
49 Entitled People Who Didn't Care About Anyone Else
Oh, boy. This poor boyfriend.
Expecting someone to be your sperm donor for FREE is wild.
"Hey, Dad? Can you stop spending your own money so I get more when you die, which I am clearly counting down the days 'til?"
People who hate drama and confrontation don't make Facebook posts like this.
Being vegan is a personal choice. You don't need to make it everyone's problem.
Some people never grow out of the entitlement of siblings in early childhood.
How did this person actually think this would work?
Lockdown was basically a case study in entitled people.
This person proved why they were an ex.
Hmmm, I wonder why they were banned?
If you can't read the above, it says (edited for spelling and grammar):So this happened last night at Trader Joe's in Prescott. I have not been able to wear a mask from day one due to a medical issue. But I am perfectly healthy otherwise.All this time, I have been able to enter the store without an issue for the past year as I have had a good rapport with some team members and most of the management team, especially the store manager whom I would touch base with from time to time to make sure I'm still good for entering the store. I had even been going in on Sunday evenings when there was a minimal amount of people. Well, I was surprised and dismayed to see this policy change, even though the numbers have been going down at a rapid pace. Now I'm expected to use this "special" cart when I go in. Really, it is humiliating, discriminatory, and bullying. Simply being punished and embarrassed for not being able to wear a mask. Might as well put flashing lights with bells and whistles on the cart, too. Definitely feeling more and more like I'm being treated as a Leper. I have already been "banned" from two stores I used a lot. That's where I eventually see this going.
Child support should be used to help your kids, not quit your job.
How entitled can you get???
*Sigh* Oh, brother.
Why would you post this on Facebook?
Personally, I get wanting to train your dog not to go on certain furniture (I also get concerns over inexperienced people adopting puppies and getting mad when they do puppy things). But threatening legal action over an adoption policy? That's where this goes over the edge for me.
Your Lyft driver is under no obligation to load up their vehicle with your stuff!
Army wives are WILLLLLD. The self-importance here from your husband being in the army — not you — is scary.
It's a difference of a few dollars. Is it really worth calling the manager over, RECORDING the conversation, and reporting the business?
Imagine calling 911 because you want to watch TV.
Do you really need to be watching two shows at once?
If the door is locked, it's closed. Don't try to sneak in after someone and get mad when you can't buy an item.
You offer someone an inch, and they want a mile!
Quick question: what does "reasonable" mean in your book?
Did these concert-goers care that NO ONE else was standing, or were they too wrapped up in their own experience to even notice?
People who use seats for their bags on crowded trains deserve a special place in hell.
Along with people who do this on public transport.
And people who do THIS when a store has a sale.
And I hope that special place in hell is being stuck doing group projects with this person forever.
Or eternally being stuck behind these three.
Did this man really think the cashier wouldn't notice? Or was he just hoping they wouldn't have enough energy — after a day of dealing with entitled assholes like this guy — to stop him?
What great behavior to model for your kids. This is how entitled assholes are made.
Don't put food on your plate if you're not going to eat it! Some scraps or a pancake here and there are fine. But this amount???
First of all, you could've helped your wife. Second of all, cleaning up your kid's mess is part of being a parent.
"Hey, can you be a half-decent person?" "No. 💅"
Why do people think this is okay???
No one wants your dirty bare feet touching their arm during a flight!
People's utter lack of respect on airplanes should be studied.
It's like people think they enter a different universe where the normal rules of decorum don't apply as soon as they set foot in the airport.
It takes two seconds to take your stuff to the trash.
Guess this woman decided the sign didn't apply to her.
Same with this couple.
Do people really lack this level of self-awareness?
Seriously. People just go through life like this?
Cool, just block the way for everyone. No one will mind.
Why do you need all three spaces???
Blocking an accessible spot is bad enough, but then parking like this???
This feels like it shouldn't be allowed.
And finally...this is why Parisians don't like Americans.

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Yahoo
13 hours ago
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50-Year-Old Woman in Disbelief After Neighbor Called Her ‘Sad' for Complaining About Party: ‘Should We Have Sucked It Up?'
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Yahoo
15 hours ago
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50-Year-Old Woman in Disbelief After Neighbor Called Her ‘Sad' for Complaining About Party: ‘Should We Have Sucked It Up?'
