r/Prorevenge They Stole My Firewood, So I Laced It With Explosives!

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 1. 07. 2020
  • r/Prorevenge In today's video, OP tells a story about his grandpa way back when his grandpa was just a kid. Somebody kept stealing his grandpa's firewood. So, the grandpa decided to get some explosive justice by drilling holes in the firewood and filling the holes with gunpowder. The next time these firewood thieves throw another log onto the fire... KA-BOOM! If you like this video and you want to see more, subscribe to my channel for daily Reddit videos.
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Komentáƙe • 3,7K

  • @rosesarered4205
    @rosesarered4205 Pƙed 4 lety +4824

    “So apparently in, like, the early 1900’s it was common for Americans to solve their problems with high explosives and gunpowder pranks.”
    Sounds about right

  • @subscriberswithcrappyRedditvid
    @subscriberswithcrappyRedditvid Pƙed 4 lety +4241

    They Stole My Firewood, So I Laced It With *Explosives!*
    Terrorists: _"Write that down, WRITE THAT DOWN!"_

  • @mcb187
    @mcb187 Pƙed 3 lety +440

    The log thing is either an urban legend or a common tactic used by homesteaders.
    My great grandma told me this story, and it is possibly better than the one in the video, as my grandma saw the aftermath.
    My great great grandfather (my great grandma’s father) had noticed that their firewood was disappearing. So, he did a similar thing, putting black powder in a log, putting a small mark on every log he drilled, and told the family not to burn those logs, but not why.
    My great grandma was walking home from school when she noticed black smoke coming from the neighbors house. She ran over to help, and their stove had exploded. The door was flung all the way across the room, and the riveted joints were bulking out in some places. Hot coals were all over, and they had to douse everything in the room with water to keep the house from burning.
    But the best part is that they had gotten electricity 2 years earlier, and the neighbors had just saved up to buy an radio only a few months earlier. Guess where they had put it? Right next to the stove. It was ruined by water.
    My great grandmother said her dad felt kind of bad, but he figured if they hadn’t been stealing, then they wouldn’t have lost their $50 radio, which according to an inflation calculator, is about $1000 dollars!
    Anyway, no one is going to read this, but figured I would share.

  • @whats_it_worth
    @whats_it_worth Pƙed 3 lety +576

    rslash: "it sounds like you kinda screwed your cousens out of an inheretence"
    we already know those kids wernt getting a penny out of her

    • @jgnitro5100
      @jgnitro5100 Pƙed 3 lety +17

      So true

    • @kaileelewis6854
      @kaileelewis6854 Pƙed 2 lety +15

      I’m sure they’ll still have plenty of inheritance from their father as well. I wouldn’t sweat it.

    • @lumberluc
      @lumberluc Pƙed 2 lety

      Old comment; Agreed. This spend-thrifty bitch-witch would burn the world down just because.

    • @BranDenhauer
      @BranDenhauer Pƙed rokem +13

      Plus it says they were already doing well financially. They didn't need the inheritance and the Aunt certainly didn't deserve to keep it. I'm glad she lost it and I'm glad her wrist was broken, but people like that deserve much worse. Kinda underwhelming revenge story

    • @toothless3835
      @toothless3835 Pƙed rokem +5

      Yeah, it doesn't sound like she had much money left. Lady's probably in mega debt.

  • @ThatOddChickenHippie
    @ThatOddChickenHippie Pƙed 4 lety +736

    Pretty sure the cousins will still get an inheritance from their dad, since it was his family's money to begin with. The mom would have squandered her cut well before dying, so those kids weren't going to see any of it anyway.

    • @tishellefrancois7840
      @tishellefrancois7840 Pƙed 4 lety +55

      Of course they'd have inherited something. Crippling debt and bad juju

    • @nexusarch
      @nexusarch Pƙed 4 lety +4

      *squandered

    • @paulatredies
      @paulatredies Pƙed 4 lety +8

      @@tishellefrancois7840 Genuine question, can debts be passed on too family that havent signed on as a, I wanna say co pay?

    • @CDW3176
      @CDW3176 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      @@paulatredies From what I've heard No, Most Debts that Parents have don't get passed to Their kids But Debts that Kids have can be Passed back up to Parents. I'm NOT 100% SURE ON THIS SO DOUBLE CHECK!!!

    • @SidereusOfTheFallen
      @SidereusOfTheFallen Pƙed 4 lety +23

      @@paulatredies IN Italy and in most European Countries, afaik, there's inheritance laws that says you have to be informed of EVERY SINGLE debt or pending payment that is going to be part of the inheritance and you can refuse to sign if debts are more than the money/property you would receive.
      Debts CAN be passed onto heirs BUT they have to be fully informed and can refuse to accept them, in this type of legal system.

  • @jacobgoodman1387
    @jacobgoodman1387 Pƙed 4 lety +911

    Not an educator so take this with a grain of salt, but I think the "merit pay" in the third story is about appearances to higher-ups. If the VP has less incidents involving misbehaving students, the better he/she appears to his/her boss/ the school board, likely resulting in salary bonuses. What's the best (illegal) way to appear to have few incidents? Delete the records!

    • @Center-For-I.E.D.Mismanagement
      @Center-For-I.E.D.Mismanagement Pƙed 4 lety +22

      Ikr? That's up there with 'what could possibly go wrong?' Lol

    • @dylangray2380
      @dylangray2380 Pƙed 4 lety +18

      I know that in the place I did my placement that the VP was the disciplinary head (Can't speak for all schools). So disciplinary problems for them where like failing students for us. Too many failing kids (misbehaving kids) and you get to have a lovely chat with a member or more from the board.

    • @creativecupcake5179
      @creativecupcake5179 Pƙed 4 lety +13

      This is actually pretty close. I have family in the education system and this is about how things go. The better your school looks in terms of test scores, graduation rates , and behavior, the better SOME peoples pay.

    • @AppleSlicesUnite
      @AppleSlicesUnite Pƙed 4 lety +3

      Also, schools that have no problems get better funding. That means a lot of money for computers, trips for the kids and perhaps a sweet sweet new teacher's lounge with nice furniture, TV's, Kerieg??? (spelling) Coffee maker etc...

    • @masonstrauss674
      @masonstrauss674 Pƙed 4 lety

      good job mate :)

  • @dwightehowell8179
    @dwightehowell8179 Pƙed 3 lety +355

    My grandfather found out a lazy, worthless, neighbor was stealing corn. He had by some fluke picked up what must have been a real bear trap in a deal for other traps. He hid this in the corn at the location where a board was lose at the bottom and could be swung aside so corn could be removed from the corn crib. He secured the trap in place hidden under corn. A few nights later he heard a scream. The next morning he found his neighbor standing in place. Grandpa did let him go, fed him, gave him a sack of corn and warned him to never come back or life would get a lot worse.

    • @myctfan5016
      @myctfan5016 Pƙed 3 lety +14

      YeeeeOUCH!😂

    • @marvnuts
      @marvnuts Pƙed 3 lety +46

      I love how your grandfather heard a scream and just went back to sleep.

    • @ladycatfish2896
      @ladycatfish2896 Pƙed 2 lety +15

      In the modern day, this will get you sued and possibly arrested. Sad.

    • @miltonturner2977
      @miltonturner2977 Pƙed 2 lety +6

      Handling criminals is easy, make their life miserable then make it worse!

    • @marciaspiegel5280
      @marciaspiegel5280 Pƙed rokem +1

      Hope he got the warning was serious.

  • @yeeturmcbeetur8197
    @yeeturmcbeetur8197 Pƙed 3 lety +843

    Merit pay (for people in high up positions at schools) is basically more money in your paycheck for how yo ur school looks overall. Essentially, the school board/district or whatever looks at all of that (like an audit) and give you money according to how good your school looks. So the VP was deleting all records because it made him look bad, which made the school look bad, which would decrease his merit pay at the end of the year.

    • @bettyunicorn6132
      @bettyunicorn6132 Pƙed 3 lety +30

      That’s aweful đŸ€Ź

    • @ardenttheprotogen4201
      @ardenttheprotogen4201 Pƙed 3 lety +43

      In the end, it all comes down to greed I guess

    • @FriedFreya
      @FriedFreya Pƙed 3 lety +55

      @@ardenttheprotogen4201 ikr? Sounds like, with an individual education program, the kid may've been developmentally delayed or severe ADHD... which makes it even worse, because they're not documenting his misbehaviour to help find a way to curb it. She put a lot of work into helping him get better and improve his learning, it sounds like... I'm proud of Karen, and fuck that VP.

    • @ardenttheprotogen4201
      @ardenttheprotogen4201 Pƙed 3 lety +24

      @@FriedFreya trust me, I've been there, kept from transferring because I was a special ed student, guess they got more pay

    • @FriedFreya
      @FriedFreya Pƙed 3 lety +15

      @@ardenttheprotogen4201 That's literally disgusting. Part of the reason I threw a diagnoses opportunity through foster care out the window. I believe that I may have Asperger's, but I never found out because... well, you have fewer words for yourself before reaching adulthood, and fortunately by then I had already reached the age of consenting to these things. Wound up dropping out of HS anyway (many reasons), had "behavioral issues" the whole time in early school up until 8th grade year. I fucking hate that for you tho, dude.

