Why open the door??Let her open the fecking thing herself!!
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I think this is an interesting debate. Guy who works there goes to open a door for a lady and tells her it needs "a man's touch". Woman reported him for it.
It's that old can of worms about being easily offended and the battle of the sexes. I have no doubts the guy had every best intention. Most women wouldn't have cared a bit about his comment. Does that make it ok?
I've been thinking about this. I've been told by some women that I can't do this or that properly as I'm a man, usually tasks that are more traditionally done at home by women. One example, last year I was baking something I'd never tried, it didn't work that well and was old to get advice from a woman on baking. Bollocks, of course, men make excellent cooks and bakers too. I've never seen the need for either sex to try and outdo the other, so I can see the annoyance the train station worker's comment could have caused.
For me it's a very fine line. The worker could have simply offered to open the door with no need to mention gender. I don't think it was worth reporting. People can be unintentionally offended and upset by things.
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/w...-door-20427510
Why open the door??Let her open the fecking thing herself!!
Just a few questions spring to mind:
Was he just being polite to his customer but the words used ill-advised?
Perhaps he was hitting on her and if so, should she have taken this as a compliment?
Are women more easily offended than men, or is this a sweeping generalisation?
Is chivalry dead?
Is it all bollocks?
I can see why she may not have taken kindly to it, especially in the woke world we live, why even bother saying it.
He clearly meant it as a joke though and meant no malice, one of those where most people don't think twice about it but always a few that will let it bother them.
A calm response to him there and then and I'm sure he would have apologised and all would have been resolved.
She must be fun at parties.
Imagine being offended by that, world's gone mad.
Whats the betting she looks like Millie Tant from Viz?
It's a bit of a crap think to say, How many on here would admit to saying something like that? It's a bit cringy, but that's it in my opinion. If the bloke had said something like that to my missus, she'd have told him to piss off, game over i think. Why it has to be drawn out on social media, where the tone of writing sounds so official and non forgiving, due to the fact that there is no human tone or expression, just makes it sound worse. The bloke shouldn't have said it, it's David Brent and Alan Partridge rolled into one, and both of those characters were a bit sexist.
if it was her back door then i can understand her annoyance
Would the lady in question have written a complaint if the guard in question had not attempted to help , a refund or compensation is probably on its way .
I just hope the man in question doesn't lose his job and we move on ?
I bet she's a right sort
Another snowflake student type who thinks it's cool to be offended by everything
Real people would not be offended by what he said.
Her type just love to complain and make a song and dance about nothing .
We had a lad working with us who was the same he didn't last long. He even made a complaint about someone breaking wind whilst having a crap in the next toilet cubicle to him
https://youtu.be/NBGOryiqZZI
This sketch was tailor made for this thread
I don’t know what’s most pathetic.
The person taking offence at such an innocuous comment.
The story making our national media.
Eric starting a thread on it with an 100+ word opening post.
Me reading this thread and commenting on it.