High school can be a challenging time for many, but what happens when a high-functioning autistic student becomes a bully? Meet Jake, the bully with autism, and our 15-year-old protagonist who decided enough was enough. When Jake targeted a girl named Lori, who had been badly burned in a fire when she was younger, our hero stepped in and called Jake out on his behavior. But now, Jake’s mom is demanding an apology, and our protagonist is left wondering if he did the right thing. Let’s dive into this controversial story.
Introducing Jake, the Bully

Targeting the Weak

No Accountability

Lori’s Struggle

A Painful Past

Jake’s Cruel Words

Enough is Enough!

Standing Up to the Bully ♂️

Autism or Not, Bullying is Wrong ❌

Detention and Playing the Victim

No Tolerance for Bullies

The Aftermath

Mom vs. Mom

A Family Divided

To Apologize or Not? ♂️

A Hero’s Dilemma: Should He Apologize?
In a world where bullies often go unchecked, our 15-year-old protagonist took a stand against Jake, a high-functioning autistic bully who relentlessly targeted a girl named Lori. After calling Jake out on his behavior, our hero now faces backlash from Jake’s mom, who demands an apology. With his own family divided on the matter, he’s left to wonder if he should be the bigger person and apologize or stand his ground against bullying. Let’s see what the internet thinks of this situation…
Standing up to an autistic bully: NTA, good on you!

NTA – Autistic bully’s behavior needs intervention, not babying

NTA — You’re a goddamn hero . Preventing stereotypes and teaching empathy .

Teen stands up to autistic bully: NTA, mom unaware of behavior

Teen defends bullied friend against autistic bully.
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NTA for standing up to a bully. You were brave!

Taking a stand against bullying: Autism doesn’t excuse bad behavior.

Apologizing to an autistic bully? NTA, but unexpected twist!

NTA stands up to bully, demands apology from his mom.

Boldly standing up to bullying: NTA!

Standing up to an autistic bully: justified or controversial?

NTA’s experience with adults with disabilities highlights the importance of boundaries.

Teen defends bullied classmate with autism: Heroic stand against bullying!

Standing up to an autistic bully: Hero or villain?

Friend defends against bully: NTA, hero in action!

Standing up to an autistic bully: NTA, but room for improvement

NTA. Autistic bully needs accountability, blame his parents.

Mom’s attitude towards autistic child’s behavior is criticized. NTA.

INFO: Seeking clarification on perceived a**hole status.
