Complaining
I like writing letters of complaint to companies containing the words "premier league muppetry", if only to give the poor office workers a good laugh on an otherwise dull day. Have you ever complained? Did it work?
( , Thu 2 Sep 2010, 13:16)
I like writing letters of complaint to companies containing the words "premier league muppetry", if only to give the poor office workers a good laugh on an otherwise dull day. Have you ever complained? Did it work?
( , Thu 2 Sep 2010, 13:16)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread
Hurrah for you!
Good outcome. It's petty little things like parking in a family space which enrage me too. Parking in disabled spaces are worse. I've challenged people twice about parking in one without a disabled badge. Once person made a weak excuse but then moved, the other threatened to kick my head in, so I reported him, but never found out if anything happened.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 8:09, 2 replies)
Good outcome. It's petty little things like parking in a family space which enrage me too. Parking in disabled spaces are worse. I've challenged people twice about parking in one without a disabled badge. Once person made a weak excuse but then moved, the other threatened to kick my head in, so I reported him, but never found out if anything happened.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 8:09, 2 replies)
.
I suppose kicking your head in would have somewhat prejudiced his claim to a disbled space.
Some supermarkets have these really evil stickers that they slap on windscreens - they're huge, and stick like shit to a blanket. They've also got perforations in them that make it impossible to peel off in one go - you effectively get about 300 1cm x 1cm pieces to pick off. Good stuff.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 9:12, closed)
I suppose kicking your head in would have somewhat prejudiced his claim to a disbled space.
Some supermarkets have these really evil stickers that they slap on windscreens - they're huge, and stick like shit to a blanket. They've also got perforations in them that make it impossible to peel off in one go - you effectively get about 300 1cm x 1cm pieces to pick off. Good stuff.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 9:12, closed)
Oh, nice one!
What do the stickers say? I hope it's something like 'If you cannot grasp why a disabled person needs this space more than you do, we suggest you GO AND BREAK YOUR FUCKING SPINE'.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 12:27, closed)
What do the stickers say? I hope it's something like 'If you cannot grasp why a disabled person needs this space more than you do, we suggest you GO AND BREAK YOUR FUCKING SPINE'.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 12:27, closed)
Doesn't that mean...
...you have to spend another hour denying a disabled user the space whilst you pick it off?
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 12:29, closed)
...you have to spend another hour denying a disabled user the space whilst you pick it off?
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 12:29, closed)
No,
I have in mind they stick it over the passenger side, or on the drivers side window, but I haven't seen it for a while. Sainsburys in Chiswick used to do it. They're about a foot square and flourescent orange.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 14:00, closed)
I have in mind they stick it over the passenger side, or on the drivers side window, but I haven't seen it for a while. Sainsburys in Chiswick used to do it. They're about a foot square and flourescent orange.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 14:00, closed)
Blue badges
In my local supermarket car park, overwhelmingly the worst for parking in parent-and-child places are the blue badge holders. That's genuine crips as well as the posh people who got one for the granny they've stashed in a home somewhere and visit once a year.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 23:28, closed)
In my local supermarket car park, overwhelmingly the worst for parking in parent-and-child places are the blue badge holders. That's genuine crips as well as the posh people who got one for the granny they've stashed in a home somewhere and visit once a year.
( , Fri 3 Sep 2010, 23:28, closed)
« Go Back | See The Full Thread