Even if the lady did have a heart condition she STILL wouldn’t need seating for 8! How the manager allowed her to occupy 2 tables (making it difficult for people who paid a lot more than just 1 coffee!!) is beyond me! It is actually quite infuriating!
I chuckled really loud at that ma'am/sir story. Near the end of that, I was concerned that the manager was going to chew OP out, but apparently she just wanted to commiserate and that really made me glad ☺️
About the ma'am - I worked on a Chicago commuter train and while collecting I was coming up from behind the passengers. I asked ticket, sir? And a WOMAN looked up at me, and she was NOT happy. Ever after I said - ticket, please. TOTALLY gender neutral. A co-worker made a dumb guy mistake (which I had done.....once) By asking a passenger when she was due. She WAS NOT pregnant. She filed a complaint. The boss was laughing when he pointed out the error of this guy's ways. And, like me, he never did THAT again!!!
Crazy that the guy went to a welding program that didn't mention wire-welding. It's been the most common form of welding at least since I was in high-school.
It's been the most popular method of welding in the welding industry for literal decades. Like the 70's or 80's I believe. Which really sucks because I can't MIG weld to save my life; I have had every single MIG machine I've ever operated jam on me even with my teachers operating the controls (it seriously baffled them since, according to them, my technique was just fine).
The welding robots that make shopping trolleys (carts)/supermarket 'cages' (in which produce in brought from the back to the shop floor) use a wire-feed welding system as well as spot-welding. The only manual welding was done by about 12 welders in the whole factory and that was for any welds missed by the robots for any reason. I worked in the UK factory that made them.
@@alexwalker2582 I can't manual weld due to my eyes not reacting quick enough to weld in a straight line, either I'd 'burn-through' or my welds looked like bumpy cooked spaghetti lol.
@@sallyphilpin1104 My grandpa was very disappointed in my inability to weld metal, I feel your pain 😆 To this day, an angle grinder is my best friend if I have to weld anything.
My Welsh granddad was a Sergeant Major in the Somerset Light Infantry and I was raised to have manners and use Sir/Madam with those older than myself or Young Sir/Young Lady to those younger (except little old ladies who have a fantastic sense of humour which I'll call 'Young Lady' to make them giggle bashfully). I have brought my daughter up to have the same respect for others and I've always been able to take her anywhere and be proud of her behaviour, even when she was a toddler. I was lucky as she never had any temper tantrums when out of the house and hardly ever when home.
So, ma'am literally means 'my lady,' and is used in context of social standing. You're saying that whoever you use it on is of equal or greater social standing as oneself. To claim not to be a ma'am means she was essentially saying she's of lower social standing, and thus not worthy of being served. Seems accurate.
It's more of a regional thing. I'm from the north and it's very seldom used except by ex-military. I find it fundamentally subservient. I'm currently in Texas near a military base and hear it all the time. Some days I find it more annoying than others but since people don't me any harm by it I ignore it.
You gonna try it? I'M NOT GONNA TRY IT! 😁Hey! Let's get Mikey to try it! He'll try ANYTHING! HEY MIKEY! 🤔MIKEY? WHERE'S MIKEY?!?! Oh, Mikey's in jail now. You know how he is, right? Bye-bye, Mikey! ✨🤗✨
On the ma'am/sir one. I was raised the same way. When I joined the military & called an E-8 "sir", he told me "don't call me sir, I work for a living". It's now my response when called ma'am. I'll be called ma'am when I either retire from working or from living (whichever comes first).
My Welsh granddad was a Sergeant Major in the Somerset Light Infantry and I was taught to call gentlemen/ladies older than me Sir/Madam and males/females younger than me Young Sir/Young Lady (except little old ladies who have a fantastic sense of humour which I'll call 'Young Lady' just to hear them giggle bashfully). I brought up my daughter the same way and I've always been able to take her anywhere and be proud of her behaviour.
