english homework: incel edition

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Title: My experience working at a goyslop factory

I used to work at a slop factory for 9 months. Around there, I was filled with an abundance of normfags and bitch foids (who were teens). In my 9 months of working there, I didn't make a single friend. It was just genuine bullshit.

My first day, everyone dapped me up and introduced themselves to me, so the little shimmer of bluepilled cope in me thought
"Wow! maybe I can finally experience 1% of a normie life :D"
WRONG

After that, it was all fucking downhill. My first shift, I was learning how to do shit for the first time, and when I couldn't do something correctly (how to wrap burgers), I had the retarded, empathy-deprived fucking whore foids laughing at me. What is wrong with their retarded fucking head?? I'm clearly new, and when I don't have the experience of a veteran they act like I'm a retard who escaped from the sped classes. But I just know if I were Chad, it'd be "haha, silly Chad, let me teach you how to wrap burgers, would you also like a pay raise and blowjob along with that too?? actually, that's not an offer, LET ME SUCK YOUR DICK CHAD PLZZZ"

FUCK

and then of course my coworkers excluded me from everything. I tried my best to act NT and fit in, but because of my manlet height (5'7), of course I wasn't at eye level with these fucking NT Tyrones. I would walk in, try to join a conversation, try to spew a few words and it'd be like "yeah yeah... anyway" and I was out. All this for 9 fucking months not a single friend made. I'd clock in, make food, then I'd be out bored and hating that shit job for all. I only kept the job for 9 months anyway because I had to help my parents stabilise with cash.

The managers also either hated me or were neutral, not one with a positive opinion. One manger who was a make-up-frauded LTB "AYY-BEEE-GEEE" whore hated me especially. She would make me work like I was a slave (when in reality it should be the niggers working hard, but they were NT Rones so ofc not) making me do arbitrary monotonous task which didn't even have any relevance to producing goy, but just out of spite. She also was responsible for shifts and gave me 5 hours a week when I told her clearly my parents were struggling and I needed work hours despite me hating every single second of it.

In conclusion: Fuck working, LDAR is life.

1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)
2. Identify the one idea conveyed in this extract? (1 Mark)
3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory (2 Marks)
4. What is the Inkwell's perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)
5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)
6. To what extent does the extract, from the authors perspective invite sympathy? (5 Marks)
 
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Nigga giving us incel home work



IMG 4459

@EthiopianMaxxer @registerfasterusing ye no me gusta
 
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I killed my teacher and ate her heart back in the day
 
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Title: My experience working at a goyslop factory

I used to work at a slop factory for 9 months. Around there, I was filled with an abundance of normfags and bitch foids (who were teens). In my 9 months of working there, I didn't make a single friend. It was just genuine bullshit.

My first day, everyone dapped me up and introduced themselves to me, so the little shimmer of bluepilled cope in me thought
"Wow! maybe I can finally experience 1% of a normie life :D"
WRONG

After that, it was all fucking downhill. My first shift, I was learning how to do shit for the first time, and when I couldn't do something correctly (how to wrap burgers), I had the retarded, empathy-deprived fucking whore foids laughing at me. What is wrong with their retarded fucking head?? I'm clearly new, and when I don't have the experience of a veteran they act like I'm a retard who escaped from the sped classes. But I just know if I were Chad, it'd be "haha, silly Chad, let me teach you how to wrap burgers, would you also like a pay raise and blowjob along with that too?? actually, that's not an offer, LET ME SUCK YOUR DICK CHAD PLZZZ"

FUCK

and then of course my coworkers excluded me from everything. I tried my best to act NT and fit in, but because of my manlet height (5'7), of course I wasn't at eye level with these fucking NT Tyrones. I would walk in, try to join a conversation, try to spew a few words and it'd be like "yeah yeah... anyway" and I was out. All this for 9 fucking months not a single friend made. I'd clock in, make food, then I'd be out bored and hating that shit job for all. I only kept the job for 9 months anyway because I had to help my parents stabilise with cash.

