The speaker discusses the problem of arrogant teachers who abuse their authority and humiliate students. They share personal anecdotes about teachers from their school days who were either respectful and effective educators or cruel and biased. The speaker emphasizes the importance of standing up against such teachers and encourages students to secretly record evidence of their mistreatment and file complaints to the Department of Education or other authorities. They believe that multiple complaints with incriminating evidence can lead to the teacher being fired and the school administration being held accountable.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The narrator's friend paid 600 rubles for food, but the narrator reduced the price to 235 rubles using coupons.
2. Coupons for employees of Burger King and similar fast-food restaurants can be found on a Telegram channel.
3. The narrator attended school and had both good and bad teachers.
4. The narrator's school had a 50-50 ratio of normal and abnormal teachers.
5. A geography teacher was one of the most respected teachers in the narrator's school.
6. The geography teacher was 60 years old and taught in an interesting way using presentations and stories.
7. A biology teacher in a parallel class taught in a boring way and did not allow students to ask questions.
8. The narrator did not study physics and chemistry in school.
9. A history teacher was the most disgusting teacher in the narrator's school, as she had no boundaries and could insult or yell at students.
10. The history teacher would often go on excursions with students and would make unfair assessments of students.
11. A physics teacher was an alcoholic and would sometimes not show up to school for weeks.
12. The physics teacher was fired after she fell asleep in class and the director's patience ran out.
13. A Russian teacher was very impudent and would constantly yell at and insult students.
14. The Russian teacher had favorites and would give them better grades, even if they made the same mistakes as other students.
15. The narrator advises students to complain to the Department of Education if they have a teacher who exceeds their authority, humiliates students, or forces them to hand over money.
16. Students can secretly record their teacher's behavior as evidence and attach it to their complaint.
17. If multiple complaints are received against a teacher with incriminating evidence, the teacher will likely be fired.