  • @somethingmarriott
    @somethingmarriott Pƙed 4 lety +2360

    A lot of schools get paid less or receive less funding when students have a lot of. Bad records to there name

    • @rubberneck3818
      @rubberneck3818 Pƙed 4 lety +99

      You think it be the other way around.

    • @BorninVirginia
      @BorninVirginia Pƙed 4 lety +107

      @@rubberneck3818 well the way it is set up is they want the money to go were it will be used the best and most believe that the kid who is actually trying to learn can use it better than the kid that is always being kicked out of school

    • @NobodySoldier
      @NobodySoldier Pƙed 4 lety +111

      @@rubberneck3818 The idea is that they are rewarded when they keep the school clean. The other way around, the school would try to emulate such behavior to get rewarded. The problem is, with salary based on merit, that it is easy to cheat. You are the one providing the records your salary & fundings are based on, it is easy to falsify them.

    • @yosoy8115
      @yosoy8115 Pƙed 4 lety +16

      @@rubberneck3818 um no it shouldn't why should people who have a clean record be forced to have less funds

    • @contradictingtroll3765
      @contradictingtroll3765 Pƙed 4 lety +21

      No wonder my old elementary school is closing down 😂😂

  • @MegaJK97
    @MegaJK97 Pƙed 4 lety +3624

    300,000$ revenge? My first thought - 'It's treelaw time!'

  • @ryanlesner4716
    @ryanlesner4716 Pƙed 3 lety +481

    "Wash my dishes"
    " No."
    " If you live under my roof you follow my rules."
    " Excuse me while I enjoy being homeless."

    • @pixelyz7792
      @pixelyz7792 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      @@slevinchannel7589 Dude, shut the hell up. Just. Please... Out of all the things you have to self advertise, it has to be this in this type of video on channel. Wrong comment section, wrong video, and wrong channel.

    • @untitled_2935
      @untitled_2935 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      @@pixelyz7792 what did they say?
      I’m asking because the comment was deleted

    • @Threegh
      @Threegh Pƙed 2 lety +6

      @@untitled_2935 probably some spam

    • @pixelyz7792
      @pixelyz7792 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@untitled_2935 I cannot remember sadly

    • @pixelyz7792
      @pixelyz7792 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@untitled_2935 I’ll try to think of it though

  • @neon-john
    @neon-john Pƙed 3 lety +38

    In the.late 70s, I used exactly the same technique to deal with a wood thief.i knew who it was but I thought he needed a bit more than just a talking-to.
    I picked several choice logs, drilled each and filled each with a pound of FFFF (the fastest burning) black powder. I plugged the holes with plugs made from limbs of rhe same tree. I coated the end with nitric acid to give it an old, aged appearance.
    A couple of weeks went by. The loaded wood disappeared.
    One night, a large explosion ripped through our little community. I looked out and saw a large cloud of white smoke rising from behind the A-frame. He had the type of stove protruded through the wall with most of it being outside.
    I walked down to his place to look things over. The stove was peeled open and laying on the ground. I looked through to the door at the inside. It was wrecked and the place was filled with thick white smoke.
    It was difficult to suppress a grin as I walked back to my place. A couple of years later, they burned the cabin for the insurance, got caught and he spent several years in prison.

  • @rhyswebb7495
    @rhyswebb7495 Pƙed 4 lety +1122

    a few months ago i found that someone was stealing from my fridge in the shed, so i lace a can of whipped mousse with chilli spray and waited for the fun. At about 22:00 that night i heard some very loud screaming. the next day i got a knock at the door from the police because the thief try to have me charged for assault. i told them about the thefts and how i put chilli spray on my mousse can (which was missing from the fridge) and the police instead charged him with theft.

    • @mystikmind2005
      @mystikmind2005 Pƙed 4 lety +30

      That could have gone either way. czcams.com/video/j1cKM-_CKno/video.html

    • @carmillastephens9497
      @carmillastephens9497 Pƙed 4 lety +126

      He was stealing from you and he called the cops? Smh Some ppl are just strange.

    • @mrd4032
      @mrd4032 Pƙed 3 lety +91

      I wouldn't have mentioned that, next time consider ''Oh no, somebody took my homemade whipped mousse with chilli spray?''

    • @AnonymousJohnAutobon
      @AnonymousJohnAutobon Pƙed 3 lety +19

      You lucked out, technically what you did was very illegal

    • @juanmontano6451
      @juanmontano6451 Pƙed 3 lety +43

      John Carroll is it? I mean, I like my liquid cheese with some strong chili to deep my chips

  • @livethroughchemistry3173
    @livethroughchemistry3173 Pƙed 4 lety +304

    I’ve talked to the Dean about this at my school during a trip. For certain schools you are promoted and your pay is increased (given a bonus) based on the behavior of your students. If bad behavior increases through the year you get less of a bonus if bad behavior is goes down your bonus increases. Other schools don’t really have a Dean who deals with these issue so I would assume the VP would assume this position

    • @codyjohnson6427
      @codyjohnson6427 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      Oh that might explain why my principal and vp were fired after 2 years in middle school where all the kids started setting up fist fights a few times a day every day.

    • @RenGraes
      @RenGraes Pƙed 4 lety +1

      So basically it's all about the do$h.
      Typical.

    • @Plazmasoldier
      @Plazmasoldier Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@RenGraes It's more based on the idea that if you do a good job keeping your students in check, then you get better pay as an incentive or as a sort of reward for doing a good job. Bad behavior reflects badly on the staff of a school and possibly even the district depending how widespread it is, so many districts will provide a slight bonus to staff members like teachers, principles, and vice principals based on the behavior of students as a reward for doing a good job in keeping students in check and maintaining the image of the school and or district.

    • @technomancerchuckturboman4364
      @technomancerchuckturboman4364 Pƙed 4 lety

      well now I know why when I was in school when a kid bit my feaking hand and left one of baby teeth in my hand ...and my mom never knew

    • @chriskimball4893
      @chriskimball4893 Pƙed 4 lety

      Have you ever wondered why so many principals and VPs insist their schools don't have bullying? This is why. The better they look to the general public, the more money they get.

  • @WarpFactor999
    @WarpFactor999 Pƙed 2 lety +74

    Some 10 years ago, I had several cords of firewood in the back yard (no fences). I noticed the stack was starting to shrink as the weather turned cold. It wasn't us using any wood either. I suspected who was responsible. A grumpy neighbor at the end of the street. I got some mesquite logs from a friend and put them on the end of the woodpile that had been shrinking. Now, you never ever use mesquite in a fireplace. It burns way to hot (fires of hell category). Sure enough, a few days later, all of the mesquite was gone. Sometime later I heard the fire engines come down the street. Seems that he had a a major chimney fire undoubtedly due to excessive creosote built up (he never had it cleaned). The mesquite was just hot enough to set it off.

    • @proudamerican183
      @proudamerican183 Pƙed rokem +3

      Would adding gunpowder make it better or somehow make it worse?

    • @patrickkeller2193
      @patrickkeller2193 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@proudamerican183 The explosion is likely to put out any fire.

  • @AquaEclipse324
    @AquaEclipse324 Pƙed rokem +29

    0:06 - OP tricks abusive aunt into using up her money to buy worthless land, after putting their family through years of abuse
    11:05 - Titular story - OP's great-grandfather puts gunpowder in his firewood, blows up the firewood thief's stove
    12:54 - Vice-Principal gets demoted for messing with school records, AKA nice Karen picks a fight with her manager and wins

  • @martinaromerov.1342
    @martinaromerov.1342 Pƙed 4 lety +1447

    Karen: "Well maybe I don't want to be the bad guy anymore."

    • @littlemisseevee2309
      @littlemisseevee2309 Pƙed 4 lety +12

      MarteenaRV 👀

    • @rosepuppy1984
      @rosepuppy1984 Pƙed 4 lety +64

      I actually had an Auntie Karen when I was younger who was really just one of my mom’s friends at work who really liked me and liked to take me places like the local farm/petting zoo and many other places! I even have a fond memory of my birthday party r (I have 0 clue which birthday it was I think maybe my 3rd because we moved out of that house and into my current house on the day of my 4th birthday) of my Auntie Karen wearing a hat that looked like she was wearing a stuffed animal flamingo on her head! Literally all I remember is the flamingo hat lol! 😂 I haven’t seen her in years since she sadly moved to a different school and she and my mom lost touch. She was super nice and she was the one who insisted on me calling her “Auntie” Karen. I really liked that woman! I also once had a pretty nice classmate named Karen! We weren’t friends or anything, but we got along pretty fine!

    • @Damii229
      @Damii229 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      @@rosepuppy1984 u Had a Pretty good life There!

    • @killercrock9362
      @killercrock9362 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      I'm a bad guy but I am not a bad-guy

    • @exalaskevas4203
      @exalaskevas4203 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      thats what i was thinking lol

  • @purplesvet
    @purplesvet Pƙed 4 lety +199

    Explosive stolen firewood story... Aussie here. A mate at work told me a similar story. Back in the day his dad's firewood kept going missing and he finally had enough. Drilled some holes in the logs, filled them with gunpowder from shotgun cartridges then sat and waited. Boom! It came from next door...the local vicar's house! I guess "Thou shalt not steal" does not apply to men of god 😂😂😂

    • @rosiemackenzie5976
      @rosiemackenzie5976 Pƙed 2 lety +14

      Some people only learn their life lessons the hard way.

    • @doloresreynolds8145
      @doloresreynolds8145 Pƙed rokem +10

      The vicar just viewed it as a donation to the church, I bet.

