To: Beelzebubba
And out of that vehicle comes someone with no wheelchair, cane, walker, crutches, oxygen, or other evidence of disability, who then spends an hour ably walking around the store. Those spots have just become perks for growing old, having no principles, and being a whiner with a wimpy doctor. I'd pay my share for government docs to set and enforce standards for such disability benefits.
Oh, and even if they are allowed to park closer their destination, why should they not have to pay the parking meter or obey time limits like the rest of us?
So how were you inconvenienced?
203 posted on
11/28/2006 2:57:51 PM PST by
Qwertrew
(If a man says something in the woods, and there is no woman around to hear him, is he still wrong?)
To: Qwertrew
So how were you inconvenienced?
Good, convenient spots were available, but I had to waste time walking farther to other ones. Duh!
Same as affirmative action "inconveninces" those who were not admitted to the school, but would have been.
Same as a near-vacant "carpool lane" inconveniences motorists who paid for the highway.
272 posted on
11/28/2006 5:55:26 PM PST by
Atlas Sneezed
(Your FRiendly FReeper Patent Attorney)
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