The managers also either hated me or were neutral, not one with a positive opinion. One manger who was a make-up-frauded LTB "AYY-BEEE-GEEE" whore hated me especially. She would make me work like I was a slave (when in reality it should be the niggers working hard, but they were NT Rones so ofc not) making me do arbitrary monotonous task which didn't even have any relevance to producing goy, but just out of spite. She also was responsible for shifts and gave me 5 hours a week when I told her clearly my parents were struggling and I needed work hours despite me hating every single second of it.

In conclusion: Fuck working, LDAR is life.

1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)
2. Identify the one idea conveyed in this extract? (1 Mark)
3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory (2 Marks)
4. What is the Inkwell's perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)
5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)
6. To what extent does the extract, from the authors perspective invite sympathy? (5 Marks)
I’ll answer this as a literary/reading-comprehension exercise, without endorsing or repeating the offensive language used in the extract.














1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)








The tone is angry, bitter, and resentful.


It is emotionally charged, hostile, and confrontational, reflecting deep frustration and alienation.














2. Identify one idea conveyed in this extract. (1 Mark)








The extract conveys the idea of social exclusion and perceived mistreatment in the workplace, especially toward someone who feels different or marginalized.














3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell hated working there because:





  • He felt mocked, excluded, and disrespected by coworkers when he struggled as a new employee.
  • He believed managers treated him unfairly, giving him undesirable tasks and insufficient work hours despite his financial needs.
















4. What is the Inkwell’s perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell perceives “Chads” as:





  • Socially and romantically privileged, receiving kindness, patience, and admiration effortlessly.
  • Benefiting from preferential treatment in both social and professional settings, regardless of competence.







This reflects a belief that attractiveness and status determine how others are treated.














5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)








The extract explores Inceldom by:





  • Framing personal failures through a rigid hierarchy of social and sexual value.
  • Attributing negative experiences to immutable traits (height, appearance, neurotypicality).
  • Expressing resentment toward perceived “normies” and idealized “Chads,” reinforcing an us-versus-them worldview common in incel narratives.
















6. To what extent does the extract, from the author’s perspective, invite sympathy? (5 Marks)








The extract partially invites sympathy, but this is limited.





Sympathy is invited because:





  • The author describes loneliness, financial pressure, and social rejection.
  • There is a sense of genuine emotional pain and isolation.







However, sympathy is undermined because:





  • The use of dehumanizing and hateful language alienates the reader.
  • Blame is externalized entirely, with no self-reflection.
  • The narrative relies on prejudice rather than evidence.







Overall, while the emotional distress is real, the hostile framing significantly reduces the reader’s willingness to empathize fully.











If you want, I can also:





  • Rewrite this extract in a neutral or exam-safe tone
  • Turn these answers into model GCSE/A-Level responses
  • Help you analyze it from a sociological or psychological perspective







Just say the word.
 
  • JFL
Reactions: qxdr, chrisangeler, EthiopianMaxxer and 3 others
I’ll answer this as a literary/reading-comprehension exercise, without endorsing or repeating the offensive language used in the extract.














1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)








The tone is angry, bitter, and resentful.


It is emotionally charged, hostile, and confrontational, reflecting deep frustration and alienation.














2. Identify one idea conveyed in this extract. (1 Mark)








The extract conveys the idea of social exclusion and perceived mistreatment in the workplace, especially toward someone who feels different or marginalized.














3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell hated working there because:





  • He felt mocked, excluded, and disrespected by coworkers when he struggled as a new employee.
  • He believed managers treated him unfairly, giving him undesirable tasks and insufficient work hours despite his financial needs.
















4. What is the Inkwell’s perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell perceives “Chads” as:





  • Socially and romantically privileged, receiving kindness, patience, and admiration effortlessly.
  • Benefiting from preferential treatment in both social and professional settings, regardless of competence.







This reflects a belief that attractiveness and status determine how others are treated.














5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)








The extract explores Inceldom by:





  • Framing personal failures through a rigid hierarchy of social and sexual value.
  • Attributing negative experiences to immutable traits (height, appearance, neurotypicality).
  • Expressing resentment toward perceived “normies” and idealized “Chads,” reinforcing an us-versus-them worldview common in incel narratives.
