    • @crwn-chaos288
      @crwn-chaos288 Pƙed rokem +11

      ​@@doloresreynolds8145 I'm sure that it blew up in his face

    • @tanyaerskine7657
      @tanyaerskine7657 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +3

      If he was stealing, he is no man of God.

    • @indigetes
      @indigetes Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      Someone I know did something like this once and only once. Why? 2 dogs died as a result.

  • @666toysoldier
    @666toysoldier Pƙed 2 lety +33

    I did the second story in miniature. Working as a nurse's aide about 50 years ago, we had a small locker room, with lockers big enough for a purse. No one locked their locker. Some of the aides noticed cigarettes going missing from their purses. When a patient checked out and left a pack with a few cigarettes in it in the bedside table, I was inspired. I took one cigarette, removed an inch of tobacco, put in a few match heads, and replaced some tobacco. The cigarette was returned to the pack, where it would be the first one picked. I put it in my locker. Came back 2 days later, and there was one cigarette missing. Didn't hear any more complaints.

  • @Kintaro316
    @Kintaro316 Pƙed 3 lety +31

    Can confirm the firewood/gunpowder was a common thing. My mothers uncle ran a lodge and cottage area up in mid ontario... wood went missing, logs were loaded, the boom led him to the thief.

  • @loganbaxter4685
    @loganbaxter4685 Pƙed 4 lety +1046

    I actually saw the log story on Quora. As for the teacher story, the school loses funding if there is a large number of students with bad behavior records. You’d think it would the opposite, but bureaucracy at its finest.

    • @settheshallow8913
      @settheshallow8913 Pƙed 4 lety +61

      No, screwing over the poor at it's finest

    • @OBM22
      @OBM22 Pƙed 4 lety +22

      *Damn Bureaucrats*

    • @alexcunningham1647
      @alexcunningham1647 Pƙed 4 lety +12

      @@settheshallow8913 no race war a war against the poor likes it always been

    • @realitynowassigned
      @realitynowassigned Pƙed 4 lety +15

      No child left behind

    • @ImplyDoods
      @ImplyDoods Pƙed 4 lety +12

      its hard to fix stuff like this since if they changed it to the other way arround wouldent the scummy schools just try to make kids bad

  • @TarotMom86
    @TarotMom86 Pƙed 4 lety +240

    My dad used to teach at a middle school several yrs ago. He taught math, and many students (the majority sadly) were belligerent, always tardy, and/or never turned in assignments. One of his students even got so pissed that he was giving him a failing grade that he threw a full soda can at his head during lunch hour.
    Despite this, the principal went to my dad and said he needed to "find a way" to bring their grades up. My dad said if they don't put in the effort and time to do the work he doesn't think they deserve it because it diminishes the hard work from his other students if he were to just hand out passing grades. It turns out the school gets more funding from the state if they have better performance relating to teacher's performance, test scores, and attendance. My dad was furious. As the school year was nearly over, he said he'd finish out the year, and then promptly told the principal to eff off and find a new math teacher for the next year.
    so, yeah that stuff is pretty commonplace.

    • @aaronhumphrey2009
      @aaronhumphrey2009 Pƙed 4 lety +29

      It's called " teaching to the test "&" passing them thru " to get increased federal / state funding .
      The Administration tells students they'll be punished for cheating- yet pressures the teachers into cheating, and punishes any " not going along to get along ".
      Hypocrisy in action.

    • @kati4684
      @kati4684 Pƙed 3 lety +5

      A full can of soda? Did it burst??!?!

    • @davewilson9924
      @davewilson9924 Pƙed 3 lety +18

      My experience in schools is this is very common, but when you finally understand that public "education" has nothing to do with education. It is about control and indoctrination, basically public "baby sitting". Any learning that takes place is merely by accident and not purposefully. This lead me to home school my two children. Your father is one of the last rare breed of men. God Bless him!

    • @mattferrigno9750
      @mattferrigno9750 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Seems like your dad didn't work their that long or he would have never done that. He would have lost his tenure otherwise

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 Pƙed 3 lety +5

      Well, good for him. He sure solved that problem. You do realize if all the students are failing, that its usually NOT THEIR FAULT, right?

  • @sabrinahobbs9658
    @sabrinahobbs9658 Pƙed 3 lety +33

    When my friend was a teacher at a local middle school, she told us how the office suspended students during state testing. Those were low performing students that they didn't want to reflect in their test scores. They have the best ratings in our district and were even on the state's list. My friend quit after seeing that's how they got to be the "best"

  • @Fairyymilkers
    @Fairyymilkers Pƙed 3 lety +130

    You mentioned at the end of Karen’s story about how it seemed slightly unreasonable. Rest assured, people are as bad as VP!
    Schools in the UK are paid every day, for each student. We have a morning register and an afternoon register. If the kid is there for the full day, the school gets paid in full. If not, they’re paid half. This made the receptionists at school super stingy, to the point where you’d have to have broken bones for them to send you home/to the hospital.
    In Year 7, I was bullied badly. To the point where these two boys, three years older than me, repeatedly slammed their hands into my ears one day. I burst out crying, but I was not sent home. When my dad found out, he took me to hospital to find out that many of the follicles in my right ear was damaged. I have now become partially deaf in that ear, and literally I hear like an 80 year old man. I’m not at the point where I’m disabled, but I’m expected to have a hearing aid in the next fifteen years due to my hearing declining.
    Those two boys were originally suspended, and dad flipped. He involved the police and one of the boys was sent to juvie, while the other was expelled. School didn’t want to expel them, because that meant they’d get less money. However my dad was pressing for a law suit if it didn’t happen.
    So yes, people can be that awful. Schools no longer prioritise the education and wellbeing of students, but instead their pay checks.

    • @emilygoogle6520
      @emilygoogle6520 Pƙed 2 lety +9

      It’s amazing to me that as humans, we don’t seem to be learning that no reported issue does not equal adequate quality.
      Performance-based incentives need to be more human centric and less based on pointless metrics. Going to school every day doesn’t mean they’re getting a good education, or learning in a safe environment. Attendance, while important, should be factored in on a case-by-case basis instead of being looked at as a sum total of days where school is attended by the students.

    • @patk7942
      @patk7942 Pƙed 2 lety +3

      I was surprised to read that you said UK Schools would let things go this far. I taught is USA schools for years and we were told things like behavior issues do not happen in the UK. Wow just lies we are told.

    • @Zeronixite
      @Zeronixite Pƙed 2 lety +2

      Australian schools have a similar system with bullying, or at least my primary school principle did, as there was a thing called "wellbeing" and no detentions, no expellings or suspensions (unless you, like, killed another kid or smth) . wellbeing just told you "no dont do that" and if you did it again they'd say the same thing. it was essentially a loophole to never get in trouble

    • @WillieManga
      @WillieManga Pƙed 2 lety +5

      We need to rethink the "Karen" insult because this woman does not deserve to be linked to it.

  • @airallieman
    @airallieman Pƙed 4 lety +288

    rSlash, on the first one, I think you forgot their father's side was the money side, the cousin's inheritance is probably just fine.

    • @a_casual_human4674
      @a_casual_human4674 Pƙed 4 lety +49

      Plus, the OP already mentioned they were money smart. There should be no worries with or without a inheritance.

    • @jjohnston94
      @jjohnston94 Pƙed 4 lety +20

      I can hear it now (in rSlash's Karen voice): I'm your mother; you HAVE to help me!

    • @P-30fromOpiclicorooms
      @P-30fromOpiclicorooms Pƙed 4 lety +10

      She probably would have spent it all before she died anyway so they wouldn't have had anything.

    • @j.j.juggernaut9709
      @j.j.juggernaut9709 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      Key word is "probably". It's still kinda slightly effed up what op did despite the fact that the psycho aunt deserved it.

    • @ifartmagic
      @ifartmagic Pƙed 4 lety +1

      I mean, thats 300k that could have potentially been theirs in addition to father side inheritance as well. Assuming she didn't spend it.

  • @fuyukazemi
    @fuyukazemi Pƙed 4 lety +571

    The OP didn't screw them out of an inheritance, the Aunt would've spent it, and made them pay for her funeral.
    She'd have left with zero $ to her name, or left with significantly more debt than assets.

    • @nicholasspidel1471
      @nicholasspidel1471 Pƙed 3 lety +6

      This is right.

    • @korab.23
      @korab.23 Pƙed 3 lety +2

      Yup. I know someone that would do this.

    • @greenaum
      @greenaum Pƙed 3 lety +15

      Yup, Aunt sounds like she'd have another 30 or so years left to piss that money away in. Assuming she even chose to leave it to her kids and not the Spiteful Bullshit Foundation. She was willing to spunk it all on Prime Arizona Beachfront Property, so it's only sooner or later that some opportunity in magic bean futures would have come along. It's risking a lot to look forward to anyone getting a penny out of the old cow. Better at least to ensure she can't enjoy it herself, put her into a position where she might need to depend on others. Then she might discover what she should have invested in her human relationships all those years. That's priceless.
      The only downside is her nieces and daughters are much better people than the aunt was, and might actually want to help her. I wouldn't do it. At least, they should make sure she suffers, and insist that if they did offer help, she'd have to apologise properly. And make up for all the needless cuntery, just a few humiliating dances and the like would have helped a lot with that. It wouldn't do her any harm, and make plain the point that you don't get to keep your conceited nastiness intact when you're begging for actual needs. Call her bluff on it, til it's finally hit her hard enough that she realises how awful she was. Or else til she decides, in her denial, that her nieces are just being meanies for no reason. In which case she's incapable of learning, and should be melted down into toasters, the human race having no use for her.
      You should always be kind to those in need, but if they've acted abominably and aren't willing to say sorry, really, truly, fuck 'em. Maybe if they end up on the streets you can bung 'em a bit of money for a shelter. But a person who isn't a dick would apologise even if they didn't mean it, that's always an option.

