Holy s*it is this bad.

Meet Jennifer Dopazo, whose Twitter bio says she used to work at the New York Times. Dopazo went full “Karen” in a now-deleted series of tweets and accused a local butcher of selling a product with a “fake weight” because she doesn’t understand that 1.63 lbs (on the label) is the same as 1lb 10oz (on the scale):

Beware of price surging these days. Because of the situation, we decided to support our neighborhood businesses and get some extra groceries for the quarantine. Well @EatMeaty sold us products with fake weight. pic.twitter.com/mExoRPH44z — Jennifer Dopazo (@jenniferdopazo) March 21, 2020

We did get a screenshot before she deleted it:

The local butcher, Dickson’s Farmstand, helped her out with a math lesson and a handy conversion via Google:

Please Learn how to read your scale please before calling cbs. Your error is shown in your own photo. Our scales print lbs as a decimal. Your scale reads as lbs and ounces. — Dickson's Farmstand (@EatMeaty) March 22, 2020

Multiply the decimal portion of the weight by 16 to convert it to OZ — Dickson's Farmstand (@EatMeaty) March 22, 2020

Even worse, she sent her husband in to talk to the manager:

“Jacob went back to figure out if it was a mistake and found a hostile team of people that denied it. Finally brought a smaller scale and the truth in front of their eyes. The weight in the label is wrong. Frustrated he came back home pretty sad, used to be his favorite butcher”

Jacob went back to figure out if it was a mistake and found a hostile team of people that denied it. Finally brought a smaller scale and the truth in front of their eyes. The weight in the label is wrong. Frustrated he came back home pretty sad, used to be his favorite butcher — Jennifer Dopazo (@jenniferdopazo) March 21, 2020

And when that failed, she tagged the New York Attorney General and said she filed a complaint:

“I hope they don’t do this to more people as we all stay home and try to find ways to support our local businesses. I’ve submitted a complaint to @nyc311 and @NewYorkStateAG”

I hope they don’t do this to more people as we all stay home and try to find ways to support our local businesses. I’ve submitted a complaint to @nyc311 and @NewYorkStateAG — Jennifer Dopazo (@jenniferdopazo) March 21, 2020

What an awful thing to do:

When you attack a small business because you can’t do basic math https://t.co/tjKFRl1wd0 — Kassy Dillon (@KassyDillon) March 22, 2020

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