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“I Live Here”: Karen Claims That The House Is Hers After Parking Her Car In A Family’s Driveway
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“I Live Here”: Karen Claims That The House Is Hers After Parking Her Car In A Family’s Driveway

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People lie all the time. Perhaps it’s to protect someone, escape punishment, or cover up an embarrassing situation – the point is that, usually, despite it still being wrong, the reasoning is somewhat logical.

The star of today’s tale, though, took it to a whole new level. The thing is, u/Top-Studio8028 recently headed to an opening ceremony for their local park but, shortly after arriving, noticed that someone had parked in their driveway. Upon confronting the so-called “Karen,” instead of moving her car elsewhere, the woman protested and claimed to be the true owner of the house. 

More info: Reddit

Woman pulls into strangers’ driveway to access an opening ceremony at the local park

Image credits: Infrogmation of New Orleans (not the actual photo)

The family notices the car and reports it to the traffic controller on duty for the event

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Image credits: Curran Kelleher (not the actual photo)

Image source: u/Top-Studio8028

Karen parked in my driveway then claimed the house was hers” – this internet user took to one of Reddit’s communities dedicated to entitled parents to tell its members a tale about encountering a mother who parked in their driveway and instead of simply moving her vehicle elsewhere, caused a ruckus and claimed to be the true owner of the property. The post managed to garner 3.7K upvotes as well as 126 comments discussing the situation.

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Now, having a stranger parked in your driveway is not always an end-of-the-world type of issue – however, the majority will probably agree that it is a pretty darn rude move.

Of course, life is an unpredictable thing, and it’s possible that a person or two may have found themselves having to resort to the nearest driveway to manage whatever troubles they could’ve been going through at that moment – but most of the time, it all stems from good old audacity.

The post’s creator, on the other hand, faced an issue that was not only uncivil but on the verge of being a little crazy too. A public event took place in the neighborhood, and you have chosen to park on someone’s property? Kudos to the woman for believing in her ability to stay unnoticed, I guess, but who in their right mind would engage in a literal lie clash and argue about being the real owner of the house while facing its actual residents?

Unfortunately, we can only guess what was going through the woman’s head during the so-called performance that she decided to put on in front of the traffic controller and the family itself. Maybe it’s the embarrassment of being caught, and she simply wanted to lie her way out of the situation to avoid the humiliation, or perhaps she is just a “Karen” who knew exactly what she was doing.

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When confronted, the culprit argues that she’s the true owner of the property – however, gets exposed shortly after

Image credits: Luz (not the actual photo)

Generally speaking, there’s no law against individuals who park on private lands – however, it does technically count as trespassing. But if you’re looking to involve that person with authorities, chances are, nothing will be done as it’s more of a civil offense rather than a criminal one.

When it comes to dealing with such situations, despite sounding like the most basic cliché ever, you need to try and stay composed. Anger will not get you anywhere, plus there’s always a slight but nevertheless present chance that the parked individual had some kind of an emergency or simply parked there in error.

If the conversation turns into something unpleasant or if you suspect that the vehicle has been abandoned – wait no more and contact the police.

There are also a couple of safety measures you could take into consideration if you have been a repeat victim of unwelcomed guests. For instance, “no parking” or “private parking” signs, installing fixed bollards, a fence or a gate could also be a great idea, and last but certainly not least – get CCTV to protect yourself from any mishaps.

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Well, enough of the blabbering; what do you think about the author’s story? Have you ever dealt with anything similar?

Fellow online community members shared their thoughts and opinions on the matter

Image credits: Skaja Lee (not the actual photo)

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Darja Zinina

Darja Zinina

Author, Community member

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Darja is a Content Creator at Bored Panda. She studied at the University of Westminster, where she got her Bachelor's degree in Contemporary Media Practice. She loves photography, foreign music and re-watching Forrest Gump.

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Darja Zinina

Darja Zinina

Author, Community member

Darja is a Content Creator at Bored Panda. She studied at the University of Westminster, where she got her Bachelor's degree in Contemporary Media Practice. She loves photography, foreign music and re-watching Forrest Gump.

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Laura Lett
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When my neighbors did this is...it was fine . We blocked them in and charge d $10 per car ,to move my car out of their way.