Oh, the mind boggling of the "Sir/Ma'am" story. "He called me sir when I told him not to call me 'ma'am!' " "Well.... what do you want him to call you?" Short and sweet and a perfect picture of so much that is wrong today. Good job, OP! We salute you!
3:00 Water park: Karen should have thought a bit and said to the manager at the table: I am a Karen and I have a brain condition! (My 2 working bran cells often switch off).
10:00 Really sad when some menopausal women scream at others when they can easily apply estrogen cream lavishly and then take a vib to bed! Disclaimer: Not all women. Not all older women, only a few.
Karens do in fact have 2 working Brain Cells...but they don't switch themselves off... One of their cells is ALWAYS lost and the other is out looking for it...
So I've been a welder for 15 years. Done mig, Tig, arc, friction even a bit of under water welding and I've never heard of a wire being horizontal only and it makes absolutely no sense for it to be horizontal only. So I'm going to out right call bullshit on op's story
@@alexwalker2582 I've even looked online and called my supplier and both the internet search and my supplier came back with there is no wire that's horizontal only but there's rods that are suggested for only horizontal because of how hot they burn example is 5/32 welding electrodes because they burn insanely hot and insanely fast due to the diameter but you can still do overhead and vertical with them it's just harder
There are rods that are horizontal only such as 7024 but I've never heard of a wire that was. You might have to change the voltage or wire feed rate but the wire is what it is.
I'm almost 58. I call everyone, including the part time students, ma'am and sir. They may cringe inwardly that they're too young to be a ma'am or sir but they accept it as a sign of respect. I guess it's better than b**ch and b'tard.
@@teresabillings8378 I'm the same way and as old. When I was growing up you got corrected if I didn't say ma'am,sir or thank you. Hard habit to break at this age 😂 Have a great day 🤗😎
@@bridgetdebourgh5698 yes, definitely please and thank you. I've had young men hold the door for me, not expecting a thank you because I always do. I think it's just plain rude not to recognize their courtesy.
I'm front the north an to me it's just a totally unneeded verbage that isn't needed at all. In my home area the only time I would use it is to hail someone over a distance. I think the last time a did it was a women with a couple of kids with her that dropped her wallet leaving the register after paying for her groceries. In that case it's hey ma'am to get here attention.
That ma'am thing has happened to me. I'm southern, and raised by an old southern family. Sir and ma'am are respectful titles to me. Most people know this and don't have any problems since they often hear the slight accent. A cab driver got mad though when I said "thank you, ma'am." She tried chewing me out, but I was bigger, louder, and meaner. So I dug right back in, tipped nothing, and left. I tried explaining myself politely and apologetically first, but she wasn't having it, so I went the mean route when nice didn't work. I'll stop and apologize if people bring it up politely, but I'm not nice if they're not nice.
A supplier is supposed to support and educate newbies. . . This is the best opportunity to make friends. Long term connections. Todays passionate and commited trainee is tomorrows foreman/ manager. . People think that sales is difficult but actually its just common decency and manners, sometimes towards folks that dont deserve or that have not earned but still. Sales, targets. . TGC Blessings in abundance to you and all those that cross your path:)
Don't Call Me Ma'am: I need to tell one of my stories now. My grandfather was a World War 2 Veteran and he taught me to refer to people as Ma'am or Sir in a similar way to OP's situation. I was working at a hardware store and an old guy wearing a veterans cap waved at me to get my attention. Me: Yes Sir? Vet: Don't Sir me unless you know how to salute. Me: * immediately jumps to attention, put my hand up correctly like my grandpa taught me and shout in a clear voice * SIR, YES, SIR!!! Vet: * taken aback * ...did you serve? You look too young... Me: SIR, NO, SIR! MY GRANDFATHER SERVED IN THE NAVY DURING WORLD WAR TWO AND HE WAS THE ONE WHO RAISED ME, SIR!!! Other customers start looking at us. Vet: um... At ease? Me: Sir, thank you, sir. * I cleanly drop the salute and stand at a more comfortable posture * How many I help you? He never brought back up me not calling him Sir again, asked what my grandpa did in the war and told me his own (obviously abridged now that I'm older and know) stories as a Vietnam vet
Whenever you do leave that job, you should leave a note for whoever replaces you to never work with the previous vendor because he was ripping off the company.
