mute & handicap parking

Anonymous
I already knew you had no honor, it was obvious.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I already knew you had no honor, it was obvious.


Continue on with your fabricated sense of a higher moral character. Anyone who gets this angry and accusatory about someone who isn't hurting or even inconveniencing anyone is a heart attack waiting to happen. I'm sorry for you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Are you for real? Where does it say handicapped stalls are to be immediately accessible, 24/7? Do people in wheelchairs never wait?


People in wheelchairs on average wait longer than those that are not. The reason is simple: If there are say 4 stalls in a bathroom, 3 normal and 1 handicapped, to the wheelchair user there is really only one stall. It's like the other 3 don't exist. So they must wait when that one handicapped stall is occupied even if all the other 3 are open. For people that have the option to use all 4, they only have to wait when all 4 are occupied.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Continue on with your fabricated sense of a higher moral character. Anyone who gets this angry and accusatory about someone who isn't hurting or even inconveniencing anyone is a heart attack waiting to happen. I'm sorry for you.


Busting out the old heart attack feeling sorry for you routine are we Sounds like your out of excuses for your behavior.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Continue on with your fabricated sense of a higher moral character. Anyone who gets this angry and accusatory about someone who isn't hurting or even inconveniencing anyone is a heart attack waiting to happen. I'm sorry for you.


Busting out the old heart attack feeling sorry for you routine are we Sounds like your out of excuses for your behavior.


Tell me who I've inconvenienced when I have never seen a person waiting in a wheelchair outside the handicapped stall when I've used it (I'm including all the times I've used it because that's where the diaper changer is. If the handicapped stalls are so sacred, why do they put the diaper changers in there?) So until you tell me who I've put out, and what "excuse" I need for my "behavior" of changing diapers, assisting my child, and the rare occasion that I need to change out of work clothes before a flight, all the while not one time ever seeing anyone in a wheelchair waiting to use the stall, I will continue. You are looking for problems where they don't exist. And that's why you're a heart attack waiting to happen. There's no problem here except the one in your head. Not healthy.
Anonymous
It's fine for everyone to use the handicapped bathroom stalls.

But if someone in a wheelchair is waiting in line, the courteous thing is to let them use the handicapped stall when it comes available without waiting in line.

Being handicapped slows people down. They may as well get to skip the bathroom line, and that way nondisabled people can use it when there is no one in a wheelchair
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I am an otherwise, normal looking guy with a pacemaker/ICD that maxes my heart rate at 125 bpm from a life threatening birth defect. Sometimes it is difficult for me to park far from the store especially during extremes of hot, cold, high winds, etc.

My wife encourages me to get a parking pass for it but I don't because cunts like you are too busy judging people who don't "look" disabled. Focus on digging out that big fat bug up your ass and mind your own fucking business. Are you the whore on the other thread who sucked 36 dicks in one night?


What the. ...dude, calm the fuck down and eat a Snickers, douche.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I get that. Did you miss where I said I wouldn't use it if someone was there who needed it? But yes, I'm gong to use it if no one needs it. If no one needs it. Let me say that again. If no one needs it.


If a non-handicapped stall is available, you should always use it if you can. You have no way of knowing if someone will come into the bathroom a few moments later that needs it. Let me say that again, you should never use a handicap stall if you don't need to and a non-handicapped stall is available. If you don't need it.


Ridiculous. I work in a building with no handicapped people. So the one giant stall in the bathroom should never ever be used? I guess just in case someone in a wheel chair is hired a year from now and wants to use it then?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It's fine for everyone to use the handicapped bathroom stalls.

But if someone in a wheelchair is waiting in line, the courteous thing is to let them use the handicapped stall when it comes available without waiting in line.

Being handicapped slows people down. They may as well get to skip the bathroom line, and that way nondisabled people can use it when there is no one in a wheelchair


+1.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It's fine for everyone to use the handicapped bathroom stalls.

But if someone in a wheelchair is waiting in line, the courteous thing is to let them use the handicapped stall when it comes available without waiting in line.

Being handicapped slows people down. They may as well get to skip the bathroom line, and that way nondisabled people can use it when there is no one in a wheelchair


Nobody is disagreeing with this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Tell me who I've inconvenienced when I have never seen a person waiting in a wheelchair outside the handicapped stall when I've used it (I'm including all the times I've used it because that's where the diaper changer is. If the handicapped stalls are so sacred, why do they put the diaper changers in there?) So until you tell me who I've put out, and what "excuse" I need for my "behavior" of changing diapers, assisting my child, and the rare occasion that I need to change out of work clothes before a flight, all the while not one time ever seeing anyone in a wheelchair waiting to use the stall, I will continue. You are looking for problems where they don't exist. And that's why you're a heart attack waiting to happen. There's no problem here except the one in your head. Not healthy.


Your confusing need with convenience. If you have a baby/toddler that needs it's diaper changed and the table is in the handicap bathroom stall, you have a need to be in there. If you have to go to the bathroom and all the other stalls are occupied, you have a need to be in there. If non-handicapped stalls are available and you just need to go to the bathroom, change your clothes or monitor your 5 year old, you have no need for the extra features provided by a handicap bathroom stall. And just because you have never seen a person waiting, doesn't mean there never has been. Far as you know someone could of came in just wanting to dump their urine bag, seen the only handicapped stall was in use, turned around and went outside to wait or find another bathroom.

The real question is, why do you feel you need to use the handicap stall when you don't have a true need? Is it merely just for your convenience? Extra privacy? What compels you to possibly make someone wait when you don't have to?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:

Your confusing need with convenience. If you have a baby/toddler that needs it's diaper changed and the table is in the handicap bathroom stall, you have a need to be in there. If you have to go to the bathroom and all the other stalls are occupied, you have a need to be in there. If non-handicapped stalls are available and you just need to go to the bathroom, change your clothes or monitor your 5 year old, you have no need for the extra features provided by a handicap bathroom stall. And just because you have never seen a person waiting, doesn't mean there never has been. Far as you know someone could of came in just wanting to dump their urine bag, seen the only handicapped stall was in use, turned around and went outside to wait or find another bathroom.

The real question is, why do you feel you need to use the handicap stall when you don't have a true need? Is it merely just for your convenience? Extra privacy? What compels you to possibly make someone wait when you don't have to?


I'm wondering: are you somebody uses the handicap stall, due to a disability? Are you a friend or family member of somebody who use to use the handicap stall? Have you ever heard somebody who has to use the handicap stall complaining about people without disabilities who use the handicap stall?
Anonymous
I use the handicapped stall at work. The TP in the regular stalls are so close and so hard to get to that my shoulders hurt. But, I am not in there long.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It's fine for everyone to use the handicapped bathroom stalls.

But if someone in a wheelchair is waiting in line, the courteous thing is to let them use the handicapped stall when it comes available without waiting in line.

Being handicapped slows people down. They may as well get to skip the bathroom line, and that way nondisabled people can use it when there is no one in a wheelchair


+1.



Agree.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm wondering: are you somebody uses the handicap stall, due to a disability? Are you a friend or family member of somebody who use to use the handicap stall? Have you ever heard somebody who has to use the handicap stall complaining about people without disabilities who use the handicap stall?


Yes to the first question, I have Spinal Muscular Atrophy. No to the second question. Yes to the third, it happens quite often. As you can tell from the responses in this thread, many do use the handicap stall when they don't need to and other stalls are available. I personally have had to wait countless times when the only stall occupied is the handicap one.
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