6. To what extent does the extract, from the author’s perspective, invite sympathy? (5 Marks)








The extract partially invites sympathy, but this is limited.





Sympathy is invited because:





  • The author describes loneliness, financial pressure, and social rejection.
  • There is a sense of genuine emotional pain and isolation.







However, sympathy is undermined because:





  • The use of dehumanizing and hateful language alienates the reader.
  • Blame is externalized entirely, with no self-reflection.
  • The narrative relies on prejudice rather than evidence.







Overall, while the emotional distress is real, the hostile framing significantly reduces the reader’s willingness to empathize fully.











If you want, I can also:





  • Rewrite this extract in a neutral or exam-safe tone
  • Turn these answers into model GCSE/A-Level responses
  • Help you analyze it from a sociological or psychological perspective







Just say the word.
wow nice one
 
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  • Love it
Reactions: qxdr, EthiopianMaxxer and registerfasterusing
I’ll answer this as a literary/reading-comprehension exercise, without endorsing or repeating the offensive language used in the extract.














1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)








The tone is angry, bitter, and resentful.


It is emotionally charged, hostile, and confrontational, reflecting deep frustration and alienation.














2. Identify one idea conveyed in this extract. (1 Mark)








The extract conveys the idea of social exclusion and perceived mistreatment in the workplace, especially toward someone who feels different or marginalized.














3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell hated working there because:





  • He felt mocked, excluded, and disrespected by coworkers when he struggled as a new employee.
  • He believed managers treated him unfairly, giving him undesirable tasks and insufficient work hours despite his financial needs.
















4. What is the Inkwell’s perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell perceives “Chads” as:





  • Socially and romantically privileged, receiving kindness, patience, and admiration effortlessly.
  • Benefiting from preferential treatment in both social and professional settings, regardless of competence.







This reflects a belief that attractiveness and status determine how others are treated.














5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)








The extract explores Inceldom by:





  • Framing personal failures through a rigid hierarchy of social and sexual value.
  • Attributing negative experiences to immutable traits (height, appearance, neurotypicality).
  • Expressing resentment toward perceived “normies” and idealized “Chads,” reinforcing an us-versus-them worldview common in incel narratives.
















6. To what extent does the extract, from the author’s perspective, invite sympathy? (5 Marks)








The extract partially invites sympathy, but this is limited.





Sympathy is invited because:





  • The author describes loneliness, financial pressure, and social rejection.
  • There is a sense of genuine emotional pain and isolation.







However, sympathy is undermined because:





  • The use of dehumanizing and hateful language alienates the reader.
  • Blame is externalized entirely, with no self-reflection.
  • The narrative relies on prejudice rather than evidence.







Overall, while the emotional distress is real, the hostile framing significantly reduces the reader’s willingness to empathize fully.











If you want, I can also:





  • Rewrite this extract in a neutral or exam-safe tone
  • Turn these answers into model GCSE/A-Level responses
  • Help you analyze it from a sociological or psychological perspective







Just say the word.
Just say the word.
 
  • JFL
Reactions: qxdr, Mogs Me, acm and 1 other person
Just say the word.
I’ll answer this as a literary/reading-comprehension exercise, without endorsing or repeating the offensive language used in the extract.














1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)








The tone is angry, bitter, and resentful.


It is emotionally charged, hostile, and confrontational, reflecting deep frustration and alienation.














2. Identify one idea conveyed in this extract. (1 Mark)








The extract conveys the idea of social exclusion and perceived mistreatment in the workplace, especially toward someone who feels different or marginalized.














3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell hated working there because:





  • He felt mocked, excluded, and disrespected by coworkers when he struggled as a new employee.
  • He believed managers treated him unfairly, giving him undesirable tasks and insufficient work hours despite his financial needs.
















4. What is the Inkwell’s perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)








The Inkwell perceives “Chads” as:





  • Socially and romantically privileged, receiving kindness, patience, and admiration effortlessly.
  • Benefiting from preferential treatment in both social and professional settings, regardless of competence.







