29 People Who Confidently Posted Something Very, Very, Very, Very Very, Very, Very, Very Dumb Online This Year

1.This person who tried to warn someone about consequences:

Social media post comments: First comment about waiting 45 min for a bus. Second comment humorously predicts "massive reaper cushions" consequences
u/siliconedude / Via reddit.com

2.This person who tried to send a positive message:

Comment: "This is what all lives should be. Kindness, helping, just a simple jester. It's not that hard." Illustrated with a hand holding a rose
u/soulsofthetime / Via reddit.com

3.This person who warned someone about food safety:

Text conversation between two people. The first says, "Didn't cook the chicken properly before we ate it." The second replies, "Dumb. That's literally how you get sell my nana."
u/Deep-Impact5595 / Via reddit.com

4.This person who posed a would-you-rather dating question:

A Facebook post poses a question about women preferring a funny chubby guy or a humorless ripped guy, assuming both are equally adept in the bedroom
u/discountdonkeyshow / Via reddit.com

5.This person who gave someone their two cents on an issue:

Social media post discussion. User 1 seeks advice on avoiding an issue. User 2 suggests burning down as a solution but mentions dyeing grass. User 3 assumes sarcasm in User 2's response. User 4 states they are just sharing an opinion
u/thenotsoamerican / Via reddit.com

6.This person who shared a story that was slightly off:

A Facebook conversation where one person recounts a story about a friend whose customer was buying genuine pigs for grocery shopping. Another person asks what made them genuine
u/JuanDosUno / Via reddit.com

7.This person who was curious if a product genuinely worked:

Social media comment asking, "Do these do anything or does it just give you the placenta effect?"
u/ItaDapiza / Via reddit.com

8.This person who somehow misheard the phrase "grand scheme of things" and thought this was the saying:

A social media post reads: "I present to you... Gran Stephen Things." Below is a humorous screenshot highlighting a typo with 1.6M views, 31.4K likes, and 1,897 retweets
u/tothgera / Via reddit.com

9.This person who tried to sell a toilet with a bidet:

Toilet for sale labeled "Toilet with electric Biden," priced at $179, previously $225. Includes description and options to contact the seller
u/ElTi9re / Via reddit.com

10.This person who was fed up with the rising costs of concert tickets:

Social media post with the text: "Ticketmaster is now my swarm enemy." The post has 1 like and 2 comments
u/Y33tusThatFeetus / Via reddit.com

11.This person who misunderstood what "theory" could mean:

Comment misunderstanding 'theory' in science, equating it with a lack of evidence
u/G3rmTheory / Via reddit.com

12.This person who asked for a favor:

Social media post asking for recommendations for air duct and dryer duct cleaning services at home
u/DampButter / Via reddit.com

13.This person who didn't know geography that well:

Screenshot of a social media exchange with comments on national identity, with some users corrected and others expressing offense
u/Trancoso74 / Via reddit.com

14.This person who should never become a doctor:

A comment questioning about someone having died from "eternal bleeding" and mentioning an article read a year ago
u/ProstheticArmsDealer / Via reddit.com

15.These people who commented on Facebook to give someone medical advice:

Screenshot of a social media conversation where individuals discuss remedies for a husband's leg injury, with suggestions for alternative medicine
u/Divided_Alarmed / Via reddit.com

16.This person who didn't know how to spell "creme de la creme":

Text conversation about a phrase "cream dollar cream" meaning "really good," heard in a movie. Participants are confused but amused
u/lunaxcake / Via reddit.com

17.This person who tried their hardest to spell "faux pas":

Image with text: "So I committed a pho pa. Big oops. But I think I got away with it."
u/AzucarParaTi / Via reddit.com

18.This person who tried giving someone suggestions for their wedding:

Comment suggests making a bangle from a gold band for a partner's wedding day rather than a chain
u/Significant-Ant-9729 / Via reddit.com

19.This person who could not do math to save their life:

"9 out of 10 is the same thing as 19 out of 20, dunce"
u/l1qmaballs / Via reddit.com

20.This person who said chivalry was dead...or at least tried to say that:

Tweet expressing nostalgia for the 1990s, stating that chivalry was still in style
u/GOGONUT6543 / Via reddit.com

21.This person who knew they said something off:

"something told me I was wrong"
u/Jordanboiii76 / Via reddit.com

22.This person who claimed a nurse had to "suction the vein" to withdraw blood:

Social media screenshot with a post about a misspoken phrase, where a nurse said "suction what now" instead of the intended words
u/Lord_Answer_me_Why / Via reddit.com

23.This person who had no idea how biology worked:

"It then enters your bloodstream and collects in your brain and spine."
u/WrestlingWoman / Via reddit.com

24.This person who claimed the sun isn't real:

"The Sun hasn't been invented yet."
u/Top_Chicken3676 / Via reddit.com

25.This person who didn't believe...in planes:

Summarized screenshot of a social media comment speculating on technology and dismissing airplanes, referencing holograms and government secrets
u/Justthisdudeyaknow / Via reddit.com

26.This person who explained why infidelity is good for couples:

"Cheating makes marriages stronger"
u/MelanieWalmartinez / Via reddit.com

27.This person who must've never seen "first and foremost" written out:

"First informals the meat..."
u/Free_Bingo / Via reddit.com

28.These people who assumed that honey must actually be really good for babies if the FDA advised parents against it:

"Why can't you give a baby under a year honey?"
u/catsoft / Via reddit.com

29.And lastly, this person who got too deep into conspiracy theories:

"How did Hollywood know what the world looked like before NASA"
u/Meaglo / Universal Pictures / Via reddit.com