Artful_Badger wrote: » It doesnt happen though does it else all those spaces would be full which they aren't and if there was a few cars there I'd park elsewhere. Like I said I wouldnt take up a space is there was a remote chance it would be needed.
Duck's hoop wrote: » It doesn't happen because the majority of people abide by the rules you choose to flout. If the majority thought like you there'd soon be no spaces free.
Artful_Badger wrote: » Big chain supermarkets usually have a lot of disabled spaces, Tesco is the one I use. And if there was only a few I wouldnt use it. There regular spaces are usually full near the supermarket. Given there are so many unused spaces I dont see the issue in parking there in full knowledge I wont be a hindrance to anyone. People who take issue with this are taking issue solely with the fact I'm parking in a disabled parking space and I'm not disabled. Nothing to do with taking one away form a disabled person or inconveniencing them in anyway. Its like taking issue with the fact I'm not putting butter into a cake mix despite it saying so on the box it. Its a pointless issue over nothing that affects nobody except those who feel the need to tell me I'm not doing what I'm "suppose" to be doing.
Duck's hoop wrote: » People are taking issue with you thinking you're somehow exempt from the rules everybody else adheres to. I think you have successfully answer the OP's question.
Artful_Badger wrote: » I dont have to keep telling myself anything, its all very self evident that there is nothing morally wrong with parking in a space that nobody else is using or will need to use while I'm parked there.
ViveLaVie wrote: » I was under the impression these toilets are for wheelchair users and other disabled people? Someone can be disabled and not look it. I am not sure what benefit hand bars etc are to a blind person, or most other disabilities, and in most cases, the Wheelchair friendly toilets are not nearer anything than regular toilets, hence not a benefit to someone with a walking stick etc. If they are of benefit to someone with a disability, so be it, they are not a benefit to people with just any disability though, so if you can use a regular toilet without hardship, then you should They are generally called 'Wheelchair friendly toilets' 'Wheelchair accessible toilets' for a reason....
Agricola wrote: » My local hardware is in a big rented premises outside town with car parking for maybe 80 vehicles. Right in front of the door there are probably 20 disabled spaces. Which is stupid. If I arrive on a quiet Tuesday morning at 10am to pick up a box of screws or nails, I will certainly park in one of them. Not the one right beside the door obviously cause Im not THAT big a cúnt. On the off chance a disabled person arrives in the same 5 minute window as me, I wont be the reason they cant park right next to the door. So far I havent come out to see one let alone a bunch of disabled people scrambling for spaces! You see you're trying to reason using common sense. People on a PC circle jerk dont want your reason or common sense. They want to get infuriated about how inconsiderate your are to those poor little disabled people!
EricPraline wrote: » Curious to know how you can predict this 100% correctly? If you do this frequently enough, it's inevitable that some day you'll be wrong, and you will park in a space that somebody genuinely needs.
guapos wrote: » In my experience lot of *people* don't realise that the spaces are wider to allow wheelchair users get in and out of the car and think theyre just being lazy and want to park closer
ballyharpat wrote: » : : back on topic now though, what pisses me off along with people using disabled parking spots, is people that use wheelchair friendly toilets, the amount of times I have been waiting outside one, I knock on the door and 99% of the time, whoever comes out is a perfectly able person without a wheelchair, on more than one occasion, it has been teenage girls stepping out and then the justification has been, 'I wasn't using it, I just needed the mirror' I mean seriously, wtf, these are probably the same kids that are brought up by parents who tell them to slam their door off the car next to them, because society hasn't provided them with a parking spot for them to do whatever they f-ing want....
ballyharpat wrote: » ViveLaVie wrote: » I was under the impression these toilets are for wheelchair users and other disabled people? Someone can be disabled and not look it. I am not sure what benefit hand bars etc are to a blind person, or most other disabilities, and in most cases, the Wheelchair friendly toilets are not nearer anything than regular toilets, hence not a benefit to someone with a walking stick etc. If they are of benefit to someone with a disability, so be it, they are not a benefit to people with just any disability though, so if you can use a regular toilet without hardship, then you should They are generally called 'Wheelchair friendly toilets' 'Wheelchair accessible toilets' for a reason.... Yes but someone may need help using the toilet even if not in a wheelchair or may require privacy for an embarrassing condition that could affect their toilet habits. I'm just saying if a wheelchair toilet is of use to a person with a genuine need for it then it may not always be visible to you.
bonzos wrote: » Pikeys park in the disabled spaced everyday in Longford while the local garda drive pass them and ignore this scumbag behaviour...the traffic warden spends 3/4 hour everyday in the bookies laughing and joking with the same wasters that are parked in disabled spaces and loading bays! Longford county council seem happy to waste taxpayers money on having an employee sitting in a betting shop while the town is out of control.
