Dude Who Went Viral For Grading His Ex’s Apology Letter Gets Suspended From College For Cyber-Bullying

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Back in February, University of Central Florida student Nick Lutz went super viral for grading his ex-girlfriend’s misspelled apology letter and sending it back to her, delivering her a D-, naturally. The spirit of the letter was Nick’s ex apologizing her her behavior during the relationship, claiming she had never cheated, but Nick argues this point.

She wrote, “I never cheated on you.” Nick marked this sentence with, “Strong statement. No supporting details to support your hypothesis.”

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Long intro, short conclusion, strong hypothesis but nothing to back it up. Details are important. If you want to be believed, back it up with proof. You claimed that cheating never occurred, but place blame on yourself, then for what? Need to stop contradicting your own story and pick a side. While this gesture is appreciated, I would prefer details over statements. Revision for half credit will be accepted.

Good luck.

After the letter went viral, Nick’s girlfriend filed a cyber-bullying claim. While nothing ever panned out legally, Lutz says he has been suspended from his school, as the University of Central Florida believes the tweet violated its code of conduct for disruption and cyber-bullying and have suspended him for two semesters and put him on probation. TWO SEMESTERS.

‘Looking back at it now, it’s probably the craziest thing that will ever happen in my life,’ he told WFTV.

‘My main goal was never to expose her. It was to show the emphasis on the letter,’ he added.

Yeah, outing your girlfriend’s sappy letter online isn’t the best look, but it wasn’t everything overly malicious. This dude will have to watch all his friends graduate before him as he sits with a flask in the crowd next to lint-smelling old people. Actually, fuck that, the dude is just putting off joining the real world one more year. Getting suspended is the best thing that could happen.

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[h/t Daily Mail]

 

 

 

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Matt’s love of writing was born during a sixth grade assembly when it was announced that his essay titled “Why Drugs Are Bad” had taken first prize in D.A.R.E.’s grade-wide contest. The anti-drug people gave him a $50 savings bond for his brave contribution to crime-fighting, and upon the bond’s maturity 10 years later, he used it to buy his very first bag of marijuana.