rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance My Professor Mocked a Disabled Student During Class!
Episode Date: March 7, 2021r/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 professo...r, 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! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to R-Slash, a podcast where I read the best post from our cross-reddit. Today's
sub-reddit is R-Slash and malicious compliance, where OP gets a bigoted professor fired.
Our next reddit post is from Kai Spaceband though. So when I was a freshman in college,
I registered for a basic English 102 course that doubled
as a humanities credit.
I thought, great, two birds with one stone, despite the rate my professor for the class
being a bismillet best.
A few things to note, I have ADHD and dyslexia.
So I have a hard time reading most times, but especially handwritten stuff.
Even my own handwriting.
It's also important to note that I had an American with disabilities act allowance on
file.
These permissions included use of my tablet during class to write notes and about an hour
longer on tests.
Well, on my first day of class, the professor strolls in with the arrogance and snobitude
of someone who thinks they're getting tinier this year.
He starts going over the syllabus and says,
there will be no phones, laptops, or technology of any kind in my class.
You will write all your notes by hand,
which is not going to work for me,
so I raise my hand and ask him if I can talk to him privately about the rule.
That went over about as well as a lead balloon,
and he starts getting snippy and says, anything you need to talk to me about can be found in the syllabus. But again,
I said that I had to talk to him and that it was pretty important. Finally, he just says,
say it to the whole class, I don't have time to deal with whining of any kind. Like,
okay, dude. I say that I'm dyslexic and I need my tablet to take notes and read the
assignments. And that my ADA permissions are on file and e-mailed to all the professors before class.
He says, yeah, I saw that e-mail, 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.
can do the work just like everyone else, you're not special even if you were in special ed.
Oh no, what have you done dude?
The class goes deadly quiet at that.
I'm absolutely shocked at his bold and completely hilarious lack of awareness and care for
his job.
I'm staring at him open mouthed, and he thinks that he's won.
He's got this smug little face like I've just been told there are no other options,
nor is there any way that has ever read this behavior.
One of the girls in class finally finds her voice and calls him out in his ableism and
lack of decorum.
But he cuts her off saying, if you don't like my rules, you can drop the class.
So she says, okay, and pulled out her laptop and dropped the class right in front of him.
And taking the cue from her, three other students and I do the exact same thing and we leave
the class together.
I've never met this girl before, but she then asked me if I want to go to the dean because
honestly I'm really shaken.
So I said yeah, and we go straight there telling the dean of students what happened as well
as the ADA counselor.
They took the girl's statement in mind and discovered that this professor has pulled
this stunt for years, but nobody wanted to get involved.
Six months later, I hear that not only did the professor not get tenure, but he was also fired and blacklisted from teaching at the collegiate level.
Let's just like... Let's just recap here.
This guy said something discriminatory, which is a violation of a federal law in front of like 30 college student witnesses, and let's not forget that college students
tend to be some of the most liberal people out there.
So if you would expect anybody to stand up for discrimination, you think it'd be college
students.
Also major props to that random girl, she sounds like an awesome human being.
Our next reddit post is from Ace Cooper.
I worked for a mid-sized fashion company with around 150 retail stores nationwide as a
maintenance and safety coordinator.
Four months into the job my manager quit and I picked up everything.
And I was doing fine on my own for years and I was the only person in charge in maintaining
the stores and the alarm systems and all the stores.
I did get a pay bump but not a promotion in my title.
I put my contact number on every
store's emergency contact list just in case the primary contacts, usually the store managers,
don't pick up their phones in case of emergencies. And the store manager almost always refused to
pick up calls during off hours. So my phone would bring at least 2-3 times every night. 99% of these
times are false alarms, usually caused by window
break sensors getting tripped because of vibrations from a big truck passing by or a leaf hitting the
window. I hated it, but I had to do it because if no one on the emergency contact list picks up
the phone, the alarm company automatically calls the police for dispatch and there are penalties
for false alarms, ranging from 50 bucks to 200
bucks for incidents after 2-3 freebies in various by location.
In 2017, the Department of Labor passed a law requiring all employees making under a certain
amount of money to be converted to hourly so they can earn over time.
My salary was $800 short of making the cut.
I brought it up with HR, stating that an hourly schedule
would actually interfere with my duties, and an $800 raise in pay would make everything
easier. HR simply said, well that's too bad, and we can't do anything about it at the
moment. Well, okay. After that conversation, I put my phone on mute and stop caring about
anything outside of my 9-5 job. In hindsight, life was actually so much easier and better that way.
