| TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! | ANSI |
| echo: | |
|---|---|
| to: | |
| from: | |
| date: | |
| subject: | Re: My Granddaughter`s Highschool Pics Online |
Grandpappy wrote:
> "Dr Zen" wrote in message
> news:1110951481.585816.14300{at}g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>
>>Hyerdawg's Grandpappy wrote:
>>
>>>http://www.worldschoolphotographs.com/pic1.htm
>>
>>A woman kicked your arse so hard you're reduced to this? Poor excuse
>>for a man, you.
>
>
> JUST GIVE YOUR SEAT TO THE FEMALES WANKER. DON'T YOU CROCODILE DUNDEE TYPES
> HAVE ANY RESPECT? HAHA
>
>
>
> HEAVILY pregnant women catch public transport in Sydney peak hour - and are
> forced to stand among indifferent commuters who refuse to offer them a seat.
Typical of these bleeding LIARS. They want
equality and then want special treatment.
This has reminded me of one of my very first
experiences of what LYING filth females are. I
was on a bus on my way to school around about
1959. As I would mount the bus at the first stop
after the terminus it was invariable that I
could get a seat.
One day a female organism, standing in the
gangway, said: "Young man, don't you stand up
for a lady to sit down?" To this I replied: "You
wanted equality, now you've got it."
D.
> This is the reality of modern Sydney, where a frazzled public seems to have
> lost its manners.
> In a special exercise, The Daily Telegraph yesterday sent four women in the
> late stages of their pregnancies to catch buses and trains in peak hour.
>
> Two were forced to stand for their entire trips. One of them - who has been
> showing for several months but has only ever been offered seats by elderly
> women - at last found a man who offered her a seat.
>
> Deepa Samasundaram, who is seven months pregnant, spent the 25-minute train
> journey from Hurstville to the city looking for a seat, but no one would
> stand for her.
>
> "Since I was pregnant only one person ever offered me a seat and it was an
> old lady," Ms Samasundaram said. "I said 'No, it's okay'. An
older lady
> shouldn't have to stand up."
>
> It was only away from the madness of Sydney, on the troubled Central Coast
> line, where travellers, accustomed to frequent delays, showed any real
> chivalry. Experts blame a lack of respect being taught by parents and
> Sydney's fast-paced lifestyle, where "no one ever smiles anymore or says
> thank you".
>
> "This has become the 'me generation'," etiquette expert June
Dally-Watkins
> said yesterday. "It's the sense of 'there's only me and I'm the only person
> in the world that matters and I see nothing or hear nothing unless it's
> related directly to me'."
>
> The Daily Telegraph yesterday followed four pregnant women across the city
> to work and found respect, common decency and chivalry are dying.
>
> On trains and buses across the city yesterday, young men averted their gaze
> when confronted by the pregnant women.
>
> School children were too noisy to even notice, men hid in their newspapers
> and well-dressed women stared blindly ahead.
>
> CityRail said yesterday that it was common for all commuters to be
> confronted by selfish passengers.
>
> "A lot of people do like to have a seat for themselves and a seat for their
> bag and that causes problems in peak hour when all seats are required," a
> CityRail spokeswoman said.
>
> In the UK, desperate authorities have resorted to offering pregnant women
> "Baby on Board" badges to wear while travelling the London
Underground.
>
> The campaign encourages men to "Do the decent thing" and
give up their seat.
>
> Etiquette expert Louise Percy, who runs the Percy Institute for
> International Protocol, said Sydneysiders were the "most
curt" people in the
> country.
>
> Ms Percy has studied all the capital cities in the past decade and said she
> found the hectic pace of life in Sydney was the key factor to why so many
> Sydneysiders were rude.
>
> "There's a general lack of respect creeping into society,"
Ms Percy said.
>
> "How hard is it to smile at somebody and say 'Thank you', to move over on
> the train or bus?" .
>
> She backed calls by Police Commissioner Ken Moroney that parents were
> failing to teach respect to their children, who are often targeted as the
> worst offenders in refusing to give up seats.
>
> Mr Moroney last week blamed a lack of respect for rioting at Macquarie
> Fields.
>
> He said: "We have to come back to parental responsibility ... parents have
> to instil respect into their children
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
--- UseNet To RIME Gateway {at} 3/16/05 8:57:24 AM ---
* Origin: MoonDog BBS, Brooklyn,NY, 718 692-2498, 1:278/230 (1:278/230)SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 5030/786 @PATH: 278/230 10/345 106/1 2000 633/267 |
|
| SOURCE: echomail via fidonet.ozzmosis.com | |
Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.