Ma'am isn't Mrs nor Ms, it applies to ALL adult women regardless of martial status (which is something ver hard for strangers to know) sorry at 22 hour not a teenage girl you are a Ma'am though reconginztion of some military tradition, Sir is the alternative
GOOD MORNING RED WHEEL AND ALL OF NEVERLAND!!! 😁😁👋👋👋 IT'S FRIDAY! IT'S FRIDAY! IT'S FRIDAY! Let's have a GRRRR---EAT DAY Everybody!!! 🌟 Stay safe. Stay cool. Stay hydrated. WHOOOOO!!!
Karen gets mad when called ma'am and madder when called sir. What does she want to be called? I can think of a few things, but none are customer service appropriate. Or safe to say around young children.
I have to say ' I am sorry for not subscribing sooner" I have been watching your videos for several hours every day and I do get a good chuckle out of a lot of them. The way you narrate them, makes it a lot funnier than the other reddit narrater's .
Ohh...my that ma'am sir story just reminded me of work I just had a screaming customer whom could not get a hold of her service writer 20. .mins of screaming over the phone and a sarcastic I am sorry I know it's not ur fault...
What annoys me is that now women are always called "Mrs." on business letters, etc. I'm no one's wife, never have been, and "Ms." was created for a reason. Bloody social recidivists.
When I worked in an airport, we used to get military kids going off to basic but sometimes got some of the retired guys. I remember distinctly this one time one of the older retired guys called me "sir" out of habit and then went bright red because visibly I present as a woman (sadly, genetics cursed me with big tits, and to clarify, even though I may be afab, I am agender and go by neopronouns but he wouldn't have known that). I just got a kick out of it and he was so embarrassed he literally ran away after getting his food from us. But culturally, I do think it's interesting in the US the differences in giving honorifics to people between generations. I was raised on a farm and it was practically beaten into me to use "sir" and "ma'am" or "mr." or "mrs." but I would rather nobody use those honorifics for me personally because of my gender identity. I wonder if we can come up with a gender neutral way of referring to people to reduce the risk of offending people though. Would be fascinating to me to see the change in language since the evolution of language is one of my favorite things to study.
On the Ma'am thing. A lot of people take being called "Ma'am" as an insult for a good reason. While you may not mean anything bad by saying it. You are basically saying "You are too old to be a prostitute" as "Ma'am" is a bastardised version of "Madam" whom was the head of a brothel. She was only the head of a brothel because she was too old to be a prostitute. A lot of people counter this argument by saying "Madam is French for woman" Sorry. French for woman is "Femme" Lady? Sorry, lady is "la demoiselle" Girl? Nope. That's Fille. Madam means "The person who runs the whorehouse". If I was a woman I would also be insulted.
Maybe it's just me. But I feel like if a man has paid his dues to society and is employed trying to go straight. Then calling his employer to get him fired is a totally a-hole move.
@@CogSpartan I don't know man. It's not like he's a pedo or violent or anything. If he was legitimately working to try to get back into the right side of his debts and maybe try to pay some of that child support, then the OP was making a real dick move. How can you take someones job then shit on them for being a deadbeat dad?
Last one is confusing the guy screwed up paid the price now needs a job so he can take care of his children and pay fines. But hey I am so cool I got him fired so it will be impossible for him to meet his financial obligations for his children.
Even if the lady did have a heart condition she STILL wouldn’t need seating for 8! How the manager allowed her to occupy 2 tables (making it difficult for people who paid a lot more than just 1 coffee!!) is beyond me! It is actually quite infuriating!