Al LeFeusch
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Absolutely insane. At least claim stupidity and say you accidentally parked at the wrong house. To claim you live in a house that isn't yours-- while the owner of the house is standing right there-- is pure derangement.

deanna woods
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When I was a delivery driver, I would sometimes pull into people's driveways because it was a lot easier than being parked in the street. The only difference is that I was there for only a few minutes and I was respectful not to block anyone's car. People that behave like this are the reason why it is so hard to be kind to strangers. A lot of the people that I delivered to were strangers to me, but I still respected the fact that I was on THEIR property. If we showed more respect towards one another things would go much better.

LilliVB
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I agree. Like someone pointed out, if it is done respectfully, asked kindly and it's not an inconvenience or done to take advantage of someone else's space, most people wouldn't have big problems to let someone parking on their property for few hours on special occasions. When I'm going to visit my parents I usually rent a car, as I don't need one where I live and so I don't own one. As it is a rented car I'm always asking a neighbor if I can park on their property for the time I'm there as being not on the road I feel it's safer. Never had an issue or a no as answer. But I'm asking every time.

Load More Replies...
Tyranamar Seuss
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I don't think she was lying. I think she was genuinely confused. Sounds like the garages are not connected to the houses and are located somewhere else. They probably all look very similar. I think she just parked in front of the wrong garage.

Al LeFeusch
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

What you do when you make a genuine mistake and inconvenience other people is *apologize*... Not get all angry when your mistake is made apparent. Saying "oh gosh, I'm so embarrassed i totally got confused... I'm sorry." probably would have kept this story from ever making it to social media at all.

Load More Replies...
Devin Singh
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Something similar happened one night when I still lived with my dad back in college. Somebody parked and blocked our driveway. I honked, nobody came to move it. So I started called 311 to have it ticketed and towed. When I pulled out my phone, somebody got out of the car, apparently he was sleeping in the backseat. And started arguing with me about how this isn't my house. I said very calmly that it was, and that I'd been living there for 20 years. He kept arguing and threatening me, telling me we've been squatting and he's gonna call his friends and they're gonna be pissed. I just calmly kept repeating that this was my house that I've lived in for 20 years. Finally, after 5 minutes of huffing and puffing and blowing smoke, he calls his friend, and they try to Jimmy the car lock because apparently he'd locked himself out. After about 20 minutes of trying, they had to call a locksmith. I waited calmly the entire time. Then he finally got the car open and drove off. This was in NYC.

Mary Rogers
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

A lot of people have no respect for other people's property. One incident with my parent's neighbors had my mind boggled at the time. We had gotten snow, which is rare in our area. The neighbor thought that was a good opportunity to show off his skiing skills to his friends...on my parent's LAWN. They had a built up lawn with a decorative wall around it, which was higher than the shared driveway with the neighbors. So he figured he could show off his "jumping" skills (sorry I don't ski so I don't know if that is the right word.) My mother went out and told him that she didn't want him on the lawn. He got all whiny and goes, "Well you could have been nice about it!" She was, it wasn't like she cussed him out. I couldn't figure out why he thought that was a good idea in the first place, or what he was trying to demonstrate since the lawn was not in any way like a ski slope. It was perfectly flat, as was the driveway he was jumping into.

Tim Farrell
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I am not condoning parking in someone’s driveway but I have a different problem. The street that I live on only allows parking on my side of the street. If someone comes to visit me coming from the wrong direction they use my neighbours driveway to turn around and park in frount of my house. This causes my neighbour to threaten me to the point of calling the police to have my guests arrested for trespassing. If I know this is going to happen I warn my friends “don’t use the driveway of the wicked witch to my west”