And I'm not sure why even wanted to stay on salary.
Months go by without a new series issues, but the penalties for false alarm start to pile
up.
One day, the accounting department brought me into their office to ask what those costs
were.
I told them what they were, and they sent out a memo reminding all store managers that safety is of critical importance, and they
have to pick up calls from alarm companies. No one bothered asking why there was a surge
of these additional costs, and I didn't care enough to remind them that it was because
of me.
A few more months go by, and one morning I woke up to almost 20 missed calls on my cell.
Apparently, one of our Florida stores was broken into the night before at around 3 a.m.
The store manager tried to get a hold of me because I was the person in charge of requesting
and dispatching vendors for things like emergency boarding up.
After an hour of trying to get a hold of me, she eventually started calling up everybody
on the hierarchy for help, and I had six
missed calls from the senior BP of operations alone. Eventually, the director of construction
was able to get a crew to board up the store, but that was almost three hours later, and
everyone was royally pissed. Unsurprisingly, the second I stepped into the office, I was
called into the office with all the senior management in HR, and they asked me why I wasn't there to take care of it. I simply replied, because I already clocked
out. The senior VP of operations was obviously not pleased with that answer, and said it was
my duty, and I had to be on standby at all times to handle these situations even during
off hours. To which I stated, oh, so I should be on call then. In that case, I'll have to work with
accounting to get properly compensated for my on-call hours once we have a schedule
established. The room went silent, and nothing came out of the rather short meeting. Later
that afternoon, HR called me into the office again asking whether I'd like to become
salaryed again with a pay bump. I said I'll take a pay bump, but I'd rather stay hourly and walked out. They did not give me the
pay bump. OP, I'm proud of you for standing tall. They were basically trying to
intimidate you into doing free work, and I'm glad you told them to basically
stuff it. Whenever work doesn't get done, bosses are really quick to tell you
that it's your responsibility, but when it comes time to pay for that work,
suddenly it's no one's responsibility.
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Our next Reddit post is from Data Nerd. This happened about 10 years ago at my American
University. I enrolled in a class that two friends also happened to enroll in. It was
an elective for our major. The professor whom I'll call a professor why told me straight
off the bat that our entire grade would be based off of two exams that would be open book.
And we could collaborate with anyone else in the class as long as we cited that we did
so.
Additionally, this was the kind of exam that you could submit as many times as you want
before the deadline.
Professor Y's rules though were that he would grade easiest on the first try and much tougher
with each subsequent try.
Fair enough.
Now some background on this professor. I'm not defending him, but I do think this context
is important. He immigrated to the US from another country where women are seen as inferior
and are often expected to be meek and quiet. Maybe less so nowadays, but definitely more so when
he was growing up. In class one day, a female student challenged
the professor and he argued back. She admitted that he made a good point and he said to her,
you're very agreeable, you'd make a good wife. Now, at this point, I probably should have
reported him for sexism. However, we all apparently let it slide. He was in his late 60s head tenure,
so I think we all brushed it aside as harmless.
I'm a female by the way. Fast forward a few weeks into the semester and the first exam is given
to us. I did the test together with my male friend, David. We submitted our test on the same day.
On the bottom of my test, I wrote, worked with David because I wouldn't have followed
the professor's rules. A few days later, we all got our first attempt at the test back.
David scored the equivalent of about a C.
My test had a big fat zero at the top with the words cheater written on it.
I was shocked.
I obviously waited until class was over and asked why this was written on my test, and
professor why it started screaming at me.
I hate liars.
I hate people like you. You are scum, you're a liar!
I couldn't believe what I was hearing.
I was sobbing and I explained that he said, and that it was in the syllabus that we could
work with other students.
I asked where I cheated, and Professor Y literally underlined the first five words of one
question where both David and I started off the paragraph by saying
something like, the reason that we're seeing these results is, and that was it.
I asked him why he thought I cheated and not David.
But Professor why wouldn't listen to me and continue to insult me until I left?
Now my university was super strict about plagiarism and cheating.
We got emails like once a week about the Honor Council.
These emails said that anyone caught cheating would be reported to the Honor Council and
sit trial.
So I went to their office and reported myself.
They were all confused and were like, wait, you're reporting yourself, not the professor?
And I told them calmly that I had been accused and given a zero without any evidence, so I wanted to sit trial. They incredulously told me that no student had
ever asked for a trial, but I was following the university rules and I was confident I would
win. Needless to say, Professor Y was not happy. At the end of the next class, he pulled
me aside and screamed at me yet again that these were his rules and his class.
