How to SUCCESSFULLY Potty Train your child in five hours or less - even if your child is resistant, and you've tried other methods before! Get it now!
Obviously if they are really desperate to use the toilet and others are unavailable then it's fine. When you gotta go, you've gotta go. But then when somone goes in when others are available, then that is annoying and I just think they are a bit silly.
Nothing.. they are NOT RESERVED for people with disabilities in the US...we go through this debate frequently on YA.. yes it is rude to camp out or use it when you see someone with an obvious disability coming... but have you been in public bathrooms much--in my area---sometimes a lot of the stalls or disgusting----and if the accessible stall is the only clean one---anyone can use it...I've had to contact the health department a couple times when talking to the manager didn't work...its scary to think what these people's homes are like as they seem to be potty trained by mischievous monkeys....I'm not talking about germs--i am talking about used toilet paper strewn about, urine on the seat/floor, not flushed, etc there are invisible disabilities....some stalls are so small even a size 0 must squeeze in---a person with a bad back would have a hard time.. I know someone who has OCD--she can't tolerate the closeness of typical stalls because she can't stand brushing up against the wall because they are germy sometimes the accessible stall is better lit as it is more open sometimes a person has a medical need..such as a cath and could use the extra room maybe the person is just claustrophobic when I use a public bathroom, I probably take about a minute...if someone can't usually wait that long, they should be wearing a diaper. An AB person might be having more of a bathroom emergency than a PWD.....the PWD might have more of an ability to wait a couple minutes.... if there is a line of 20 people----8 regular stalls and 2 accessible...no one using a mobility device in sight....why shouldn't the 2 accessible stalls be used? My opinion is that NO ONE (not PWD or AB) should be able to cut to the front of a log line--unless it is urgent and they ask politely (either the PWD or the AB)...of course it is polite to let the PWD cut in front of a short line as soon as the accessible stall opens..but if they are number 20 in line--they can wait until they are at least number 10---unless it is urgent and they ask politely.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.