    • @EmbraceTerror
      @EmbraceTerror Pƙed 3 lety +11

      Yup. Someone like that is going to make sure none of her kids get anything, except the golden child.

    • @jakesullivan9179
      @jakesullivan9179 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      That aunt was using to fund her lifestyle in a shitty cheap way, the only inheritance was the house and that's it. That money would've been blown through one way or another. Plus she just blew 300k because her nephew said something, how dumb are you! Do your fucking research before you buy 300k of land. She could've bought so many S&P 500 Composite stocks and made some dough.

  • @jaynederp5236
    @jaynederp5236 Pƙed 2 lety +40

    I spend my childhood around really emotionally abusive people. When I was a teenager a friend of the family acted sympathetic to me and decided to "take me under his wing" and I even got a job with him. He quickly became emotionally abusive, berated me, constantly insulted me and blamed me for everything that went on around me. I basically became perpetually scared and feeling the need to apologize for everything, even if it wasn't my fault.
    After this abusive person started snooping into by personal life he found out some things about my sexuality I wasn't ready to share. The abuse got so bad I nearly ended things. I got help and haven't seen that person in years.

    • @proudamerican183
      @proudamerican183 Pƙed rokem

      Not to seem rude, but was he homophobic or something?

  • @daedalusspacegames
    @daedalusspacegames Pƙed 3 lety +12

    As someone who lived something like that kid Xavier's life growing up (divorced parents before school, IEP, etc.), that VP was doing him a massive disservice teaching him that acting out in class was a free pass to hang out with the cool candy guy. Good on Karen for being so thorough and making sure Xavier got the education he deserves (up to and including a proper reprimand). We don't deserve teachers, IMO.

    • @darkeness1029
      @darkeness1029 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      One of my high school counselors got named counselor of the year for California or BS. Part of this was because he “encouraged” underperforming kids to transfer to the “alternative” school or to just drop out. Therefore his case load looked squeaky clean as if he did such a great job helping his students. Sh*t like this is how faculty and admins get great pay in merit based pay scales.

  • @rkoncenasupporter
    @rkoncenasupporter Pƙed 4 lety +166

    while I do agree the first OP did mess up any chance of his cousins getting an inheritance, they probably wouldn't have gotten one anyway because of how selfish their mother seems to be

    • @Lycanthromancer1
      @Lycanthromancer1 Pƙed 4 lety +19

      Aunt Karen, on her deathbed: "...and finally, in my will, I want you to donate all of my remaining money to the Sharks With Lasers on Their Friggin' Foreheads Fund. What? No, I don't want you to give any of it to my family! I'll be dead to them, so they're dead to me!"
      Sounds about right.

    • @echochildus2441
      @echochildus2441 Pƙed 4 lety +21

      nah. The Father wasn't poor. They will still get an inheritance. Their parents money isn't their money anyhow and shouldn't' be looked at as such. That's choosing beggar style thinking.

  • @vvminh555
    @vvminh555 Pƙed 4 lety +153

    Karen: does something good
    Me: impossible

    • @wels2342
      @wels2342 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Minh Vo it’s more Karen was looking out for her bad behaving kid and won. Plus the kid started behaving better too

    • @wmrcats
      @wmrcats Pƙed 4 lety

      The universe has never seen a thing like that

    • @wavez2206
      @wavez2206 Pƙed 4 lety

      Lol

    • @wavez2206
      @wavez2206 Pƙed 4 lety

      Lol

    • @wavez2206
      @wavez2206 Pƙed 4 lety

      Lol

  • @JEL625
    @JEL625 Pƙed 4 lety +43

    With the way her aunt spends her money OP's cousins were never getting an inheritance.

    • @janenickris
      @janenickris Pƙed 3 lety +1

      What does OP mean?

    • @JEL625
      @JEL625 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@janenickris Original Poster.

    • @silvergreylion
      @silvergreylion Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Probably true, but with most of the money now tied up in that land, it won't ever be completely worthless.
      Maybe they can get it re-zoned, or start a business there.

  • @neilallenphillips590
    @neilallenphillips590 Pƙed 3 lety +13

    I did something similar, with gas. Lived in far northern Canada and basic mode of local transportation was snowmobiles. I always kept about 8 gas containers outside my house, filled and all chained together for security. But I was missing gas. Made me mad, because in the north you do not steal from anyone. Had they asked I would have gladly given it to them no problems. So I noticed the end gas can was the main can always emptied of gas. So in that one I put a pound of sugar into the gas. Just 3 days later my boss called me over to look at his truck, as it stopped working. It was the sugar gas. He had put it into his truck and his snowmobile. Both wrecked. I told him it looked like somebody had put sugar in his gas, and maybe he should call the cops. He looked at me quietly for a long time. Finally he said he would not, as he thought the thief would stop stealing, and he was sure the thief was sorry for having stolen the gas with sugar. Went home and laughed for a long time.

    • @ambiava123
      @ambiava123 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      đŸ˜‚đŸ€ŁđŸ˜‚đŸ€ŁđŸ˜‚I love this 'Sugar in the Tank' story😉!

  • @WobblesandBean
    @WobblesandBean Pƙed 4 lety +236

    First story: ten bucks says OP works for the IRS. 😂 Also I disagree with you about the cousin's inheritance. The aunt would have spent every last penny.

    • @settheshallow8913
      @settheshallow8913 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      Nope, he said he was working on development projects

    • @beckyhartley9502
      @beckyhartley9502 Pƙed 4 lety +13

      Nope. OP works for the local council's (aka local government) planning department. I know this because they're describing specifics that I know working as a planning officer in the same capacity.

    • @cameroncollins8619
      @cameroncollins8619 Pƙed 4 lety +10

      I bet she wanted to be buried with all of her wealth. She’s that kind of person.

    • @eddkevinarenumberone2522
      @eddkevinarenumberone2522 Pƙed 4 lety +10

      But didn't the story say they make more money then her and that they left the house to live with their father who has more money then the mother? Because everything she has came from him right because of the divorce

    • @zeframc
      @zeframc Pƙed 4 lety +4

      Yeah that's what I was thinking, unless they were lucky enough that she died in an accident or something before blowing it all. Not likely.

  • @maddiekoester7785
    @maddiekoester7785 Pƙed 4 lety +385

    The last time I was this early, Karens weren’t entitled.

    • @SilverVolo
      @SilverVolo Pƙed 4 lety +30

      So u came before time ?

    • @derriusjohnson9925
      @derriusjohnson9925 Pƙed 4 lety +9

      Before time was a thing

    • @communistdude6163
      @communistdude6163 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      @@SilverVolo so far before time

    • @Westers05
      @Westers05 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      Never been early I guess

    • @Old343
      @Old343 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      So you where never early? Or are you the person who created the world

  • @cones914
    @cones914 Pƙed 3 lety +39

    FINALLY SOMEONE USING EXPLOSIVES TO SOLVE PROBLEMS.

  • @codahighland
    @codahighland Pƙed 2 lety +16

    Last story: Teachers like that are a blessing. My son had issues like that -- thankfully never quite so injurious to other students -- and we saw the whole gamut of teachers along the way.

  • @sethdickerson9360
    @sethdickerson9360 Pƙed 4 lety +369

    Ahhh, good ol' RSlash with a cup of Joe is a perfect morning.

  • @BlueberryBlanket
    @BlueberryBlanket Pƙed 4 lety +40

    Teacher here: If a principal/vice-principal goes into their review with a lot of reports, they have to explain what they're doing to fix it, if it's a systemic thing, are they working with the teachers to solve it, etc. It adds to their paper work immensely and it doesn't look good in front of their superiors. Not surprised at all he was sweeping it under the rug.

    • @Una1
      @Una1 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Agreed. I've had horrible experiences with VPs covering up disciplinary reports.

    • @jjohnston94
      @jjohnston94 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@Una1 Get screenshots of everything, email yourself a copy of everything at work and home addresses, email the boss saying you've submitted a disciplinary report, citing the unique number if it has one, etc. Make so many redundant paper trails he can't possibly find all of them.

    • @lisalowe5262
      @lisalowe5262 Pƙed 4 lety

      ESPECIALLY if it involves students receiving Special Services.

  • @pretentiousfly
    @pretentiousfly Pƙed 4 lety +150

    This first story was my exact childhood except it was my adopted mother not an aunt. It's been 7 years since I moved out and I'd still only go home to piss on her grave

    • @torazedwora7324
      @torazedwora7324 Pƙed 4 lety +11

      Proud of you for moving out, take care. ♄

    • @henryrodgers7386
      @henryrodgers7386 Pƙed 3 lety +11

      My aunt and uncle are like that... Sorry you had to deal with that kind of person. Their daughters moved about a year ago.
      If someone planned to burn those two at the stake, the entire fire department and sheriff's posse would show up...
      With firewood and whiskey.
      They really are scumbags, that's for sure...
      .
      Best of wishes in your solo endeavours!

