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Tesco - Parent/Child + disabled car spaces
Comments
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Or dogs, barking up the wrong tree?0
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Or worse, a disabled space!!0
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Thank you,:D I am opinionated, I am not narrow minded, and only righteous when it is obvious to all where "right" lies (and in this instance it is not with you)
As for intelligence, I generally leave that for others to judge, although I would back both my paper qualifications (one of which is in Pyschology) and experience against yours.
As for being serious,or miserable, not even my worst critic would say that, so on a lighthearted note:-
I do also know the correct usage of the words "to" and "too" something which apparently eludes you:rotfl:
Well you see there you go again.
You have had to resort to your very own school ground tactics of picking up a mistake in the text I typed.
Your post, as quoted above is a classic example of someone with lack of self confidence.
Worried you might come across undereducated? Bit of an inferiority complex?
Boasting about your 'paper qualifications' and then mocking someone for missing an 'o' from a word is possibly as childish as my 'pop it up your bottom' comment.
You have just made yourself look a little bit silly haven't you? :rotfl:
Oh, and I find your constant need to 'bold' certain words you believe you should emphasise extremely patronising.0 -
...an afterthought for you;
When one is bragging about ones [FONT="]Psychology[/FONT][FONT="] qualifications - one should possibly spell [/FONT][FONT="]Psychology [/FONT][FONT="]correctly....
That is all.
[/FONT]0 -
:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:Emma :dance:
Aug GC - £88.17/£130
NSD - target 18 days, so far 5!!0 -
DaisyClaire wrote: »Well you see there you go again.
You have had to resort to your very own school ground tactics of picking up a mistake in the text I typed.
Your post, as quoted above is a classic example of someone with lack of self confidence.
Worried you might come across undereducated? Bit of an inferiority complex?
Not at all, just responding in kind to your post, and showing I have a sense of humour......pity you lost yours!:D
Boasting about your 'paper qualifications' and then mocking someone for missing an 'o' from a word is possibly as childish as my 'pop it up your bottom' comment.
Your post cast aspersions on my education, I was merely answering your question. If you are so sure you are better educated there is no problem is there?
You have just made yourself look a little bit silly haven't you? :rotfl:
Oh, and I find your constant need to 'bold' certain words you believe you should emphasise extremely patronising.
If I look silly, imagine how you look, saying I have no sense of humour and now taking the (quite obvious bait) and retaliating.:T
Sorry about the bold, I feel the need to emphasise some words.....just my style. If it makes you feel patronised that probably says more about you than me.
With regard to my typo, it was just that, a typo, whereas your incorrect usage of the word, was ....just that, incorrect.0 -
Old Cries of MSE #27:-
Handbags! Get your lovely HandBags!I am a cow so cannot speak Bullshine but I do recognise its smell when I come upon it.0 -
Re this issue of tesco staff telling you to park in the disabled space:
if they have, firstly they arent the brightest as they have to know that they are opening themselves up for all sorts of trouble if this gets around.
but secondly and crucially you have ultimate responsibility for your own actions. your excuse that "they told me to do it" sounds very much like the MP expenses defence (its also the Nuremberg defence)
So nope it doesnt wash.
I'm sure you're lovely in the rest of your life, well balanced and reasonable, so i dont think you're an awful person as you may have felt has been suggested. however, as a sensible human being i'd expect you to review the weight of objections to your actions and re consider whether this really is something you should be doing.
if your desire to park nearer the store means that on one occasion out of a hundred that a disabled person cant actually get the items they need it should be morally worth you not doing it.
having had two close relatives with horrible neuroloigical illnesses which severaly restricted their movement i can fully understand the additional upset that this could cause. for those of us who are well, nipping to the supermarket is an almost daily (well for me anyway) chore. for disbaled people it might actually be the highlight of their week, a goal to aim for.
That might give some insight as to how difficult a severely disabled life can be, and also the kind of impact your actions can have.
what saddens me most when i see able bodied people in the blue bays is when they have kids. what kind of people are we raising here?
i heard a quote yesterday which to paraphrase went:
"you can teach your kids nothing, but they learn everything from you"0 -
Ok I now understand why the Parent / Child spaces at tescos are so important... http://www.bitterwallet.com/tag/drag0
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