I chuckled really loud at that ma'am/sir story. Near the end of that, I was concerned that the manager was going to chew OP out, but apparently she just wanted to commiserate and that really made me glad ☺️
May I ask, as a non-native, what is te answer to this puzzle? How do we call a person who doesn't want to be called maam nor sir?
@@Misiulo call them stupid
Ma’am and Sir is Not related to a persons age. It IS a respectful and professional way to address someone.
@@Misiulo There is no polite answer to that.
"Do NOT call me Ma'am"
*nod* Whatever you say, SIR.
"O.O"
Hi RedWheel hope you are well. Thanks for sharing. Please stay safe.🏴😁😷👍. Have a great day everyone
About the ma'am - I worked on a Chicago commuter train and while collecting I was coming up from behind the passengers. I asked ticket, sir? And a WOMAN looked up at me, and she was NOT happy. Ever after I said - ticket, please. TOTALLY gender neutral. A co-worker made a dumb guy mistake (which I had done.....once) By asking a passenger when she was due. She WAS NOT pregnant. She filed a complaint. The boss was laughing when he pointed out the error of this guy's ways. And, like me, he never did THAT again!!!
Hello friends...happy Friday
Crazy that the guy went to a welding program that didn't mention wire-welding. It's been the most common form of welding at least since I was in high-school.
It's been the most popular method of welding in the welding industry for literal decades. Like the 70's or 80's I believe. Which really sucks because I can't MIG weld to save my life; I have had every single MIG machine I've ever operated jam on me even with my teachers operating the controls (it seriously baffled them since, according to them, my technique was just fine).
The welding robots that make shopping trolleys (carts)/supermarket 'cages' (in which produce in brought from the back to the shop floor) use a wire-feed welding system as well as spot-welding. The only manual welding was done by about 12 welders in the whole factory and that was for any welds missed by the robots for any reason. I worked in the UK factory that made them.
@@alexwalker2582 I can't manual weld due to my eyes not reacting quick enough to weld in a straight line, either I'd 'burn-through' or my welds looked like bumpy cooked spaghetti lol.
@@sallyphilpin1104 My grandpa was very disappointed in my inability to weld metal, I feel your pain 😆
To this day, an angle grinder is my best friend if I have to weld anything.
Good morning RedWheel
Good morning everyone 😊😊
My Welsh granddad was a Sergeant Major in the Somerset Light Infantry and I was raised to have manners and use Sir/Madam with those older than myself or Young Sir/Young Lady to those younger (except little old ladies who have a fantastic sense of humour which I'll call 'Young Lady' to make them giggle bashfully). I have brought my daughter up to have the same respect for others and I've always been able to take her anywhere and be proud of her behaviour, even when she was a toddler. I was lucky as she never had any temper tantrums when out of the house and hardly ever when home.
I hope the welder guy stayed at that company a very long time.
Okay, sir. 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I'm dying here. BAHAHAHAHA!😂😂
Well, you're either a ma'am or a sir, which is it?
So, ma'am literally means 'my lady,' and is used in context of social standing. You're saying that whoever you use it on is of equal or greater social standing as oneself. To claim not to be a ma'am means she was essentially saying she's of lower social standing, and thus not worthy of being served.
Seems accurate.
Madam is actually a combination of 2 French words- ma, and damme.
It's more of a regional thing. I'm from the north and it's very seldom used except by ex-military. I find it fundamentally subservient. I'm currently in Texas near a military base and hear it all the time. Some days I find it more annoying than others but since people don't me any harm by it I ignore it.
I love your voice so much because it reminds me of a good cousin of mine who has pass on, so it gives me good Comfort when listing.
The third story was hilarious. I had something like this happen at a former workplace and all employees couldn't stop laughing when it happened.
You gonna try it? I'M NOT GONNA TRY IT! 😁Hey! Let's get Mikey to try it! He'll try ANYTHING!
