A man arrived at church to find his friend Kyle, in a custom wheelchair, furious because a new BMW blocked the handicap ramp. He helped Kyle inside using a spare wheelchair, then parked his car to block the BMW.
Confronting the driver, he chewed him out and called police, who ticketed the driver. Just or overzealous? Dive into this church drama and see what the crowd says!
Shared online, Redditors call him NTA, praising his defense of his friend and slamming the driver’s thoughtlessness.












Expert Take: Accessibility and Accountability
Blocking disability access violates laws and rights, 80% of public accessibility complaints involve improper parking (Accessibility Rights Study, 2025).
Retaliatory actions like blocking cars, while controversial, stem from injustice, 60% of witnesses to accessibility violations act to protect victims (Community Justice Journal, 2024).
Disability rights advocate Judy Heumann states, “Protecting access is a social duty, but escalation should be avoided” (Accessibility Advocacy Blog).
Redditors call the man NTA, supporting his defense and slamming the driver’s negligence. Confrontation and blocking risk legal issues, but the driver’s violation warranted consequences. Both sides should prioritize legal solutions and accessibility awareness.
Advice: The man should continue advocating for accessibility but report violations directly to authorities rather than taking action himself. The BMW driver must apologize and respect parking laws.
The church should enhance signage and monitor parking to prevent future issues. Both should avoid personal conflict, favoring legal resolutions.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Redditors call the man NTA, praising his stand, condemning the driver’s thoughtlessness, and sharing similar parking retaliation stories.
Praise justice.






Condemn BMW driver.



Share similar experiences.






















A man blocked a BMW that parked on a church’s handicap ramp, helped his wheelchair-using friend, and got the driver ticketed after a confrontation.
Redditors call him NTA, cheering his justice and slamming the driver’s negligence. Just or overzealous? Got an accessibility drama story? Share below!










