Parenting teenagers often means balancing patience with accountability but what happens when a lesson in consequences becomes a family conflict? One frustrated father recently took to Reddit’s AITA community after his 17-year-old son vandalized his car as part of a dare from a friend.
When he confronted his son, things got heated. He called the boy a “moron” and issued an ultimatum: either he and his friend pay for the damage or the cost comes straight out of his college fund.
While the father thought his response was firm but fair, his wife accused him of being “abusive” for his language and strict stance. So, did he go too far?
Teenage son was dared by a friend to vandalize his dad’s car, and instead of saying no, he went through with it












OP’s son deliberately vandalized the family car as part of a dare. The parent’s impulse to demand repayment, and to threaten using the son’s college fund, reflects a desire for accountability and to teach consequences. The wife’s hesitation reflects concern that overly punitive measures will damage trust or appear abusive.
Both perspectives are understandable, but experts recommend balancing accountability with constructive, legal, and developmentally appropriate responses.
Vandalism by adolescents is a law‑breaking act that commonly leads to restitution or juvenile court involvement; juvenile systems emphasize holding youth accountable while promoting rehabilitation. OJJDP
Legally, victims (including parents) typically can seek restitution; parents may also face parental‑responsibility rules in some jurisdictions, so careful legal navigation matters. FindLaw
Psychologists and parenting authorities stress that effective discipline is firm, predictable, and focused on learning rather than humiliation.
The American Academy of Pediatrics advises non‑violent, consistent consequences that preserve the parent‑child relationship and build responsibility.
Practical parenting research and commentary recommend reparative consequences, meaningful tasks or labor to repair harm, direct restitution to the victim, or structured community service, rather than purely punitive measures that remove future opportunities. Psychology Today
A constructive roadmap for OP:
- 1) document the damage and get repair estimates;
- 2) involve the teen in a written restitution plan (work, payment schedule, and limits);
- 3) contact the other teen’s parents and insist on shared responsibility;
- 4) consider restorative justice (mediated meeting with the son, friend, and the family whose property was harmed) to teach empathy; and
- 5) avoid rash actions (e.g., unilaterally seizing protected college funds) without legal advice. These steps preserve boundaries while prioritizing repair and learning.
Here are the comments of Reddit users:
Reddit overwhelmingly sided with the father, calling his response reasonable and his wife’s leniency dangerous


![Father Calls Teen A Moron And Threatens College Fund After Dare-Driven Vandalism [Reddit User] − NTA. Im sorry, but your wife about letting this pass? No f__king way.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761753108925-14.webp)








Several commenters argued that both boys should be held accountable























One commenter shared a personal experience






And this user had a question to ask

Do you think taking money from a college fund is an appropriate deterrent, or would you prefer a plan that teaches empathy and responsibility without jeopardizing his future? Share your hot takes below!









