One of the main issues Chamblee high school has faced coming into the 2023-24 school year is overpopulation.
“I’m so thankful it’s my last year here, this year the hallways have been way to full for me to comfortably walk down them, and I swear as I’m walking I see so many people,—this may sound weird —but I swears I keep seeing the same faces,” said Gonica Meller (‘24).
Due to their large numbers the freshmen are starting to believe they are superior to all other grades and even to the teachers and administrators.
“600 people is a lot of people, and a lot more people than teachers and administrators when you really think about it. Who put the teachers and administrators in charge anyways,” said Bandler Ching (‘27).
The freshmen have declared Bheo Puffay as their leader. They are planning to take over the school one grade level at a time, starting with the sophomores.
“We have come to the decision to work our way up, starting with the sophomores because considering they have only been in the school for one year that should be easy. The teachers and administrators will be much more difficult because some of them have been here for like 20 years,” said Grachel Reen (‘27) the leader’s assistant.
You would assume they would be more discreet with their plans, but being as open as they are being, is actually a part of their plan.
“We really want to test the school’s limits and strengths, they also can really kick us out, and if they try, this whole thing has actually been a social experiment,” said Puffay.
This article is less of an article and more of a warning. Sources are still unclear on if this is actually a “social experiment.” We do not know the lengths the freshmen are willing to go to.
“I feel personally attacked by these threats, I’m honestly really scared some of them are really tall,” said Toey Jribbiani (‘26).
On the other hand, administrators are ready for whatever is about to happen.
Principle Bail Garnes said “Yes, they do outnumber us, but most of them haven’t hit puberty yet, so we have size. They say quality over quantity, and I believe that will benefit the teachers and administrators if the freshman pull through on their plans.”