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USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
Thousands join effort to find treasures in the mud after Texas floods
The deadly flooding of the Guadalupe River swept away priceless belongings, but volunteers have helped reunite families with their possessions. The items range from the everyday to the extraordinary. Pieces of jewelry and children's toys. Blankets and photographs, fine china, trophies and plaques. Keychains and stuffed animals. Clothes and dolls. A church pew. A canoe. Some were found miles from home after being carried away by the Guadalupe River flood. They're the remnants of homes, cars, cabins, trailers and campsites. They're also pieces of people's lives, family heirlooms that in some cases hold generations of memories. But thanks to volunteers and social media sleuths, families are being reunited with their possessions after the river flooded on July 4, killing at least 135 people. A Facebook group is connecting people who have found things along the river with flood victims searching for pieces of their lives. Several new items are added each day, even weeks after the flood. Some items have been cleaned of the mud and dirt that soiled them. Others won't ever look the same after being washed away, buried and submerged, reemerging days or weeks later. Here are some of their stories. 'The lady picking up personal effects' Dondi Voigt Persyn of Boerne, Texas, wanted to help in the flood's immediate aftermath. So she joined other volunteers in the recovery along the Guadalupe River. The first days were "overwhelming," she said. "There were still children missing, people missing. "I decided, let's let the professionals do their job, so I started collecting trash and personal effects. By the end of the day, I was the lady picking up people's personal effects." But the volume of debris was so great, and Persyn knew many of the items she and fellow volunteers found meant something to people who had already lost so much. Along with some friends, she now administers Found on the Guadalupe River, a Facebook group with more than 47,000 members who share photos, information and tips about items found during cleanup and recovery. The group grew "exponentially" within days, she said. "It was shocking how organized and effective we were able to be in such a short time," she said. Fellow administrator DeAnna Kaye Lindsay and Persyn "have been friends for 40 years, and our experience in life prepared us for this moment," said Persyn, who added she has volunteered in various capacities and for a variety of organizations throughout her adult life. "Being grandmothers, we wanted to handle everything the way we would for our own children and grandchildren," she said. So their "heart-driven" mission includes working with families and local agencies to verify ownership and make sure recovered items go to the rightful owners. A timeline: Hour by hour, how deadly flooding struck Texas Hill Country She recalled returning a life vest to a man who saw a photo of it on the Facebook group. "He just needed one thing," she said. "It was a connection to the past, his life before." A retired teacher lost her trailer and everything in it, but she and her grandson were both able to get to safety. Persyn talked about returning some of her jewelry: "I know these are things, but she talked about how 'This was a time when my grandkids played,' and 'I remember this from when we all went to the beach.'" Helping her bring back those memories, Persyn said, "was really heartwarming." "There's also been a lot of behind-the scenes reunions with people who'd lost loved ones," she said, and she's keeping those stories to herself, out of respect and deference to their losses. "I will keep those close to my heart." A family's heirlooms returned The Deupree family has been on the receiving end of the Found on the Guadalupe River group's kindness. Taylor Deupree lives in Houston and much of her extended family is in Dallas. But to all the Deuprees, home is their grandmother Penny's house in Hunt, Texas, near the Guadalupe River, just 2 miles from Camp Mystic. It's been a family gathering place for decades, said Deupree, and Penny Deupree is the family matriarch who keeps "scrapbooks upon scrapbooks" of Deupree family lore, her granddaughter said. Penny Deupree was among nine family members rescued from the home's roof as floodwaters raged around them. The house was heavily damaged, Taylor Deupree said, but the garage, which held many of the family's keepsakes, was destroyed. Among the items that have been found and returned to the family: photographs, heirloom silver pieces and mementos from lost family members, including a pocket watch from Dr. Tague Chisholm, a pioneer in the field of pediatric surgery, and a painted portrait of Frances Hodgson Burnett, who wrote "The Secret Garden." The people contributing to the Found on the Guadalupe River group and the way the community has stepped up to help people, even after so much loss, are "the real silver linings," Deupree said. An errant oar and how 'hope floats' Andrew Diggs was among those who responded as part of a joint search and rescue team with TEXSAR and Heroes for Humanity to help find people who vanished in the flood. While he was searching, he came across an old wooden paddle with markings that gave him pause: the year 1962, Greek letters. "It was a 1-of-1 piece of memorabilia lost in the chaos," he wrote in a social media post he titled "Hope Floats: It was never about the paddle." "At first, it was just an artifact," he wrote. "A personal item amid the wreckage. But the more I looked at it, the more it felt like a message. Someone, somewhere, loved this thing enough to hold onto it for 60 years. That meant something. And after everything that had already been taken by the flood, I knew I couldn't let this be one more thing lost to time. I made it my mission to return it." That mission, and the Facebook group, led him to Tom Schulze, who had given it to his wife when they went to a University of Texas Sigma Nu formal in 1962. It had been hanging in his daughter's house − more than 3 miles from where it was found − but the house was heavily damaged in the flood. Diggs shared a text message with USA TODAY from Schulze expressing his gratitude to Diggs and a vow that "we will never clean it up and (will) do something to preserve it as a reminder of that night of infamy." "When we reunited Tom with the paddle, he called it a 'bright spot in a time of immense loss and suffering,'" Diggs wrote. "To him, it wasn't just wood and paint. It was family. History. Resilience." Diggs told USA TODAY he had never been very sentimental about material things; he was "a minimalist" who believed "memories live in your heart." That has changed, though: When he heard "the stories behind the paddle, and the web of stories from those stories, I realized it's a physical thing that can remind you of so many good times. I've seen so many small things that I previously would have deemed insignificant, but now I can see what they mean to people." Family photos from a home called 'Kerplunk' Mille Kerr's family called their vacation home of more than 50 years "Kerplunk." On July 4, they lost the home, even though it seemed safe, high off the ground and set back from the river. "We are mourning the loss of the special gathering place built by my grandparents, but we're also counting our lucky stars because a large group of family members who were at the property during the flood escaped just in the nick of time while so many others suffered unimaginable loss," Kerr wrote in an email to USA TODAY. An aunt saw several family photos posted on the Found on the Guadalupe page, including one with Kerr's mother and grandmother at a wedding at Kerplunk. "I have many mixed emotions about the fact that we are going to be reunited with undamaged photographs while others await the bodies of missing loved ones," she wrote. "I'm so proud of the community for coming together to mourn this tragedy − and find whatever goodness is left."