This reflects a belief that attractiveness and status determine how others are treated.














5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)








The extract explores Inceldom by:





  • Framing personal failures through a rigid hierarchy of social and sexual value.
  • Attributing negative experiences to immutable traits (height, appearance, neurotypicality).
  • Expressing resentment toward perceived “normies” and idealized “Chads,” reinforcing an us-versus-them worldview common in incel narratives.
















6. To what extent does the extract, from the author’s perspective, invite sympathy? (5 Marks)








The extract partially invites sympathy, but this is limited.





Sympathy is invited because:





  • The author describes loneliness, financial pressure, and social rejection.
  • There is a sense of genuine emotional pain and isolation.







However, sympathy is undermined because:





  • The use of dehumanizing and hateful language alienates the reader.
  • Blame is externalized entirely, with no self-reflection.
  • The narrative relies on prejudice rather than evidence.







Overall, while the emotional distress is real, the hostile framing significantly reduces the reader’s willingness to empathize fully.











If you want, I can also:





  • Rewrite this extract in a neutral or exam-safe tone
  • Turn these answers into model GCSE/A-Level responses
  • Help you analyze it from a sociological or psychological perspective







Just say the word.
you forgot to add speicifc quotes and make it a cohesive argument :feelswhat:
 
  • +1
  • Woah
Reactions: qxdr, registerfasterusing and EthiopianMaxxer
Title: My experience working at a goyslop factory

I used to work at a slop factory for 9 months. Around there, I was filled with an abundance of normfags and bitch foids (who were teens). In my 9 months of working there, I didn't make a single friend. It was just genuine bullshit.

My first day, everyone dapped me up and introduced themselves to me, so the little shimmer of bluepilled cope in me thought
"Wow! maybe I can finally experience 1% of a normie life :D"
WRONG

After that, it was all fucking downhill. My first shift, I was learning how to do shit for the first time, and when I couldn't do something correctly (how to wrap burgers), I had the retarded, empathy-deprived fucking whore foids laughing at me. What is wrong with their retarded fucking head?? I'm clearly new, and when I don't have the experience of a veteran they act like I'm a retard who escaped from the sped classes. But I just know if I were Chad, it'd be "haha, silly Chad, let me teach you how to wrap burgers, would you also like a pay raise and blowjob along with that too?? actually, that's not an offer, LET ME SUCK YOUR DICK CHAD PLZZZ"

FUCK

and then of course my coworkers excluded me from everything. I tried my best to act NT and fit in, but because of my manlet height (5'7), of course I wasn't at eye level with these fucking NT Tyrones. I would walk in, try to join a conversation, try to spew a few words and it'd be like "yeah yeah... anyway" and I was out. All this for 9 fucking months not a single friend made. I'd clock in, make food, then I'd be out bored and hating that shit job for all. I only kept the job for 9 months anyway because I had to help my parents stabilise with cash.

The managers also either hated me or were neutral, not one with a positive opinion. One manger who was a make-up-frauded LTB "AYY-BEEE-GEEE" whore hated me especially. She would make me work like I was a slave (when in reality it should be the niggers working hard, but they were NT Rones so ofc not) making me do arbitrary monotonous task which didn't even have any relevance to producing goy, but just out of spite. She also was responsible for shifts and gave me 5 hours a week when I told her clearly my parents were struggling and I needed work hours despite me hating every single second of it.

In conclusion: Fuck working, LDAR is life.

1. What is the tone of this extract? (1 Mark)
2. Identify the one idea conveyed in this extract? (1 Mark)
3. Why did the Inkwell hate working at the goyslop factory (2 Marks)
4. What is the Inkwell's perception of Chads and their quality of life? (2 Marks)
5. How does this extract explore the theme of Inceldom? (3 Marks)
6. To what extent does the extract, from the authors perspective invite sympathy? (5 Marks)
this was a funny read, enjoyed it brah
 
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Reactions: qxdr and acm

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