US Parent shocked after child played “Five Nights at Epstein’s” game on school computer - The game has become popular nationally, and kids from all across the country are playing it and other games that feature similarly disturbing content.

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One Granite School District parent is sharing her concerns after she said her son accessed and played a Jeffrey Epstein-themed game while at school, calling for the district to do more to protect their students from disturbing content.

The game in question is styled after the massively popular “Five Nights at Freddy’s” games, but instead of protecting yourself from a group of rogue animatronics, you are defending yourself from late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and other notable figures found in the Epstein files.

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The game also uses real photos released by the Department of Justice of the inside of Epstein’s Virgin Island home, “Little Saint James,” where he is alleged to have trafficked young women and girls to be sexually abused by himself and visitors to his home.

The game can be played on several websites for free, and playing the game has reportedly become a trend in schools across the country.

One mother of a Granite School District student recently turned to social media to share her concerns after she learned her son was playing this game while at school. The topic came up one night while the family was talking about what to have for dinner.

“He mentioned the game, and it caught me off guard,” Michelle Martinez told ABC4 over the phone. “And so I asked him about it, and he told me that it was a game he had played at school.”

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She said she was so upset that he knew anything about Epstein that she didn’t ask him any more questions. “I hadn’t had the conversation with him yet, or talked to him about situations like that yet.”

The fact that her son was able to play this game on a school computer was deeply disturbing to Martinez. “It absolutely disgusts me and breaks my heart that our children are subject to this, especially in this day and age,” she said.

School districts are able to block certain websites to prevent students from accessing them on their computers, but with free VPNs and proxies available on those same computers, it can become an almost impossible task for the districts to keep up with.

Still, Martinez feels like schools need to be doing more to prevent students from accessing content like this. “I think that the schools either need to remove computers completely or spend the money and upgrade their technology to prevent kids from being able to have access to games on their computers,” she said.

This is not just a problem for Granite School District, as the game has become popular nationally, and kids from all across the country are playing it and other games that feature similarly disturbing content.

Martinez said she thinks most students will grow up and remember it as a joke, but some kids will take it differently, and it will stick with them. “I just hope that the district or districts will figure out a way to put a stop to this so that we can protect our children just a little bit more,” she added.

Granite School District said that they’re aware of this particular issue and that they’ve taken measures to block it before. The district provided the following statement to ABC4.

“Granite School District is aware of a national trend involving students who are reportedly able to access an inappropriate game during school hours. In February, Granite received a concern about this game from one parent, and the district was able to block the website at that time,” the school district shared.

They said that they have since become aware of one additional concern that was shared to social media, but the district was not able to verify that the game was actually accessed.

“The district does not believe this game is being widely accessed at our schools. Regardless, we are committed to ensuring appropriate internet use in our schools, and we have a variety of safeguards in place,” the statement concluded.

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She said she was so upset that he knew anything about Epstein that she didn’t ask him any more questions. “I hadn’t had the conversation with him yet, or talked to him about situations like that yet.”
“I am a bad parent and I am expecting the overworked school teachers and administration to take responsibility for my failings.”
 
Man, when I was a kid and the internet was new and nobody had any idea how it worked, we had a PC in the lobby of our junior high, and of course everyone played boomershooters on it and the older students put the homepage of the browser on a hardcore porn site.

Those parents must be Gen X to be shocked by mild shit like this.
 
“I am a bad parent and I am expecting the overworked school teachers and administration to take responsibility for my failings.”
the parent "failed" to block content from the school's computers? what? how the fuck was she supposed to do that?
 
Oh please, this is amateur hour compared to Pico's School, Super Columbine RPG Massacre, and other lolworthy games.
 
Sometimes I wonder if the parents that show up in this type of articles ever had actual childhoods or if they were born lame, paranoid party-poopers deathly afraid that their kids learn about any of the bad things of the world on their own. Granite School District is in Utah so the chances they are actually all of that are not all that small
 
Sometimes I wonder if the parents that show up in this type of articles ever had actual childhoods or if they were born lame, paranoid party-poopers deathly afraid that their kids learn about any of the bad things of the world on their own. Granite School District is in Utah so the chances they are actually all of that are not all that small
If you ever have kids you will become cringe in the exact same way, and the circle of life will be complete
 
“I think that the schools either need to remove computers completely or spend the money and upgrade their technology to prevent kids from being able to have access to games on their computers,” she said.

"Yes, please school district give my child even more disadvantages over the pajeets!!"
 
Sometimes I wonder if the parents that show up in this type of articles ever had actual childhoods or if they were born lame, paranoid party-poopers deathly afraid that their kids learn about any of the bad things of the world on their own. Granite School District is in Utah so the chances they are actually all of that are not all that small
Helicopter parents probably got bullied in school, couldn't handle it, and proceeded to go on an anti-bullying crusade to make sure their pristine little children never have to go through the horrors they went through at the hands of those mean neighbourhood kids! Not once have they ever thought that the reason they got bullied was because they were acting retarded.

Coddling your children breeds weak bitches. I'm so sick of helicopter parents, they condescend to all children with their coddling, some of whom are probably smarter than the parents.
 
the parent "failed" to block content from the school's computers? what? how the fuck was she supposed to do that?
It's not about him getting around the filters, it's her being upset that he was playing a game about Epstein. Her not talking to him about those 'situations' is what she is seemingly expecting the school to do for her, or the prevent him from learning about from his friends.
 
Martinez said she thinks most students will grow up and remember it as a joke, but some kids will take it differently, and it will stick with them.
Take what differently? What will stick with them? Is Jeffrey Epstein offensive to some students? :story:
 
One mother of a Granite School District student recently turned to social media to share her concerns after she learned her son was playing this game while at school. The topic came up one night while the family was talking about what to have for dinner.

“He mentioned the game, and it caught me off guard,” Michelle Martinez told ABC4 over the phone. “And so I asked him about it, and he told me that it was a game he had played at school.”
Dumb little sperg.
 
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