brandyy17
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

i used to live in a gated community and wen i got new neighbors their guests parked in my driveway. my parents werent home so i decided to stand on the driveway id in my pocket smoking a cigarette. they get to there car freaking out and call the cops. cops get there and to my suprise one of them was my friend from high school. the party guests start yelling saying how im tresspassing and smoking on their driveway. my friend walks up to me asks me if it true i just simply hand him my id and he reacted perfectly. he gave me back my id they said "mind if i smoke too" i gave him the go ahead and now we r both smoking on my driveway. the other officer is so confused my neighbors party guests r furious. the other cop comes over asks wats up so my friend tells him my id says this address and we r standing on my driveway. i told them i never said they could park here and they r blocking the garage which my parents use all the time. the other cop told them to take there car and leave. they refused bc i was the one tresspassing. after asking for the 3rd time my parents come home. my friend yells over to my parents saying hi and its nice to see them. at that moment not only did the other officer understand his calm and smarta$$ tatic but my neighbors guests realized they f'd up. i made sure they didnt see show my id to my cop friend and hes quick so he picked up on wat i was trying to do. i was waiting for my parents cuz i knew theyd b home soon. my neighbors guests ran into their car and went to the guest parking lot. i saw them running back to my neighbors with a gift. the other cop left but my friend stayed and we started talking with my parents and he said if i wasnt so clever with my choice on how to handle that they probably wouldve tried to pull the "we r their neighbors" card and they just got back from getting them a housewarming gift. my parents were so happy my friend was one of the cops that showed up bc it couldve gone a very different direction. the direction that took me having a panic attack leading into a seizure since they trigger my epilepsy. im not good in situations if they escalate bc of my anxeity disorder but wen i saw my friend i knew id b fine. my friend did tell me that if the situation did escalate and i did have a panic attack causing a seizure bc of their actions i would technically b allowed to press charges for causing me emotional distress since at the time i was wearing a medical warning bracelet. it labeled my conditions and triggers on it. one of those triggers aggressive confrontation. if my friend wasnt there i wouldve shown the cop my bracelet which in turn would tell him how to handle the situation. ive had to do it before. alot of ppl thought my driveway or the front of my house was a free parking spot wen in reality if u r a guest to someone living in the community u r only allowed to park in the driveway or one of the many guest parking lots. only exception is major holidays. the time before that they parked infront of my house and another in the driveway and since residents r allowed to call the cops i did and since the car owners werent there and i didnt kno where they were their cars got towed. all i knew was they parked and walked down the street. the cop gave me a note and said wen they come back give them the note and go back into the house. i showed him my bracelet which is y he wrote the note along with the towing papers. he made it so no conversation was necessary for me. i dont wear it anymore since im married and my husband works from home so im never alone and even if he is out my in laws live upstairs so i never need to deal with situations regarding strangers. although we always have 3 cars at most in the driveway and no one is gonna risk that unless they r an entitled prick.

John Cherish
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

All the woman had to do was knock on the door and ask permission from the owner of the house. A very simple and respectful thing to do

Caroline Driver
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'd have let her fumble for her garage keys for a good length of time, dangling my keys all the while, watching her do the whole 'they must be in here somewhere, maybe I left them in my other bag' etc before opening up the garage.

Celtic Pirate Queen
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We lived in a condo with assigned parking. Once upon a time our landlord and another owner had swapped parking spots so each would have one closer to their unit. Unfortunately, the never cleared it with the HOA. I came home from the store and someone was in our spot. I left a very polite note on the car. A few hours later this guy comes pounding on our door to let us know that was HIS assigned spot. I was like, "Dude - we've been parking there for 6 years and all of a sudden you decide you want to take it back? You're an a$$hole." So, we had to park our car 12 spots further from our unit, which honestly wasn't that big of a deal, but it was the way he handled it that got me p*ssed. I flipped that motherf*cker off every single time I saw him.

Argle Bargle
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

In situations like this, don't even get mad.....just bite the bullet and pay a tow truck to come and impound it. Then they get to wonder where the car is and pay even more to get it out due to storage fees.

Maggie Hood
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Maybe she had memory problems or something. It sounds a lot like she might've been confused or maybe she has some sort of mental illness. Either way I feel like there's more to the story than "she was just a crazy karen".

Westerly Winds
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

To be able to lie vehemently like that! Unbelievable what society has become.

The Other Guest
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There's a liquor store about two blocks away that only has street parking. There's a residence behind it. The people who live there used to put a traffic cone in their driveway to keep people from parking there. Then they added a "no parking" sign. Then a "no tresspassing" sign. Then they replaced the cone with a barricade like you would see when a road is closed, with the signs. Finally the ended up fencing in their yard, including an electronic gate across the entrance to the driveway. Crazy that they had to take it that far just to keep rude people from parking where they didn't belong.

FluffyPanda
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

HHAHAHAHAHAHAH she really thought that would work? Usually I don’t care about stuff like that but this is HALARIOUS

Mark Esther Askren
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Regardless, Karen is a derogatory term and racist, should not be used.

Laura Lett
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When my neighbors did this is...it was fine . We blocked them in and charge d $10 per car ,to move my car out of their way.