    • @kati4684
      @kati4684 Pƙed 3 lety +7

      You piss on that grave and you piss on it *GOOD*

    • @wherethespitfiredare9794
      @wherethespitfiredare9794 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Piss on that grave as much as you can mate, good on ypu for getting out of there and take care!

    • @Zamolxes77
      @Zamolxes77 Pƙed 3 lety

      @@kati4684 Make sure it has Aides You have to have aides to piss on her grave .

  • @ElementofKindness
    @ElementofKindness Pƙed 3 lety +23

    Heck, up until almost 1970, you could buy dynamite in a hardware store. So yeah, lacing wood or coal with gunpowder/blackpowder is childsplay.

    • @hokutoulrik7345
      @hokutoulrik7345 Pƙed 2 lety +5

      In some more rural places, you can still get quarter sticks for 'stump clearing'. Most of the time it is indeed used for that on farms and such, but it does occasionally get used for other less legal purposes.

    • @chuck-echeese6706
      @chuck-echeese6706 Pƙed 2 lety +3

      Just give ‘em the stick paint it brown and say “it’s a new type” they are probably stupid enough to believe it

  • @nickyboy22071989
    @nickyboy22071989 Pƙed 4 lety +235

    I'm a mere plebeian here, a humble shitkicker and no expert. But I imagine that the vice principal was deleting those records because poorly behaved students reflect poorly on his school.

    • @jeed-qf1kx
      @jeed-qf1kx Pƙed 4 lety +11

      Yep my principal at my primary school covered all the fights and bullying on grounds to keep a clean palate on the school

    • @madkirk7431
      @madkirk7431 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      Probably, but they still should've reported it to the system.
      "The system" would be either the school system, or some other system.

    • @christiansmith804
      @christiansmith804 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      Curtis Warren BTW STOP BEGGING the issue is if you have them in the system it can affect the school financially, it’s fucked up but if you cover it up it helps the school, and if you report it the school may lose money witch will make things worse.

    • @cyrusbijan6363
      @cyrusbijan6363 Pƙed 3 lety

      thnx for giving a short explenation nickyboy

    • @michaelwest2141
      @michaelwest2141 Pƙed 3 lety

      The Vice Principal also knows that the school would have to address the kid’s behavioral problems (he was already a special ed student), which would likely entail more services, more specialists, possibly placement in an alternative school, and much greater costs to the school system. So he could be hiding problems to keep costs down, knowing the problem will belong to someone else in a couple of years.

  • @allena7879
    @allena7879 Pƙed 4 lety +64

    A Karen that's actually the non entitled one. I love it 😂

    • @anthonylau3065
      @anthonylau3065 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      What a pleasant surprise! All the good Karens in the world are getting a bad rap, almost like they're getting bullied from these stories. I liked it better when they were referred to as "entitled."

    • @dreyhawk
      @dreyhawk Pƙed 4 lety

      Someone suggested using Ivanka to describe them instead of Karen...

    • @bigstinkybeans
      @bigstinkybeans Pƙed 4 lety

      Yeah thats nice

    • @a2brostoo219
      @a2brostoo219 Pƙed 4 lety

      A change, and a good one

  • @JohnJ469
    @JohnJ469 Pƙed 3 lety +7

    The log story has been around a while. I first heard it over 40 years ago concerning river boats on the Murray River in the 1800s. The idea was that wood cutters would leave logs by the river with their name on the pile. The river boat captains would fuel and pay next time they were in the town. All except 1 who decided not to pay. An honour system only works when people are honourable. So the word went out that captains should leave one particular wood pile alone. Sure enough the pile disappeared and shortly after, the renegades boiler blew up.

  • @magnimalt
    @magnimalt Pƙed 3 lety +46

    "I'm kinda split on this one op, but on one hand she deserved it.."
    me: oh no he agrees with the-
    ...but on the other hand you screwed your cousins out of an inheritance."
    me: oh phew

  • @touchofcomics1841
    @touchofcomics1841 Pƙed 4 lety +91

    1: the kids will be fine. The money came from their dad's side of the family, they seem to be on good terms with him so they will still get a inheritance.

    • @themostbritishpersonalive868
      @themostbritishpersonalive868 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      I think it's an inheritance not a inheritance but I'm not sure

    • @84953
      @84953 Pƙed 4 lety +6

      Yeah, but who actually had the money? It sounds like the woman had gotten manipulative that she may have gotten the money from him. Just guessing. It sounds to me like this woman is legitimately psychotic.

    • @Excitable101
      @Excitable101 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      @@84953 the aunt got money from a divorce, but not all the money.

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 Pƙed 4 lety

      @@84953 She doesn't even come close to the clinical definition of psychosis, which is a permanent or recurring break(s) from reality. She merely had a garden variety inferiority complex, although severe, likely from the stated facts being due to her profound lack of money and/or financial resources in her younger formative years growing up.

    • @danielfronc4304
      @danielfronc4304 Pƙed 4 lety

      You can't assume that the father will pass the money on to his kids from his first marriage. This situation is pretty much identical to my ex-wife's family. Her father re-married, as a younger man is likely to do, and said he would only provide a token sum to his ex- in his will. He then went on to have a son by his second wife. Likely in the story any money he had would go to the new wife and younger son, as men usually pre-decease their wives (although I pray to outlive my ex-). You just never know when 2 familes having the same father are involved.

  • @slammedautomotive2591
    @slammedautomotive2591 Pƙed 4 lety +790

    Karen: is the good the person in the story
    Me:visible confusion
    (Edit: wow thanks for the likes fr)

  • @yotengo2807
    @yotengo2807 Pƙed 3 lety +38

    “my best friend Karen” lots of things wrong here

    • @MrBeevee5
      @MrBeevee5 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Unfortunate use of a real friend's name?

    • @thomasarussellsr
      @thomasarussellsr Pƙed 3 lety +4

      See, not all Karens are bad...
      Some people have that name for real, and they are good people!

    • @myddrinemrys8988
      @myddrinemrys8988 Pƙed 3 lety +3

      @@thomasarussellsr Not all Karens are “Karens.”

  • @macabremage6374
    @macabremage6374 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    Merit pay is a fancy way of saying "If there are no notable problems that occur, the higher-ups get paid more."
    Dude was erasing student records so he would get a bonus on his paycheck.

  • @Nepafarius
    @Nepafarius Pƙed 4 lety +24

    RSlash, for the Wealthy Karen story, OP likely didn't cost the children any inheritance. You forgot that OP mentioned the wife married into old money, she likely only got a portion of the family estate. Not only that, but OP makes a point that Mega Karen is terrible with money, she would've spent the rest of that money anyway. They will also probably get the house when she dies, making for easy tenant money.

  • @silentshepherd9601
    @silentshepherd9601 Pƙed 4 lety +90

    " so apparently in the early 1900s it was common for Americans to solve their problems with explosives and gunpowder pranks"... MERICA!

  • @hihello6456
    @hihello6456 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    That's some rally explosive morning wood--

  • @TheSimba86
    @TheSimba86 Pƙed 2 lety +3

    I remember hearing about the hollowed out logs filled with either gunpowder or m80 firecrackers as a means to stop firewood thieves probably 15 years ago so it probably has happened more than once

  • @gokummit969
    @gokummit969 Pƙed 4 lety +115

    In the third story when i heard karen i genuinely thought she was gonna be someone entitled 😂😂

  • @aurongrande6141
    @aurongrande6141 Pƙed 4 lety +29

    I doubt those Cousins got would have gotten any inheritence from that nasty Aunt anyway.

  • @ceruelion815
    @ceruelion815 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    School teacher here: the vice principal (or principals in larger schools) is typically the disciplinarian. The principal themself is typically not the one to discipline students directly except in certain circumstances. Just like how teachers are looked upon more favourably and are given raises based on the pass/fail rate of their classes, the VPs can be looked upon more or less favourably if they have "repeat offenders." I would imagine this was in a larger school, as vice principals in that case are usually divided among grade level. If your grade performs and behaves poorly, it comes back to the administrator moreso than the teachers' abilities to control the students. In addition, after so many disciplinary referrals, students are likely suspended and expelled based on the school's rules. The more suspensions and expulsions a particular administrator (especially one that serves as a disciplinarian) has to perform, the less favourably they are looked upon and their pay could potentially be affected by it.
    Edit: a lot of this also depends in district standards, city/county/state codes and laws, and even national laws depending on where this occured. My experience is coming from an American State where educators are typically seen as "scapegoats."

    • @bostonrailfan2427
      @bostonrailfan2427 Pƙed 2 lety

      it’s even further broken down if it’s an urban school: Principal is the CEO and oversees budgets, hiring, retention, curriculum planning. VP is usually the day to day operations manager who oversees the students’ discipline once they reach a certain point of being a problem and is the go-to for parents before escalating to the principal. Below the VP are the deans, whose jobs were to oversee x number of students and dish small discipline(detentions, in-school suspensions) and handle attendance issues.
      the principal would only get involved if it was an expulsion level offense as they are the ones that school boards go to for answers when students appeal suspensions and expulsions. students know to steer clear of the principal and to not be known as it’s not good to be known to the,

  • @FillyCheesteak
    @FillyCheesteak Pƙed 3 lety +13

    Everyone to the Karen: “Perhaps I’ve treated you too harshly.”

