kenberg, on 2021-February-22, 20:46, said:
But if we just go by the story, it seems a customer asked another customer to keep the proper distance in a check-out line.
Where I shop, places are clearly marked as to where you should stand when you are in line at a check-out.
People around here are pretty congenial, but if I moved in closer than the marked spot, I can well imagine the customer in front of me would ask me to step back.
Or, if the person behind me moved in closer than the marked spot, I might well, depending on whether we are speaking f a couple of inches or speaking of a substantial amount, ask them to step back.
The store sets the spots, I and others comply.
Covid is a serious business, states set rules stating expectations of stores, stores set rules stating expectations of customers. I wasn't a witness at the event, but if the story is accurate it seems that one customer, the woman, was ignoring the rules and another customer, the man asked her to comply with the rules. I don't care that she is 58 or that she does, or does not, love Trump, but if she was clearly crowding in on a guy in line then telling her to move back seems to be both allowed and sensible. The rules were not complicated and not burdensome, and they had an important purpose regarding both individual and community health.
Curious in that what I read in that article was the story of a woman whose vitriol was reserved not for simply being asked to step back but by being asked to step back by someone who didn't look or sound like her.
To me, this is the critical line from the article:
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This post has been edited by Winstonm: 2021-February-23, 08:24