And he decides the grades not the Honor Council.
I said that's not the University's policy, and if he thought that I was cheating, he should
have gone to them.
Since he didn't, I did.
He was livid and tried to bully me to back down, but I didn't.
We had the trial, and obviously I won.
At the end of the semester, I organized a meeting with the dean of the school and filed
a formal sexism complaint against Professor Y.
The dean, also incredulous, promised a launch of formal investigation of this professor
and would be meeting with him to discuss it.
I'm sure that nothing happened besides a slap on the wrist, but even a slap on the wrist was worth it. And down in the comments, we have this story from Lilith
Immaculate. I feel this. I got accused of plagiarism and sociology when on one class because
I used the term non-verbal communication. All I got was a mark down on my essay and a note
that I shouldn't be reading former student's essays. So naturally I approached the professor when I was like WTF. He told me the term had been a requirement to use in the essay
in previous years and that there was no way I knew what it meant when he hadn't reached that
chapter yet. I just stared it unblinkly for like 15 seconds because I couldn't believe what he was
saying. I kind of snapped and told him, you don't think that I'm intelligent enough to know that nonverbal communication
It means communicating through nonverbal f-ing ways. It's literally in the name.
Jesus Christ, do you normally teach elementary school?
He kind of just stuttered an apology and removed the demerit.
I couldn't believe that a university had so little faith in their students that they couldn't believe that they'd understand a basic self-explanatory term.
Our next reddit post is from Sirono Domeniac.
Long ago when I landed a couple hundred miles away, my father wanted to dress up the front
corner of our property with a section of decorative fence and a few rose bushes.
Myself, being a tween-age boy and not having the good sins to be somewhere else, was
drafted to help him one hot July Saturday
afternoon. We brought the new fence post to the corner of the lot, along with the shovel and a
post-old digger. It was a long, slow process, as the clay heavy soil was fairly dry and hard baked,
and as such, each hole was taking the better part of 20 minutes to dig. This definitely wasn't on
the list of things I wanted to spend my afternoon doing, but such as life. Right about the time we started on the final whole,
mommy yelled to dad from the house announcing that he had a phone call. Since these were the days
before mobile phones, dad headed off to the house and instructed me to keep digging until I get back.
Lucky for me, this hole went a bit differently than the first four. About the moment he got to the
door of the house, I busted through the clay layer into
a much sandier soil, where I could get a couple of inches of soil in one scoop rather than
perhaps a quarter of an inch per scoop.
Easy peasy.
Now, I was a good kid.
I didn't cause any significant trouble.
I got good grades and I helped out around the house.
But seizing an opportunity for malicious compliance was definitely among my personal
strengths.
So, I kept digging and digging.
Post-holer in, squeeze, post-holer out, dump, repeat.
That wasn't on that phone call very long, but I made good time, and by the time I saw
him at the door coming back, I was quite literally putting the post-holer all the way down
to the ground. To the point where the tips of the handles were just below the surface
of the ground. And I couldn't really dig because I couldn't open up the handles to squeeze
the digging end anymore. So, if I had to guess, I'd say the hole was about 5 feet deep.
How's it going? I think it's deep enough now. Let's put the post in and check. I'm
wearing a huge grand wally stoop over to pick up the post now. Let's put the post in and check. I'm wearing a huge grand-wally stoop sover to pick up the post.
Dad proceeds to drop the post in the hole.
All the way in the hole.
See, these posts were made me about hip-hide when they were installed.
Probably about five feet long themselves.
So, there's Dad.
Momentarily struck speechless.
Amazement washing over his face.
He looks at me.
You told me to keep digging until you got back.
I shrug.
You little turd and he laughs.
Dad had to grab the post with his fingertips and pull it back out of the hole.
And it wasn't but a few seconds of work to refill the hole to the proper depth.
And to this day, my dad loves telling the story
of his maliciously compliant son. And then OP posted an update. Follow up. Years later,
dad realized that he should have followed the call before you dig rule. Turns out, the
hole that I was digging was within a footer to of an underground main power line for the
neighborhood. He still feels guilty about it, saying, I almost killed
us. So like in an alternate reality, there's definitely a scenario where Opie's like,
oh, I'm going to teach my dad a lesson and keep digging. And then he digs to greedy, digs
too deep, hits the power line and kills himself. That was our slash malicious compliance. And if
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