HEY MIKEY! 🤔MIKEY? WHERE'S MIKEY?!?!
Oh, Mikey's in jail now. You know how he is, right?
Bye-bye, Mikey! ✨🤗✨
I can understand hating people, I'm often glad I'm not one of em.
Good morning RedWheel! GREAT stories! Thank you for helping me to start my day laughing 🤣🌈
On the ma'am/sir one. I was raised the same way. When I joined the military & called an E-8 "sir", he told me "don't call me sir, I work for a living". It's now my response when called ma'am. I'll be called ma'am when I either retire from working or from living (whichever comes first).
My Welsh granddad was a Sergeant Major in the Somerset Light Infantry and I was taught to call gentlemen/ladies older than me Sir/Madam and males/females younger than me Young Sir/Young Lady (except little old ladies who have a fantastic sense of humour which I'll call 'Young Lady' just to hear them giggle bashfully). I brought up my daughter the same way and I've always been able to take her anywhere and be proud of her behaviour.
Oh, the mind boggling of the "Sir/Ma'am" story. "He called me sir when I told him not to call me 'ma'am!' " "Well.... what do you want him to call you?" Short and sweet and a perfect picture of so much that is wrong today. Good job, OP! We salute you!
"B*tch" would work.
RE: The last story... Justice is one thing and revenge is entirely another. Simply reporting crimes is not revenge, it is what civilized people do.
Some lies stab you in the back. Make sure everything fits before lying at least
"Ma'am..."
"DON'T CALL ME MA'AM!"
"Ok Sir..."
LOL so f'ing funny...
Savage.
I can think of a third option - but she probably wouldn't like that, either.
@@lomax343 which is?
@@Anagh1701 Unprintable.
@@lomax343 I would have been tempted to say to the boss as I walked away see you next Tuesday.
Thank you for all your crazy stories. As my Mom always said, it takes all kinds, to make this world. Lol Have a great weekend.
3:00 Water park: Karen should have thought a bit and said to the manager at the table: I am a Karen and I have a brain condition! (My 2 working bran cells often switch off).
10:00 Really sad when some menopausal women scream at others when they can easily apply estrogen cream lavishly and then take a vib to bed!
Disclaimer: Not all women. Not all older women, only a few.
Karens do in fact have 2 working Brain Cells...but they don't switch themselves off...
One of their cells is ALWAYS lost and the other is out looking for it...
[A Wilson] Good one!
The ma'am thing is regional. In some areas you do not call a woman that unless they're much much older and you know them.
So I've been a welder for 15 years. Done mig, Tig, arc, friction even a bit of under water welding and I've never heard of a wire being horizontal only and it makes absolutely no sense for it to be horizontal only. So I'm going to out right call bullshit on op's story
I think I'm going to drag out my old welding textbook just to see if it says anything about that.
@@alexwalker2582 I've even looked online and called my supplier and both the internet search and my supplier came back with there is no wire that's horizontal only but there's rods that are suggested for only horizontal because of how hot they burn example is 5/32 welding electrodes because they burn insanely hot and insanely fast due to the diameter but you can still do overhead and vertical with them it's just harder
@@Hunglikeagrimsmo Ah ok, that makes more sense. Thanks for getting back to me on that. My textbook didn't get very specific about that.
There are rods that are horizontal only such as 7024 but I've never heard of a wire that was. You might have to change the voltage or wire feed rate but the wire is what it is.
Have a great day 👍 Happy Friday everyone 👋😃🤗😎
Calling someone ma'am is like calling them old is how I see it. I get called ma'am I'm 18 its miss. T^T
I'm almost 58. I call everyone, including the part time students, ma'am and sir. They may cringe inwardly that they're too young to be a ma'am or sir but they accept it as a sign of respect. I guess it's better than b**ch and b'tard.