Curious George57 wrote: » Yep I do it, the reason is that I only care about myself. I don't care about the well being of other people.
slimjimmc wrote: » There's nothing wrong with able bodied people using wheelchair/disabled friendly toilets. Unlike a local authority disabled parking bay they are not exclusively for wheelchair bound /disabled persons, they're just toilets designed with those groups in mind. In many places able bodied persons are directed to use the 'disabled' toilets when the mens/ladies are closed for cleaning, eg. the AppleGreen service station on the M1 at Lusk.
ballyharpat wrote: » Right, but when there are other available toilets and some people just go in to put on make up or have another excuse, then it pisses me off.......they are also generally the toilets that are used for changing stations for babies etc-so yes, vie la vie, if someone has a valid reason for gaining from using them, then, no problem....and I am of course talking about when they are separate toilets, not when they are stalls in the same toilet....
Artful_Badger wrote: » I dont have to keep telling myself anything, its all very self evident that there is nothing morally wrong with parking in a space that nobody else is using or will need to use while I'm parked there. Keep rambling, insulting and condoning illegal behavior though. Cant let the scum win
Ghost Buster wrote: » The first honest answer!
whatdoicare wrote: » On the other hand, people can be absolute pigs. Mammy and baby spots are the same, people with two seater fancy cars and no car seat for kid parking just so people won't scratch their car leaving me struggling to get a baby into car and buggy into boot in a tiny spot. Drives me mad.
stoneill wrote: » Ignorant lazy cúnt Lazy ignorant cúnt
_Whimsical_ wrote: » I have a condition that affects my blood pressure and heart rate to an extent that when it goes through bad phases I can only stand for a minute or two .Even on good days when I am standing the ground feels like it is moving under my feet,I'm often very dizzy,seeing double,I feel like I'm going to be sick,pass out and my heart is thundering in my chest. I look fine,I don't use a wheelchair. I have one of these disabled parking cards that I use when I'm a passenger in other people's cars because I can't drive right now. If I go out, to the dr ,the dentist,wherever, I need someone to be with me all the time, I can't walk any distance alone into appointments or stand around waiting for someone to park the car any distance away from the entrance if they drop me at the door. People parking in disabled spots as often meant that I've arrived at an appointment or somewhere I needed to go and have had to just go home again because there was no way for me to safely get into where I was going. On rare occasions when I have a "good day" and can conceive of being able to go out for a coffee for 20 mins(and 20 mins is my maximum safe sitting standing time ATM) I have to plan to go somewhere we can park directly outside, mostly to places with a disabled parking space. Several times I've got there and had to go home again because the parking space outside the place I wanted to go was gone. Then it might be a month or more before I'd be well enough to try again. There are several comments on this thread about how there aren't that many disabled drivers etc so it's not a big deal to just park in a space for 20 mins. The truth is that there are lots of disabled drivers and passengers out there who really need those spaces. You saving five mins parking near the door for 20 mins can easily ruin an entire day for someone like me. Lots of people with these cards are not well,they can't just go to another shop 20 mins away etc, they have to plan trips that are physically capable of making or go to specific places because those places can accommodate their mobility needs. Theres already quite a lot of competition between disabled people for these spaces.Please don't park in them if you don't need to.
jobyrne30 wrote: » Thanks, but I'm not lazy Like I said, I'll park in a disabled spot if a disabled driver parks in the parent parking bays when the disabled spaces are free....this happens all the time, no respect shown none received. I worked with a chap who lost a leg below the knee, he had a disable parking permit. We also went to the gym together, he had no problems on the treadmill or any other equipment. I ask him one time did he really need the permit, he said no but he used it because he didn't want the car damaged in "small spaces", that and the free parking in Dublin city centre was handy (he earned 150K +). There are plenty of healthy people and able-bodied people traveling alone using these spaces for the same reason, their spouse may have an genuine problem but if they are not with them on the journey they've no right to use them but the do. The whole system is a joke and the worst abusers are often the poor mouths with the blue badge on board. As another user commented, having 20 disabled places outside a DIY store makes no sense....I'll glady use these. Thought you might enjoy the attached images too :pac::pac: King regards from this ignorant cúnt
Ghost Buster wrote: » Longford eh. It probably local self important school principals, GAA types, bank managers and wealthy business men as much as travellers. Nasty little town is Longford
Ghost Buster wrote: » I think the post quoted above does indicate how ignorant you are. Still find it funny?
jobyrne30 wrote: » The OP asked what where the reasons why people used disabled parking spaces. I gave the reason I would, two clearly defined set of circumstances.I doubt _Whimsical_ would be affected by my actions in the circumstances I described. I've no problem with my actions in the circumstances I outlined and will sleep soundly tonight. The biggest offenders are often those with the blue badge on board when there is no need, or those with disabilities who are still able to get around fine ....like my former work colleague. My parking in a DIY store space when 19 others are free is not really a problem so get off your high horse
willowthewisp wrote: » What did Longford ever do to you?
Ghost Buster wrote: » Made me live in it for work and now i have to keep chasing Big Fish in a small pond types out of my works disabled parking spaces.:)
Ghost Buster wrote: » That says enough.