WillCAD
Where there's a Will there's a way
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2004
- Messages
- 5,836
Because they were in line before you.
No, they weren't. When I got in line, they weren't there. The fact that they may have been in line earlier in the day does not mitigate their cutting in front of me - and the others who got in line while they weren't there - one bit.
That must be something they didn't cover when I took conrtitutional law. I'm going to ask for my tuition back....
They didn't cover the Declaration of Independence? "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happines..."
Maybe you should ask for that tuition refund.
in your opinion. I disagree.Your wait time didn't change by a single second. Only your perception changed.
Perception? No, the reality is that there are a certain number of people IN the line when I get into it. If more come into it ahead of me at a later time, then the REALITY of the situation is that my wait time has increased.
Perhaps you should try to relax a little and be just a bit more compassionate and understanding.
Wow, any time someone advocates following the rules, somebody always breaks out the bogus "compassionate and understanding" argument.
Compassion does not justify the breaking of rules. Understanding why someone breaks a rule does not mitigate the violation.
If someone cuts in line, they have broken a rule. All of the understanding and compassion in the universe don't change that fact - only your perceptioonof the fact.
I think it's funny when people try to paste their positions onto Walt Disney and use him to supprt their point. The truth is, you have no clue what he would have thought about this. Not only that, but he isn't in charge any more. His hypothetical opinion isn't pertainent to this conversation.
You're right, I don't know for sure that Walt wouldn't have approved of line cutting; I simply suspect so, based on the times in which he lived and the prevalent culture of those times, which were extremely courtesy and rules oriented.
And Walt isn't in charge any more, but his company still uses his original philosphies as guiding precepts to running the parks. If we give up on the idea that Walt probably wanted people to follow the rules and not cut in line, then we may as well abandon his original philosophy that the Disney parks are meant to be places which the whole family can enjoy together, and just "aim for kids" as he so elloquently put it once.
Please don't twist the positions of others. Its a poor debate tactic.
How have I twisted anyone's position?
Ummm, the people whining in this thread are not the ones who disagree with you. (Look in the mirror.)
No, the people afvocating line-cutting and thus rule-breaking are not whining, they are using a more insidious technique of casting aspersions on the compassion and understanding of those on the other side of the issue, and telling them repeatedly to "lighten up" and "don't let it get to you" and "don't let it ruin your vacation." The unspoken subtext of that, of course, is that there is something inherently wrong with following the rules or being a little miffed when someone cuts in line ahead of us.
Whatever. In every one of those scenarios, it would be perfectly acceptable for someone to hold your place in line if you had to leave it for whatever reason. The simple fact is, in the real world people are more compassionate than in the forum world.
No, once you are out of a line, then you are no longer in the line, and if you want to get in the line, you should get in at the end.
What about others having some compassion for my experience? What about others having consideration for my wait time? Compassion is a two-way street - if you want me to have compassion for others' difficulties in waiting in line, maybe they should have compassion for MY difficulties, as well.
When my feet, knees, and back hurt from standing in line, I don't get out and come back to the same spot later - that would be cutting, and would negatively impact the wait times of those behind me. So I don't do it.
If I have to go to the bathroom while I'm in a line, I get out and get back in at the END, not in my previous position. To cut in at my previous position would be against the rules, and would be unfair - and uncompassionate - to those behind me.
People often pull that "have some compassion" stuff, but what they're really saying is "have some compassion for ME, because MY needs are more important then yours and more important than the rules."
Balogna. Rules apply equally to everyone. Line cutting is wrong.

