With all due respect, I am trying my hardest NOT to pick on Wabbit. I appreciate his comments and said so. The reference to the GED was based on HIS remarks:Some of this is pretty mean spirited and not necessary. Wabbit, it is sometimes hard to read your posts. However, I do not think people should be picking on you. That is classless. Suggesting somebody go get a GED or take classes is insulting IMHO in this context. You don't know anything about the person you are talking to. This could be very hurtful.
The moderators have asked you all to stop. Please do. Stick to trains and related topics. Not manners, not spelling, not chivalry, and not the battle of the sexes or any other mess. And treat others with respect regardless of education or background.
Would you, sir, not encourage one to better themselves? That is all that was suggested.maine rider 'if u want to make jokes about my spelling
go ahead i am getting real tired of being the butt of peoples jokes
just becouse i did not graduate hs, if u are the spelling police, then u fix it
if'in u still want to mock me, just grow up this board is about amtrak not about spelling mistakes
With regards to the rest of your comment, manners and chivalry are most relavent to this thread and to society in general. Some of the "Strangest things we've seen in Coach" are merely from our perspective from being outside certain cultural awarenesses. Not all, but some. The coolest thing about Amtrak is that it plies across the country and is a tossed salad of cultures. It's isn't a melting pot, as there is generally not enough time to embrace, understand, and perhaps even accept different cultures.
Take for example any of the long distance trains. The culture in Chicago is very different than in LA. When you start in Chicago, the majority of the passengers may act a certain way, or express a certain behavior. As the train crosses the continent, it picks up cultures from the Midwest farms, the front range of the Rockies, the high deserts of New Mexico and as it approaches California, well, it ain't Chicago any more.
Manners and chivalry in NY are not the same as in San Antonio. It just isn't. Not to judge and say one is better than another, but it's different. Anyone travelling across the country should be quite keenly aware of that fact and either be willing to embrace it or avoid it.
So, yes. When someone states that they haven't graduated from high school, I don't think it's picking on them to encourage them to finish. We are well into the 21st century and education is a must to be a productive member of society - perhaps even to be be an accepted member of society. I highly encourage that, and find that it is heartless not to.
Wabbit, I hope you understand I'm not picking on you. I am encouraging you. I want the best for you because you deserve it.
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