Acceptable or unacceptable?
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Just found this.
Up until a certain point I totally agreed that you are just SOL and you should have known better.
Up until I understood that he wouldn't let you retrieve your ticket from the bin.
Is anyone listening? Guys at this point the ticket inspector changed from a man doing his job to a mean-spirited a-hole.
What would it have cost him to allow the guy to find his proof? Nothing wrong with that. That was just plain evil.
There, there. Stroke, stroke. Big bad man was very wrong and you are a poor dear, foolish, victimized soul. You have my total sympathy. -
IT WAS ME
joking...i ebayed my conductors uniform ages ago.
if he had let you retrieve your ticket he would have been a super-conductor...he he
if the conductor was a midget, would that make him a semi-conductor?
sorry couldn't resist
pav
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@sorgesu said:
Up until I understood that he wouldn't let you retrieve your ticket from the bin.
Is anyone listening? Guys at this point the ticket inspector changed from a man doing his job to a mean-spirited a-hole.
What would it have cost him to allow the guy to find his proof?I would agree that the guy was being an a-hole- anybody who is a reasonable judge of character can see the difference between a serial offender waste-of-space loser who tries to get away without paying for anything and someone who honestly mislaid their ticket, but the fact remains that retrieving a valid ticket from the bin is not proof that YOU bought it. It's reasonable to say that as soon as a valid ticket is discarded into a bin it becomes invalid, otherwise any chancer could play the "ooops, I'll have to retrieve my ticket from the bin" trick.... and I bet the ticket inspectors hear that line 20 times a day.
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Arent the tickets time stamped though? so logically if everyone else on the bus had a ticket, and i didnt then the tim stamped ticket could only be mine.
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From the ticket inspector's point of view he's probably heard just about every story about lost, stolen, eaten by the dog, used for Granny' shopping list, disappeared in thin air, abducted by aliens, . . . thrown in the bin is just another variant. And unfortunately many students make a practice of travelling as far and as often as they can without a ticket and having a fund of plausible stories.
How would you have known which ticket in the bin was yours - only by searching through for one with more or less the correct time-stamp and that proves nothing, except that someone bought a ticket around that time and threw it away. But the time that takes is keeping the inspector from getting back to the tea-pot at the depot.
Bob
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the should just stamp your hand like they do when you go to a club.
i'm a genius.and i'm modest.
pav
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And another thing thats pissing me off about public transport:
my SINGLE fare for a bus journey lasting 45 mins: 5 pounds 20.
my friends RETURN fare for a train journey lasting 3 hours 30 in total, 4 pounds
i wish theyd left it nationalised.
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i'm actually better off since i have been driving.
as i drive a classic car my insurance is virtually nothing and i pay no road tax.
i have spent so much on bus and train fares to get to and from work it's crazy.ooh, i might buy a bike and save even more money! he he
pav
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What, there are generally a cornocupia of tickets in the bin? Everyone throws their ticket in the bin? To me, if the individual says they put their ticket in the bin, and lo, there is one, that proves his story. C'mon, how likely is it that there are a surfeit of tickets in the bin and they are all of the right time to corroborate the story.
Nope nope nope. Decent person would have given him a chance. Guy wasn't just doing his job. He wasn't decent. Not being a decent person, in my books, in my world, is "unacceptable". -
I agree with Susan. I think it would have been more than reasonable for the inspector to let you prove your case, and he didn't. Now, what was so pressing for the inspector that he could not let him take 30 seconds tops, and find the ticket? If the bin is full of tickets, does that mean that most people throw their ticket away right before they get off the bus, I'm guessing it does. In that case, it might be hard to find that one ticket and may take a lot more time. But if the inspector stays on the bus for the ride,(don't know if he does) he has a lot of time.
Oh well, I suggest you keep that darn ticket next time and you should have no hassles . I wish I had more of the facts about the transportation process, it reminds me of my college law classes and having to state the Facts, Issue, Holding, and the reason for hundreds of cases.
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