Posted on 08/20/2007 7:41:24 AM PDT by Between the Lines
Exactly. I lost all respect for the system after the nth time I saw someone zip into a handicapped spot, put up the tag, jump out of the car and run into the mall. It's infuriating.
“Seventy percent of suicides have uncontrollable physical pain as a factor.”
______________________________________________________________
Where does she get this figure. That’s truly awful if true and should be flogged as often as possible when the issue of pain control and painkiller prescription is brought up.
Damn those rednecks for giving Oxycontin a bad name.
Seems to me a bunch of Americans just need to mind their own dang business.
I don’t give a crap who parks in the blue spots, I don’t care if they “deserve” to or not.
Why are there so many busy bodies in our country?
I think it’s because we mistakenly classified pimp slapping stupid people as assault, JMO.
if you see someone abuse the handicapped parking laws, you shouuld report them to the police, or at least the DMV.
You’d be doing a favor for those of us who need the spaces.
I smile eerily, as if to an invisible presence over the questioner’s shoulder, and say, in a singsong robotic voice, “I’m psychotic, little angel, would you like to go back to heaven with me?” This generally backs them up.
What would we print on mine?
I all to often get that look of “You are stealing a handicapped person place and you look healthy to me” The symptoms of advanced emphysema and COPD are hard to spot from a distance and I only use the , what I call the “Cripple Tag” on a bad day. Walking is no problem but the distance is the problem
What really irks me is when I need a spot and have the license plates for them and they are all full than I see two football players running to a car with the tag hanging on the mirror and getting in and running back to the store.
Than you look at the next car and it has no handicapped symbol of any sort but the engine is running and the guy is reading the newspaper. It has now become a standing zone.
In Houston we have a program where individual citizens can write a ticket and take em to court. You have to go to classes, learn the way to do it and start out the right way.
You have to remember one thing. Write the ticket in full befor you take the mandatory photo. If you try the picture first you get people driving off as fast as they can
Of which the automobile has become a major contributor. How very perceptive. Thanks for pointing out that irony.
Or we get the AMA and the APA to list Chronic Jealousy Disorder as a legitimate illness and issue everyone a blue placard.
No one should get a handicapped sticker unless they are in a wheelchair. Better yet, since the “handi-capable” demand to be treated like everyone else, eliminate handicapped parking altogether.
did you see the pain shooting up that person's spine? Were they runnign becauseeach step hurt adn they wanted to get in as quickly as possible? Were they running because someone they care about was inside in need of help? or are you simply playing into stereotypes?
Amen.
I recently counted 12 in a nearby Home Depot parking lot: how many people in wheelchairs have you ever seen pushing sheets of drywall out to their cars? Sheesh ...
To the author:
Quit your damned whining and park in the closest spot to the door. Your real handicap is self-pity and lack of spine.
Hee hee...
I once said something very similar to someone once who commented on my placard.
I've got pretty bad scoliosis, and as a result once in a while my back bothers me something severely (usually on Monday mornings after I've spent the weekend doing yardwork).
I hardly ever actually use my handicap parking privileges, only when I'm in such bad pain that walking is almost impossible. One time, I used it at the mall a week or so before Christmas. I'll admit, I wasn't hurting all that much at that point, but I knew after two hours or so of walking around the mall I'd need a quick exit to the car after the shopping was done.
As I got out of the car, a lady comes up to me and my wife (she was with me) and said,
"Hey, you can't park there...you don't look disabled."
To which I politely replied,
"Well, you don't really look all that ignorant to me, but I guess looks can be deceiving, eh?"
And then I continued on my way.
There are many more things than drywall for sale at the Home Despot ... and some of them are purchased by handicapped folks, for later installation by healthy relatives and friends.
Yes, handicapped folks can have relatives and friends.
I sympathize. My late boyfriend had Parkinson’s. He looked hale and hearty, but it was very difficult for him to walk. He got lots of nasty looks. (Since he had the ruddy complexion, tendency to perspire and awkward gait that often go with Parkinsonism, he was sometimes taken for a drunk.) People need to be a little more tolerant — don’t assume you can judge by first appearances.
“My wife has JLS when she sleeps. Can she get a sticker?”
Jimmy Legs Syndrome?
Trainer: Pick up those weights.
Laz: Hell no! Then I'll be heavier! My goal is to LOSE weight.
Trainer: LOL! WTF??!? OMG! STFU! IMHO, FOAD! LOL!
“did you see the pain shooting up that person’s spine? Were they runnign becauseeach step hurt adn they wanted to get in as quickly as possible? Were they running because someone they care about was inside in need of help? or are you simply playing into stereotypes?”
Um... No?
What do I win?
ever think that they were getting something for somebody else? on more than one occasion I was with friends when one of htem had an insulin attack. If the usual candy bar didn't sstop the reaction, I would send somebody to the car to get another one. In these cases these 'normal' persons would run to the car, grab the item requested, then hotfoot it back to us.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.