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 Pƙed 3 lety

      Holy Flip.
      I just found that theres a YT-Channel literally named 'Normalizing Nudity'!
      Every single Video is report-worthy! A crazy channel, where the Gender-Ratio being off is really only one thing that tipps you off that this Channel is NOT educational, duh...
      Wow...
      I wished more people would report or flag channel.
      Going out of their way to help the plattform; know what i mean?
      If someone wants to, feel free!!

  • @rossgoosen7269
    @rossgoosen7269 Pƙed 4 lety +316

    You know you’re early when there aren’t any hearted comments or an rSlash pinned comment

  • @sdmedia1323
    @sdmedia1323 Pƙed 4 lety +34

    That dude in the first story - clearly a police officer.
    And damn, he was good at what he did.
    And all of these people in the videos, if you can see this, congrats on the win.

  • @roberthickman2907
    @roberthickman2907 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    My great Aunt Shirley, had a problem with somebody stealing her wood, she actually had Dynamite in order to get rid of tree stumps on her land so I simply put a piece of dynamite in the wood plugged up the hole and even it out when the person got a hold of that piece of wood, they never stole wood from her again.

    • @GeekExtremist
      @GeekExtremist Pƙed 2 lety

      *because they died.
      You forgot to finish your comment.

  • @casualcoon9000
    @casualcoon9000 Pƙed 3 lety +6

    OP: puts explosives firewood
    Me: how is that not NUCLEARrevenge

  • @andy10121984
    @andy10121984 Pƙed 4 lety +54

    The 300,000 revenge said that his cousins were money smart and distanced themselves from their mother so I don't think the cousins would be surprised or unprepared for their mother to go broke.

    • @Pemenari
      @Pemenari Pƙed 4 lety +10

      i agree. when rSlash said he wasn't sure about that one cause op 'screwed' them out of inheritance i was like. "what inheritance? you mean the one she would have spent either way?"
      I doubt she was old so she would have plenty years left to make bad mistakes. op just made it happen a little faster. no biggie

    • @ceooflowqualityedits54
      @ceooflowqualityedits54 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      r/NuclearRevenge

  • @travisrose7164
    @travisrose7164 Pƙed 4 lety +60

    OP: I forgave my aunt.
    Also OP: I planned to screw over my aunt for years.
    Me:.......so you didn't forgive her at all.

    • @jakubpuchalski2583
      @jakubpuchalski2583 Pƙed 4 lety +7

      He did forgive. He jusy didnt forgot

    • @EpicNoob99
      @EpicNoob99 Pƙed 4 lety +15

      He forgave her for what she did to him, but not for what she did to his sister or mother

    • @jakubpuchalski2583
      @jakubpuchalski2583 Pƙed 4 lety +7

      @@CamaroZ28Nut3 no. Forgiving someone doesnt mean that a guilty person should not be punished.
      Ps. He said that he forgave her for what he has done to him but hasnt forgave ger for what she has done to his mother and sister

    • @SidereusOfTheFallen
      @SidereusOfTheFallen Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Reading comprehension is difficult, I understand. You have my sympathy.

    • @SidereusOfTheFallen
      @SidereusOfTheFallen Pƙed 4 lety

      @@CamaroZ28Nut3 Oh well, I guess they don't even listen, then, and neither do you. Problem solved, you failed both.

  • @russellkeeling9712
    @russellkeeling9712 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    Human traps are illegal everywhere I have ever been. Something like putting explosives in firewood you know your neighbor is going to steal is a good example of that. If you do this you will be welcoming a felony charge.

    • @danoconnor3720
      @danoconnor3720 Pƙed 2 lety

      It goes way back into English Common Law. Illegal to set dead traps.

    • @cyanideytcuriousseadoggo
      @cyanideytcuriousseadoggo Pƙed 2 lety +2

      Wtf that is the law defending those who break it and not those who comply.

  • @deniseeulert2503
    @deniseeulert2503 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    A guy who was in my business fraternity while I was at university in my city told this story. He was part of an extended family that farmed fruits and veggies and sold them locally. Their business was well known. At one point they were having melons stolen from the edges of their field, probably local kids. So the family would make an inconspicuous mark on some of the melons nearest to the edge of the field, and inject them with a mild laxative. The mark was so such fruit would not be sold or consumed. They took note when neighbor kids would go missing for a day or two, then reappear after "having the flu". Nothing could be proven, and soon melons stopped being stolen.

  • @EntFncomp
    @EntFncomp Pƙed 4 lety +85

    I thought the title was “they stole my firewood, so I laced it with drugs” then report them

    • @jaellanthehat3693
      @jaellanthehat3693 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      E N T Primarina genius

    • @raena-willowdeveruoix4631
      @raena-willowdeveruoix4631 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      Imagine dank weed, lol. "I was smelling something... rather odd coming from their house officer."

    • @readjordan2257
      @readjordan2257 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      But most drugs were legal then. Coca Cola literally had Cocaine perhaps during the time the story took place, or within a few decades after.

    • @sanskaarkulkarni1036
      @sanskaarkulkarni1036 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Lace it with weed, they will get high. Take this time to replace the wood with huge bundles of weed. Rinse and repeat till goal is achieved.

    • @EntFncomp
      @EntFncomp Pƙed 3 lety +1

      @@sanskaarkulkarni1036 you have been, DRUGGED

  • @thepoopenfarter
    @thepoopenfarter Pƙed 4 lety +25

    The last time I was this early, every Karen was still a little bratty entitled child.

  • @victorclabaugh1373
    @victorclabaugh1373 Pƙed 4 lety +17

    I would take my kids anywhere else such a toxic woman homeless in a car would be better and good for you that woman nearly ended you and you got revenge most times I think revenge is bad this case maybe taking back a piece of yourself she stole from you when young

  • @carljacobs1837
    @carljacobs1837 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Old neighbor used to steal my wood (apple and hickory) for his huge, fancy, and very expensive smoker. Used motor oil in the wood he stole. It was hilarious watching him lose his tiny mind when thick black smoke began pouring out of his smoker. Ruined everything.

  • @wildlifesymphony
    @wildlifesymphony Pƙed 4 lety +32

    "Like try to stab another student with a pencil..."
    Oop.
    My teachers saved my tail end then!
    I was homeschooled till highschool, enjoyed being on the family farm and working with and training different animals...
    Got in, aced the tests to prove I was educated....
    And once the guys that didn't grow up with me realized I was a nice looking gal...
    It began.
    Sad thing is, Everytime someone "made a move" a childhood friend was behind them saying not to try with me, that they'd regret, to just ask me for a hug or permission to touch etc...
    First time a teacher caught it, all I felt was a large guy behind me giving me a hug without warning or approval...
    I was getting a pen out of my bag to get ready for class..
    The end of that pen went thru his jeans, and left a nice mark for a few weeks...
    Not bad, cuz once he cried out I realized who it was and pulled in my auto response so as not to legit stab him with my good pen...
    Our teacher was halfway to me ready to remove the boy from me...
    Said teacher was frozen seeing the smart farm girl had reacted so fast and he didn't need to help her.
    He then asked if he needed to help the guy I stabbed...
    I even dug out ointment and a bandage from my locker for him...
    Another time I was switching books (I planned to be a vet- so u can guess how many large books I had.)
    I felt someone grab my hip and cover my eyes at the same time...
    Dropped as quick as I could and slammed the book I had over my head.
    Poor Jake.
    Or when a guy decided that to flirt with me, he'd steal my food as I ate.
    Farm girl, advanced classes, plus band and I helped my sister's by pitching softballs at home?
    I needed my food, I was a stick, but not because I didn't eat much.
    I warned him.
    My friends, and my sister's warned him not to try anything, specifically when I was tired as I had auto reactions..
    I broke my fork prongs on his hand before I realized what happened.
    A coach saw, and knew I'd been trying to chase him off- and that I'd been really busy... And hungry to the point of sneaking granola bars during class...
    He looked me in the eye, and told me to go get a new fork.
    I swear over my 4 years, those lunch ladies got alot of laughs.
    They knew what happened everytime I needed a fork.
    Even told me to keep a spare one just to trade for a clean one in my bag when I'd break them cuz the principal made me start turning in the old fork to get a new one the same day....
    He heard of what happened, saw the proof(from recognizing what a fork stab looks like on the kids hands)...
    And yet my reign of terror continued..