Al LeFeusch
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Absolutely insane. At least claim stupidity and say you accidentally parked at the wrong house. To claim you live in a house that isn't yours-- while the owner of the house is standing right there-- is pure derangement.

deanna woods
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When I was a delivery driver, I would sometimes pull into people's driveways because it was a lot easier than being parked in the street. The only difference is that I was there for only a few minutes and I was respectful not to block anyone's car. People that behave like this are the reason why it is so hard to be kind to strangers. A lot of the people that I delivered to were strangers to me, but I still respected the fact that I was on THEIR property. If we showed more respect towards one another things would go much better.

LilliVB
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I agree. Like someone pointed out, if it is done respectfully, asked kindly and it's not an inconvenience or done to take advantage of someone else's space, most people wouldn't have big problems to let someone parking on their property for few hours on special occasions. When I'm going to visit my parents I usually rent a car, as I don't need one where I live and so I don't own one. As it is a rented car I'm always asking a neighbor if I can park on their property for the time I'm there as being not on the road I feel it's safer. Never had an issue or a no as answer. But I'm asking every time.

Load More Replies...
Tyranamar Seuss
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I don't think she was lying. I think she was genuinely confused. Sounds like the garages are not connected to the houses and are located somewhere else. They probably all look very similar. I think she just parked in front of the wrong garage.

Al LeFeusch
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

What you do when you make a genuine mistake and inconvenience other people is *apologize*... Not get all angry when your mistake is made apparent. Saying "oh gosh, I'm so embarrassed i totally got confused... I'm sorry." probably would have kept this story from ever making it to social media at all.

Load More Replies...
Devin Singh
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Something similar happened one night when I still lived with my dad back in college. Somebody parked and blocked our driveway. I honked, nobody came to move it. So I started called 311 to have it ticketed and towed. When I pulled out my phone, somebody got out of the car, apparently he was sleeping in the backseat. And started arguing with me about how this isn't my house. I said very calmly that it was, and that I'd been living there for 20 years. He kept arguing and threatening me, telling me we've been squatting and he's gonna call his friends and they're gonna be pissed. I just calmly kept repeating that this was my house that I've lived in for 20 years. Finally, after 5 minutes of huffing and puffing and blowing smoke, he calls his friend, and they try to Jimmy the car lock because apparently he'd locked himself out. After about 20 minutes of trying, they had to call a locksmith. I waited calmly the entire time. Then he finally got the car open and drove off. This was in NYC.

Mary Rogers
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

A lot of people have no respect for other people's property. One incident with my parent's neighbors had my mind boggled at the time. We had gotten snow, which is rare in our area. The neighbor thought that was a good opportunity to show off his skiing skills to his friends...on my parent's LAWN. They had a built up lawn with a decorative wall around it, which was higher than the shared driveway with the neighbors. So he figured he could show off his "jumping" skills (sorry I don't ski so I don't know if that is the right word.) My mother went out and told him that she didn't want him on the lawn. He got all whiny and goes, "Well you could have been nice about it!" She was, it wasn't like she cussed him out. I couldn't figure out why he thought that was a good idea in the first place, or what he was trying to demonstrate since the lawn was not in any way like a ski slope. It was perfectly flat, as was the driveway he was jumping into.

Tim Farrell
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I am not condoning parking in someone’s driveway but I have a different problem. The street that I live on only allows parking on my side of the street. If someone comes to visit me coming from the wrong direction they use my neighbours driveway to turn around and park in frount of my house. This causes my neighbour to threaten me to the point of calling the police to have my guests arrested for trespassing. If I know this is going to happen I warn my friends “don’t use the driveway of the wicked witch to my west”

