    • @Harry-zz2oh
      @Harry-zz2oh Pƙed 3 lety

      For many younger people and some older, the first few jobs are the ones you feel the most joy in doing and you want to do a great job, even if it means working a bit over what the clock says. In time, you learn you are only paid for the time you are there and no more. Very, very seldom are you rewarded for doing outstanding work. After all, you are paid to do outstanding work.

  • @dragonofmordor
    @dragonofmordor Pƙed 3 lety +1

    I had an actual law school professor who I had to fight to be able to use my computer to take notes with in spite of having the disability accommodation. She wasn't as bad as this one as she didn't mock me. She just didn't believe that this was a genuine need that someone could have and thought the accommodation was made in error.

  • @jackmcfarland706
    @jackmcfarland706 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    I can relate I cannot wait at all and I can't read except from very westleighs very difficult for me to read so yeah he's quite difficult for most people know so I can bite at all can read a bit but not

    • @jackmcfarland706
      @jackmcfarland706 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      Also if you're wondering how I wrote the first one message was because I'm using voice tracker

  • @richewilson6394
    @richewilson6394 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    I would have had him recording my phone for reference sake and then bring it to the Dean. Also I hope Op dated that girl

  • @Derael
    @Derael Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Lol, in that first story when the professor dropped that bomb, I would just straight up tell him: "You are fired."

  • @ArcanaMaxima
    @ArcanaMaxima Pƙed rokem +1

    Was anyone else disappointed in that additional story about non-verbal communication that the student didn't demonstrate their knowledge of it by flipping the professor the double bird?

  • @thehumblevaudevillain
    @thehumblevaudevillain Pƙed 3 lety +3

    Ah my daily does of R/Slash👍

  • @Spaitzo
    @Spaitzo Pƙed 3 lety +6

    I hope that professor got a job as a teacher working a special ED class.

    • @onettaviator5396
      @onettaviator5396 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      That'd be WORSE.

    • @Everlucky_Clover
      @Everlucky_Clover Pƙed 3 lety

      dont wish that asshat onto people who dont deserve him. however court mandated permanent ADA course classes would be fine. make him REALLY LEARN what bullshit he had been inflicting is a far worse punishment.

  • @uncle0eric
    @uncle0eric Pƙed 3 lety

    As a teacher, I can't comprehend the attitude of the guy in the 1st story. Why wouldn't I want ALL my students to succeed in the class and to understand and appreciate the subject matter?

  • @lycianempire
    @lycianempire Pƙed 3 lety +2

    I used to ignore old dudes being sexist as it just being how they grew up, right up until I had an 87 year old history professor who would stop lectures mid-sentence to talk about how you could judge a culture by how they treated their women (and their enemies), to gush about how much he loved his doctor wife, or talk about how badass some historical lady was. If a near 90 year old Greek man wouldn't approve of how you treat women, you don't get a pass.