    • @TaiChiGhost
      @TaiChiGhost Pƙed 4 lety +8

      I teach Martial Arts. You would be surprised that bullying continues well into adulthood, _physical_ bullying even. I'll skip the anecdotes here but just say that the only thing better than putting a bully in his place is teaching someone else how, and knowing it worked :-)

    • @oliverdoyle629
      @oliverdoyle629 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      Oh I have a school story
      So I was sitting in class during 6th grade and the girl who was sitting next to me kept getting and walking around actively (and happily) telling people about her depression (like skipping) and I asked her to stop 1 time and proceed to attempt to jab a pencil into my neck as I held her arm back. It took a minute or 2 for teacher to notice and pull her away then I get in trouble? R/slash amITheA**hole LOL

    • @wildlifesymphony
      @wildlifesymphony Pƙed 4 lety +8

      @@TaiChiGhost We had bits and pieces taught as we grew up...
      Military family and we had come from Dallas 0-0'
      So our mum made sure we knew everything that she had to know to protect herself in Dallas...
      But we are out in the country with a small town that we went to school at...
      It was always interesting hearing what our new teachers were warned about with us each year.....
      They never believed the smart and quiet kids could be so rough and tumble.
      Right up till I took out one of the guys.
      Those that grew up with me knew better than to try something.
      Even like bullying someone else, cuz I'd hear about it and they'd regret- wether it was due to me tackling them or because of my words... Lol
      I felt bad at one point, having taught my niece some self defense...
      Cuz she got in trouble at school for "beating up" three other kids...
      When she told me what happened though, I wouldn't even tell her she did wrong(other than to remind her to stop defending herself when a teacher came).
      Two boys had knocked her down and then started kicking her, the third was the girl that talked them into it.
      She didn't defend herself till she was on the ground and realized the teachers weren't coming.
      She's 6.
      She already doesn't trust teachers as far as she could throw them when it comes to them controlling the other students.
      What she got in trouble for the most was on the bus, she had yanked a kid over the back of her seat (she was buckled up to remind her ADHD butt to stay seated) and had him in a choke hold....
      Thing is, his seat was two seats behind hers....
      So how the heck was he even close enough for her to do that!?
      She wouldn't stop till he tapped out, which is why she got in trouble cuz the bus driver tried breaking it up finally and my niece wouldn't let go till she knew this kid wouldn't be trying this again.
      (My fault on the choke hold- my pregnant lil sister was worried about self defense without hurting the baby.... I'm disabled, so she came to me to ask and I showed her some stuff...
      Apparently my niece saw 0-0')
      But both times the kids had been reported for bullying her and the one on the bus had been yanking her braids hard enough to make her cry, but the driver did nothing.
      I feel bad because she doesn't act like other kids, alot of its because of me.
      I know bullying continues into adulthood...
      I am 24 ATM, and have had to defend myself and my service dog physically multiple times.
      My first SD was kicked because I wouldn't let this one guy pet him- had my friend and his brother not been there... The guy would have gotten my stun gun to his face most likely.(Said dog was a 20pound medical alert dog at the time because I was still wheelchair bound.)
      And another was with my 2nd SD a lab/border collie mix(60ish pounds)... A Lady decided she wanted to pick a fight about how evil I was for making others deal with my dog (was walking thru a store for milk before pick up was an option a few years back)....
      My dog is now a mobility assist doggo, SD #2 helped me walk so I didn't have to use a wheelchair for my own safety.
      My current SD does the same.
      She grabbed the leather leash that kept me tethered to him so he could help me balance...
      I nearly broke her wrist when I grabbed it.
      Store manager is the only reason she got away without bones broken.
      Had she had time to struggle, I'm sure she would have broken her own wrist- and I wasn't letting go.
      He took care of her and made sure I was ok...
      Just yeah.

    • @michaelrobertson4896
      @michaelrobertson4896 Pƙed 2 lety +4

      Back in my school days I was bullied frequently because of my autism. It was torture for years and honestly I still hate the school for allowing it to go on as long as it did. For the most part I just ignored their taunts and general bs until in high school they decided to get physical. They’d shove me kick my stuff across the room and once actually shoved me in the girl’s bathroom (that last action actually got me suspended and was the proverbial nail in the coffin for my patience) I frequently told the teachers and begged them to do something to stop it, but they either didn’t care or didn’t want to bother with the whole thing. After awhile I realized that the teacher’s were absolutely useless and that I’d have to deal with it myself. So I issued a warning to the teachers “either you handle it for me or else I will deal with it myself” you can guess what they did
 absolutely nothing, so I was forced to act. Around lunch time the next day they started it up again, kicked my bag across the room and then threw my lunch across the room at the window. As they laughed I finally snapped and proceeded to knock them out with a single punch to each of them, boom they dropped like bags of cement. By the time the teachers arrived I was standing in the middle of a circle with six people knocked unconscious laying at my feet. Believe it or not that was me holding back, way back. Needless to say I was punished with a week long suspension and was nearly expelled but wasn’t because my mom threatened to sue the school for their inaction against my bullies. It would definitely have been a PR nightmare for them had we proceeded. But upon my return I discovered them my former bullies were now utterly terrified of me as was most of the other students. They had seen a brief flash of what I was capable of and were rightfully scared of it. Thing is I’m a pacifist, I hate using violence to solve my problems but don’t mistake it for weakness. I hate that I had to do it but the circumstances forced my hand. I don’t regret my actions that day but I am sad and disappointed that it came to that. Also as a side note: after the incident I basically lost any and all respect and trust for the teachers as was reflected in my final words at graduation, I literally said in the microphone as I was handed my diploma “later a**holes smell my a**” and shot them the bird. My mom and grandma were kinda mad at me but after the hell of dealing with them for 4 years I said that I deserved that moment. They had to agree with that but they were still a little mad about it. Believe it or not I got other stories about how much they sucked but that’s for another day.

  • @richardweighill8556
    @richardweighill8556 Pƙed 4 lety +9

    There’s a family story from my fathers side of the family that supposedly happened in the early part of the Great Depression. Early 30s? My family was in a small Saskatchewan farming community and they had a farm with a few types of stock animals. Horses, pigs, chickens, etc... One early winter day my grandfather went out to feed the animals and discovered one of the hogs was missing. During the Depression this was the worst sort of thing that someone could do, essentially cattle rustling, and could get a thief hung if he were caught and/or cause a family huge financial hardship and even starvation. My grandfather, being a thoughtful man slow to anger, came up with a plan. He told NO-ONE about the loss of the hog. Not even the family. He just kept it to himself.
    One summer day, about 7 months later, as he was working in the fields, a neighbour was walking by and stopped to chat. After a few minutes of idle gossip the neighbour asked if my grandfather had ever figured out who stole his hog. My grandfather just smiled, looked him in the eye, and said “yup”. Two days later the neighbour had uprooted his family and headed south. Apparently the farming in South Dakota is much better.

  • @williamgandarillas2185
    @williamgandarillas2185 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    Kim Jun Un: I fear no man
    But that thing.
    Authoritarian Aunt
    It scares me.

  • @jennifergardner3155
    @jennifergardner3155 Pƙed 3 lety +12

    As far as the vice principal of a school getting “merit pay“, yes schools get bonuses for their own grades. This is why they came up with the “no child left behind“. When it comes to public schools, the better the kids grades, the less disciplinary action that has to be taken, typically that school gets better funding. Better funding means better pay. I don’t know if it’s this way throughout the entire country, but it definitely is where I live.

  • @mystikmind2005
    @mystikmind2005 Pƙed 4 lety +48

    The aunt story, i thought the revenge was going to be years later let her stay in OP house then order her around like a dog in exactly the same ways she did to OP - now that would be the perfect revenge!

    • @woodenkat8971
      @woodenkat8971 Pƙed 3 lety +8

      Nah, it would be repeating a pattern of toxic behavior and it sounds like OP worked hard in therapy to break that. Taking away her second greatest love, money? So much sweeter.

    • @sxatcychan1988
      @sxatcychan1988 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      @@woodenkat8971 There's that, but there's also the high chance the lazy Aunt does a sh*t job with her work. When that happens, OP will have to deal with the extra work and stress of punishing the Aunt to submission.

    • @fussbudgetstories
      @fussbudgetstories Pƙed 2 lety

      The need to be a good person wasn't in her aunt's heart, it was only in her ego.

  • @LuMD
    @LuMD Pƙed 4 lety +38

    "so apparently in the early 1900s Americans solved their problems with explosives and gunpowder prinks"
    Guess not much has changed then.

  • @scottys1423
    @scottys1423 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    I noticed some firewood disappear a few years ago. I had a mix of cut/split pieces ready to burn, and small logs (maybe 6-8 footers), all from trees in my yard I had to remove. Less than a cord total. On two successive Sundays I noticed a few cut pieces had been taken. I moved the remaining cut pieces inside the garage, leaving the logs. I put sign on the small log pile saying "I'd have given you the wood if you'd just asked, but since you prefer to steal you can cut it yourself." None of the logs we're ever taken. The culprit next door only leased the house for a year and then moved...thankfully.

  • @johnjoseph2010
    @johnjoseph2010 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    "So apparently, in the early 1900s, it was common for Americans to solve their problems with explosives and gun powder pranks"
    Those were better times

    • @cyanideytcuriousseadoggo
      @cyanideytcuriousseadoggo Pƙed 2 lety +2

      As the law actually took the context of the actions of both sides into consideration.

  • @thepolevaulter2494
    @thepolevaulter2494 Pƙed 4 lety +112

    “ In the early 1900’s it was common for Americans to solve their problems with high explosives and gunpowder pranks.”
    North Korea: Do I not exist

    • @cessposter
      @cessposter Pƙed 4 lety +7

      1940's Americans: nah not really

    • @wta1518
      @wta1518 Pƙed 4 lety +3

      July 3rd 1776 America: We aren’t even a county yet

    • @ocow5735
      @ocow5735 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      North Korea didn’t exist in the early 1900s lol

    • @javelinjoe7034
      @javelinjoe7034 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Americans in the early 1900's: What is this North Korea? Are we getting another state or something?

    • @stevenlundvall6411
      @stevenlundvall6411 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      nah going to war with them you know civil war (flash backs)

  • @kingcobraarchie
    @kingcobraarchie Pƙed 4 lety +39

    Last time I was so early, Entitled mothers tried to stop my mum from breastfeeding me

  • @YenSnipest
    @YenSnipest Pƙed 2 lety +1

    This sounds like legal repercussions for both parties...so really my question is, how many others ever clicked this to see what bs they did to avoid liability for explosive laced logs?