brandyy17
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

i used to live in a gated community and wen i got new neighbors their guests parked in my driveway. my parents werent home so i decided to stand on the driveway id in my pocket smoking a cigarette. they get to there car freaking out and call the cops. cops get there and to my suprise one of them was my friend from high school. the party guests start yelling saying how im tresspassing and smoking on their driveway. my friend walks up to me asks me if it true i just simply hand him my id and he reacted perfectly. he gave me back my id they said "mind if i smoke too" i gave him the go ahead and now we r both smoking on my driveway. the other officer is so confused my neighbors party guests r furious. the other cop comes over asks wats up so my friend tells him my id says this address and we r standing on my driveway. i told them i never said they could park here and they r blocking the garage which my parents use all the time. the other cop told them to take there car and leave. they refused bc i was the one tresspassing. after asking for the 3rd time my parents come home. my friend yells over to my parents saying hi and its nice to see them. at that moment not only did the other officer understand his calm and smarta$$ tatic but my neighbors guests realized they f'd up. i made sure they didnt see show my id to my cop friend and hes quick so he picked up on wat i was trying to do. i was waiting for my parents cuz i knew theyd b home soon. my neighbors guests ran into their car and went to the guest parking lot. i saw them running back to my neighbors with a gift. the other cop left but my friend stayed and we started talking with my parents and he said if i wasnt so clever with my choice on how to handle that they probably wouldve tried to pull the "we r their neighbors" card and they just got back from getting them a housewarming gift. my parents were so happy my friend was one of the cops that showed up bc it couldve gone a very different direction. the direction that took me having a panic attack leading into a seizure since they trigger my epilepsy. im not good in situations if they escalate bc of my anxeity disorder but wen i saw my friend i knew id b fine. my friend did tell me that if the situation did escalate and i did have a panic attack causing a seizure bc of their actions i would technically b allowed to press charges for causing me emotional distress since at the time i was wearing a medical warning bracelet. it labeled my conditions and triggers on it. one of those triggers aggressive confrontation. if my friend wasnt there i wouldve shown the cop my bracelet which in turn would tell him how to handle the situation. ive had to do it before. alot of ppl thought my driveway or the front of my house was a free parking spot wen in reality if u r a guest to someone living in the community u r only allowed to park in the driveway or one of the many guest parking lots. only exception is major holidays. the time before that they parked infront of my house and another in the driveway and since residents r allowed to call the cops i did and since the car owners werent there and i didnt kno where they were their cars got towed. all i knew was they parked and walked down the street. the cop gave me a note and said wen they come back give them the note and go back into the house. i showed him my bracelet which is y he wrote the note along with the towing papers. he made it so no conversation was necessary for me. i dont wear it anymore since im married and my husband works from home so im never alone and even if he is out my in laws live upstairs so i never need to deal with situations regarding strangers. although we always have 3 cars at most in the driveway and no one is gonna risk that unless they r an entitled prick.

John Cherish
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

All the woman had to do was knock on the door and ask permission from the owner of the house. A very simple and respectful thing to do

Caroline Driver
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'd have let her fumble for her garage keys for a good length of time, dangling my keys all the while, watching her do the whole 'they must be in here somewhere, maybe I left them in my other bag' etc before opening up the garage.

Celtic Pirate Queen
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We lived in a condo with assigned parking. Once upon a time our landlord and another owner had swapped parking spots so each would have one closer to their unit. Unfortunately, the never cleared it with the HOA. I came home from the store and someone was in our spot. I left a very polite note on the car. A few hours later this guy comes pounding on our door to let us know that was HIS assigned spot. I was like, "Dude - we've been parking there for 6 years and all of a sudden you decide you want to take it back? You're an a$$hole." So, we had to park our car 12 spots further from our unit, which honestly wasn't that big of a deal, but it was the way he handled it that got me p*ssed. I flipped that motherf*cker off every single time I saw him.

Argle Bargle
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

In situations like this, don't even get mad.....just bite the bullet and pay a tow truck to come and impound it. Then they get to wonder where the car is and pay even more to get it out due to storage fees.

Maggie Hood
Community Member
1 year ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Maybe she had memory problems or something. It sounds a lot like she might've been confused or maybe she has some sort of mental illness. Either way I feel like there's more to the story than "she was just a crazy karen".

Westerly Winds
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

To be able to lie vehemently like that! Unbelievable what society has become.

The Other Guest
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There's a liquor store about two blocks away that only has street parking. There's a residence behind it. The people who live there used to put a traffic cone in their driveway to keep people from parking there. Then they added a "no parking" sign. Then a "no tresspassing" sign. Then they replaced the cone with a barricade like you would see when a road is closed, with the signs. Finally the ended up fencing in their yard, including an electronic gate across the entrance to the driveway. Crazy that they had to take it that far just to keep rude people from parking where they didn't belong.

FluffyPanda
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

HHAHAHAHAHAHAH she really thought that would work? Usually I don’t care about stuff like that but this is HALARIOUS

Mark Esther Askren
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Regardless, Karen is a derogatory term and racist, should not be used.

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