@@teresabillings8378 I'm the same way and as old. When I was growing up you got corrected if I didn't say ma'am,sir or thank you. Hard habit to break at this age 😂 Have a great day 🤗😎
@@bridgetdebourgh5698 yes, definitely please and thank you. I've had young men hold the door for me, not expecting a thank you because I always do. I think it's just plain rude not to recognize their courtesy.
I'm front the north an to me it's just a totally unneeded verbage that isn't needed at all. In my home area the only time I would use it is to hail someone over a distance. I think the last time a did it was a women with a couple of kids with her that dropped her wallet leaving the register after paying for her groceries. In that case it's hey ma'am to get here attention.
“DON’T CALL ME MA’AM!”
“Ok sir”
😂😂😂😂😂
Good Friday morning all good. Thanks RedWheel.
That ma'am thing has happened to me. I'm southern, and raised by an old southern family. Sir and ma'am are respectful titles to me. Most people know this and don't have any problems since they often hear the slight accent. A cab driver got mad though when I said "thank you, ma'am." She tried chewing me out, but I was bigger, louder, and meaner. So I dug right back in, tipped nothing, and left. I tried explaining myself politely and apologetically first, but she wasn't having it, so I went the mean route when nice didn't work. I'll stop and apologize if people bring it up politely, but I'm not nice if they're not nice.
A supplier is supposed to support and educate newbies. . . This is the best opportunity to make friends. Long term connections.
Todays passionate and commited trainee is tomorrows foreman/ manager. .
People think that sales is difficult but actually its just common decency and manners, sometimes towards folks that dont deserve or that have not earned but still. Sales, targets. .
TGC
Blessings in abundance to you and all those that cross your path:)
Don't Call Me Ma'am: I need to tell one of my stories now.
My grandfather was a World War 2 Veteran and he taught me to refer to people as Ma'am or Sir in a similar way to OP's situation.
I was working at a hardware store and an old guy wearing a veterans cap waved at me to get my attention.
Me: Yes Sir?
Vet: Don't Sir me unless you know how to salute.
Me: * immediately jumps to attention, put my hand up correctly like my grandpa taught me and shout in a clear voice * SIR, YES, SIR!!!
Vet: * taken aback * ...did you serve? You look too young...
Me: SIR, NO, SIR! MY GRANDFATHER SERVED IN THE NAVY DURING WORLD WAR TWO AND HE WAS THE ONE WHO RAISED ME, SIR!!!
Other customers start looking at us.
Vet: um... At ease?
Me: Sir, thank you, sir. * I cleanly drop the salute and stand at a more comfortable posture * How many I help you?
He never brought back up me not calling him Sir again, asked what my grandpa did in the war and told me his own (obviously abridged now that I'm older and know) stories as a Vietnam vet
Whenever you do leave that job, you should leave a note for whoever replaces you to never work with the previous vendor because he was ripping off the company.
15years ago I was miffed by being called ma'am but that was cause I was still a Miss at 22 years old and not married.
Sir, this is a Wendy's
@@CogSpartan Huh?!
Ma'am isn't Mrs nor Ms, it applies to ALL adult women regardless of martial status (which is something ver hard for strangers to know) sorry at 22 hour not a teenage girl you are a Ma'am though reconginztion of some military tradition, Sir is the alternative
Yay right when I'm going on break
9:15 The moment I burst out laughing with how that part was read describing how a Karen goes from angry to nuclear.
First story's kinda lame!
I'm genuinely curious as to what that crazy lady wanted to be called.
Good Lord, Good Morning RedWheel. These are perfect.
OH, I can't wait.... 7:46
edit LMAO "I hate people"
Hi
GOOD MORNING RED WHEEL AND ALL OF NEVERLAND!!! 😁😁👋👋👋
IT'S FRIDAY! IT'S FRIDAY! IT'S FRIDAY!