  • @CopieKat
    @CopieKat Pƙed 3 lety +2

    If you read this Rslash, THANK YOU. You're voice is soothing and I listen to your videos when I do my school works. It makes me determined to finish it. Like a dude listening to the radio. Keep up the good work!

  • @laptopcommando
    @laptopcommando Pƙed 4 lety +23

    I have a profound, deep, nearly irrational hatred of thieves, so I love hearing about them reaping the whirlwind for their crimes!

  • @SlotterYT
    @SlotterYT Pƙed 4 lety +19

    I love the one about the wood. That'll teach the thief not to steal. Nowadays, the criminals are protected more than the victims. BLOWITUP!!!

    • @DVankeuren
      @DVankeuren Pƙed 2 lety +3

      yeah, but if they would have died, the story would not have been so entertaining.

  • @rosssmith4638
    @rosssmith4638 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    When my mum was about 10 years old, she lived in a small mining town.
    Wood was going missing around town.
    One of the blokes put some dynamite into one of his logs.
    The chimley of one of the local police officers blew up.
    Nothing was said about it, no more fire wood went missing.

  • @erichanastacio9695
    @erichanastacio9695 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    Firewood with gunpowder?
    Literally they're BOOMSTICKS

  • @wickedblade4751
    @wickedblade4751 Pƙed 4 lety +32

    You mentioned op screwed his cousins out of an inheritance by setting up their aunt but from the way she spent money the aunt would likely have just blown through it and left it the cousins with debt anyways soo they probably enjoyed seeing their mother get that sweet karma more, also yes sorta about merit pay my mom is a teacher and she said that generally it looks favorably on the principal and vp if schools don't have behavioral issues too

    • @ryanm4013
      @ryanm4013 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      An inheritance isn’t an entitlement. You can’t be screwed out of something that there was never a guarantee of to begin with. The Aunt has every right to spend every dime she had or even give it all away to others upon her death. So they were hardly “screwed”. Also, didn’t the dad have the real money anyways who they were closer to?!

  • @Rabijeel
    @Rabijeel Pƙed 4 lety +33

    If your School is a "good one", you get more money. If your School is a "bad one", you get hit by financial Cuts first. Cuts are usually done on Salary and Materials.
    If a School performs well, it is the Head Staff who gets the praise - in form of Raises or Bonus Payments.
    "Bad Kids" are for "bad Schools" (..yeah, it makes a lot of sense, I know...), good Kids are visiting "good Schools" - so, Bad Kid = bad School = bad Staff = bad Management.
    Wonderful bureaucratic Capitalism.

    • @lauralynnwilliams2338
      @lauralynnwilliams2338 Pƙed 3 lety +1

      imo it should be reversed, schools that tend to have more behavioral problems should have more support than schools who are "better", if schools have more support than can better help the troubled students

    • @charmedleblanc
      @charmedleblanc Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@lauralynnwilliams2338 That's what would make sense. We have a shitty school system in the US.

    • @bartonabrams3433
      @bartonabrams3433 Pƙed 2 lety

      Given the state of American schools where race shaming has become common, you don’t need to pass math, English, or science to graduate, kids can do the pledge of allegiance to any flag other than the US flag and you have teachers “educating” five YEAR olds in BDSM as sexual expression and oh yes gender shaming male students (look it up, it’s all over various news stations and of course, CZcams) is it any wonder why American schools are such a joke in the world

    • @byakuyatogami2905
      @byakuyatogami2905 Pƙed 2 lety

      @@bartonabrams3433 I have several questions

  • @MelanaC
    @MelanaC Pƙed 3 lety +1

    My kids went to school in Scotland. Both my kids are on the spectrum. When my oldest was struggling with school bullies I was told not to make such a fuss and I was discouraged from wanting to homeschool. I found out later that my son had a very high PIP score and removing him from the school would mean the school would lose its bonus... the more kids with high PIP pulled up the average so they got more money!
    Complete disregard for my child’s mental health ... NO encouragement for ongoing psychological help!
    I removed both my children and homeschooled! Son is a computer game content creator (working for a large software company) and daughter is a musician and artist!
    I’m so happy that I took them out of that poisonous environment. So yes the schools in Scotland are penalised and lose funding if there is trouble in the school!

  • @HunterRedux
    @HunterRedux Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Teacher here, I know in SOME states the less referrals that are in their logging system that get reported to the state the better the school looks. This is a GROSS mishandling of discipline, even for a student with an IEP (Individualized Education Plan).

  • @LegoEngineer003
    @LegoEngineer003 Pƙed 4 lety +10

    It sounds like the cousins really didn’t need an inheritance, they left the aunt as soon as possible and are doing very well on their own financially.

  • @atree7509
    @atree7509 Pƙed 4 lety +13

    Aww noo, my tree comrades!!!

    • @ilovefunnyamv2nd
      @ilovefunnyamv2nd Pƙed 4 lety +4

      They Died to be an explosion ^_^
      Could have been worse, they could have become toilet paper

    • @Asutoro
      @Asutoro Pƙed 4 lety +1

      /r/beetlejucing

  • @jarrod752
    @jarrod752 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    I recall him saying the aunt was squandering the money... And not good on her own with it.
    Those cousin's weren't getting an inheritance from their mother. They are probably fine from their father.

  • @lifegoddess1410
    @lifegoddess1410 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    I was bullied and harassed for nearly the entirety of my schooling. I had got my teachers, my mother, and the one police officer in the school involved. I had even pointed out one instance of harassment on the schools camera system to the VP and low in behold, when trying to get the records for an official report and for my therapist. (The dates and frequency of this happening.) There was nothing. And the VP had the nerve to say he didn't remember any of it! Yet during my time in the school it was always, "it's being handled." And "This is a no bullying school." The thing that makes it worse was it was almost always the same kid. Others had even found out i was reporting him and his friends, and told me to give up cause he was the VPs favorite kid and they'd been told "he can do no wrong". It seriously pisses me off that this crap happens.

  • @officergreg1318
    @officergreg1318 Pƙed 4 lety +37

    Karen: *is the good guy in the story*
    Me: *impossible*

  • @shaywilson2971
    @shaywilson2971 Pƙed 4 lety +9

    Schools get grants and kickbacks for things like attendance, academics, and infractions. Chances are the upper staff does get a bonus if the whole school meets the correct numbers.
    Side note: if you have research and writing skills I'd suggest looking into becoming a grant writer. It can be very lucrative.

  • @deleteaccount8135
    @deleteaccount8135 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    “So apparently in like the early 1900s it was common for Americans to solve their problems with high explosives & gunpowder pranks” 😆

  • @stevenboykin116
    @stevenboykin116 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    About the explosive coal during WWII, the Allies made plans for sabotaging German power plants with explosive coal but the plans were intercepted so they never put it into practice. The plans caused the Germans to become so paranoid about the idea that it slowed the production process significantly because they had to constantly check to make sure the coal was good.

  • @extro523
    @extro523 Pƙed 4 lety +84

    The last story sounds like “Middle School: The Worst Years Of My Life” yk that movie on Netflix? Well the principal rigs the test to get higher scores for a bonus. Sounds a lot like the VP in the last one.

    • @soulbound2
      @soulbound2 Pƙed 4 lety

      Oh I know that movie it was a nice

    • @Cinko420
      @Cinko420 Pƙed 4 lety

      Extro
      It was originally a book, I believe.

    • @extro523
      @extro523 Pƙed 4 lety

      Cinko515 yeah

    • @ratking4768
      @ratking4768 Pƙed 4 lety

      Ah yes I love that movie

    • @m1kankinnie55
      @m1kankinnie55 Pƙed 4 lety

      Extro yeah! I love that movie

  • @--EW--
    @--EW-- Pƙed 4 lety +5

    I can tell you that in that last story, stuff like that actually happens. When I was working with one school I had to deal with several delinquent children. None of them listened and would act out, I even had a 4th grader jump on my back. The school never punished him, refusing to believe me without video evidence. When I took it to my supervisor they found that the student had an ADHD, and because of that the student couldn't be punished for assaulting me. I had another student that was apart of that same group of kids tell me that the teacher told her that they weren't going to punish any of the students as it was to early in the school year.

  • @jenniferwintz2514
    @jenniferwintz2514 Pƙed 3 lety

    Firewood story, I felt that. Having spent countless hours in my youth helping cut, haul, and stack wood for the winter, it's hard work! You don't want to lose the value of that work or be cold in the winter.

    • @thedude925
      @thedude925 Pƙed 2 lety

      Setting up a deadly booby trap that you can reasonably assume will go off is illegal unfortunately, yes, even if it has to be stolen to go off.

  • @andybreglia9431
    @andybreglia9431 Pƙed 2 lety +3

    (Caught some typos)
    Thing with firewood explosives reminds me of a prank we pulled. We tied a cherry bomb to a long strip of cloth to make sure it got pulled all the way down the pipe. When it went off, you would hear screeches from the girls room. What we didn't know was that someone in chemistry disposed of calcium carbide down the sink. It produced acetylene when it is exposed to water. When it went off, the shock wave set off all the acetylene in the sewer system causing all the toilets on campus to back up. Heard that the dean of girls got blown off the can.