DisneyHardin
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2010
Not at the speaker, but I put it on as I pull around to the window.
How? I am in my car behind the door sitting in the driver's seat. I look out the driver's door window and I'm looking at bricks. The worker is 4+ feet above me on the other side of outside from me behind a wall behind glass putting my stuff through a hole in said glass. Nothing face to face about it.
You can now pump your own gas in about half the counties in OR. Some Oregonians were downright hysterical when they first learned they might have to pump their own gas, like it was this incredibly complex and dangerous task.
my town in MA doesn't allow you to pump your own gasHa, after I closed out the computer, I thought, "I have 1 in 50 chance of them coming and saying New Jersey..." Yup, that is it, LOL.
There's another one too, isn't there? Or perhaps a county or city in another state out west that you can't be trusted to put gas in your own car I think.
It must be if they had to have experts doing before right?You can now pump your own gas in about half the counties in OR. Some Oregonians were downright hysterical when they first learned they might have to pump their own gas, like it was this incredibly complex and dangerous task.
well imagine being a fast food worker at that window encountering people all day long that are not wearing masks...you may only be seeing that person for 15-30 seconds but they see people for 15-30 seconds over and over and over all day. Wear a mask to protect others not yourself. Why at this point do people not understand that yet?If this thread is a true representation of the country, we really have gone off the deep end.
No, I do not put on a mask for the 15-30 seconds it takes to reach over and grab a bag of food. And somehow I am alive to tell about it.
Good for you. Maybe think about the employees who you come in contact with. How does it hurt you to put a mask on for 30 seconds, especially if it might help protect somebody else?If this thread is a true representation of the country, we really have gone off the deep end.
No, I do not put on a mask for the 15-30 seconds it takes to reach over and grab a bag of food. And somehow I am alive to tell about it.
ExactlyI don't wear mine when placing my order. I wear it when I pay and when they hand it to me...
If this thread is a true representation of the country, we really have gone off the deep end.
No, I do not put on a mask for the 15-30 seconds it takes to reach over and grab a bag of food. And somehow I am alive to tell about it.
well imagine being a fast food worker at that window encountering people all day long that are not wearing masks...you may only be seeing that person for 15-30 seconds but they see people for 15-30 seconds over and over and over all day. Wear a mask to protect others not yourself. Why at this point do people not understand that yet?
Mask wearing is not why this country has “gone off the deep end.”
one thing this whole pandemic has done is cure me of being a germaphobe,
I have never been a germaphobe. But one thing thing this pandemic had done is make me realize how much we touch things. I have never had my hands feel so dirty ever. The first thing I do now when I come home - from the store, from work, doesn't matter - is wash may hands.
That is reasonable. I do the same.
Which begs the question of whether constantly putting on masks/ taking off masks is actually putting us more at risk, since it makes us touch our faces so much more. A different discussion for a different thread, I guess.
I fully understood in NJ not pumping your own. Problem isn't the knowledge, the problem is the muscle memory. I pulled in, and got out of the car before I knew I got out. It's like me driving an automatic, I know there's no clutch, but I still try to step on it and reach for the shifter because muscle memory.It’s already been answered, that yes it’s Oregon. But we had similar experiences to @disneychrista abd @Kittyblue. We drove through OR with my parents last summer and my dad could not understand he couldn’t do it himself. It was equal parts frustrating and amusing.