Let's have a GRRRR---EAT DAY Everybody!!! 🌟
Stay safe. Stay cool. Stay hydrated.
WHOOOOO!!!
Second Story: "BY THE POWER OF WHITE WOMEN, I AM OUTRAGED!"
Hey mikey...hey mikey...he doesn't like it!!!! LOL!
Please continue to take stories from other countries? But please tell us the countries so that we have se context. Thanks.
Karen gets mad when called ma'am and madder when called sir. What does she want to be called? I can think of a few things, but none are customer service appropriate. Or safe to say around young children.
I have to say ' I am sorry for not subscribing sooner" I have been watching your videos for several hours every day and I do get a good chuckle out of a lot of them. The way you narrate them, makes it a lot funnier than the other reddit narrater's .
“…able to recover back child support”??? Uh, no. You really think if he had a stash of money he’d be a referee for peewee basketball?
Ohh...my that ma'am sir story just reminded me of work I just had a screaming customer whom could not get a hold of her service writer 20.
.mins of screaming over the phone and a sarcastic I am sorry I know it's not ur fault...
Don't call me ma'am, reminds me of the Trans man, throwing a fit after being called sir...
What does a busty motorcycle chick in the thumbnail have to do with any of these stories?!
What annoys me is that now women are always called "Mrs." on business letters, etc. I'm no one's wife, never have been, and "Ms." was created for a reason. Bloody social recidivists.
🌟🌟🌟🌟
When I worked in an airport, we used to get military kids going off to basic but sometimes got some of the retired guys. I remember distinctly this one time one of the older retired guys called me "sir" out of habit and then went bright red because visibly I present as a woman (sadly, genetics cursed me with big tits, and to clarify, even though I may be afab, I am agender and go by neopronouns but he wouldn't have known that). I just got a kick out of it and he was so embarrassed he literally ran away after getting his food from us. But culturally, I do think it's interesting in the US the differences in giving honorifics to people between generations. I was raised on a farm and it was practically beaten into me to use "sir" and "ma'am" or "mr." or "mrs." but I would rather nobody use those honorifics for me personally because of my gender identity. I wonder if we can come up with a gender neutral way of referring to people to reduce the risk of offending people though. Would be fascinating to me to see the change in language since the evolution of language is one of my favorite things to study.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
I hate people too.
LOL!!!
I am a 56 year old lady, but not a Karen. Sometimes, MA'AM is said like BITCH and that's why old ladies may not like to be called MA'AM.
👍😎👍😲😡👮🤣😅😂🤣😅😂🤣
On the Ma'am thing. A lot of people take being called "Ma'am" as an insult for a good reason. While you may not mean anything bad by saying it. You are basically saying "You are too old to be a prostitute" as "Ma'am" is a bastardised version of "Madam" whom was the head of a brothel. She was only the head of a brothel because she was too old to be a prostitute.
A lot of people counter this argument by saying "Madam is French for woman" Sorry. French for woman is "Femme" Lady? Sorry, lady is "la demoiselle" Girl? Nope. That's Fille.
Madam means "The person who runs the whorehouse". If I was a woman I would also be insulted.
Maybe it's just me. But I feel like if a man has paid his dues to society and is employed trying to go straight. Then calling his employer to get him fired is a totally a-hole move.
Dude owes other debts too. He's still responsible for the kids he fathered. And he shouldn't work at a school if he's a convict.
@@CogSpartan I don't know man. It's not like he's a pedo or violent or anything. If he was legitimately working to try to get back into the right side of his debts and maybe try to pay some of that child support, then the OP was making a real dick move.
How can you take someones job then shit on them for being a deadbeat dad?
Last one is confusing the guy screwed up paid the price now needs a job so he can take care of his children and pay fines. But hey I am so cool I got him fired so it will be impossible for him to meet his financial obligations for his children.
It's his fault for screwing over a large portion of a town. He is a moron since he still owed child support. He wasn't pay ing it if he's on the site.