Technology0 min ago
Good Manners
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No best answer has yet been selected by lady_p_gold. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well, I'm temporarily living in Germany, and I have to admit they are the rudest people I have ever come in to contact with.
One thing they do in shops is put the change on the counter, even when you hold out your hand infront of them. They even have little dishes on the counter to put the change in so they don't have to hand it to you. It's so annoying!
Also when people bump in to you on the street they don't even turn around to acknowledge that they've done it. That really annoys me, so (ashamedly) I normally turn around and make a rude comment at them, (in English of course, I don't want to get killed...).
Grrr
@leandrews: Just for your information, most people in Germany do speak English, so they probably understand very well what you are bitching about.
While I do agree with you on the unfriendliness of many Germans (not all of them, being one myself), I don't see, how being rude back is going to help in any way.
Tell me about it, I have worked in a bar in a golf club for quite some time, and I had a customer flick a hot used tea bag (straight out of his mug!) at me because I dared to suggest that he could put the used bag in the bin next to the bar, saving me an unnecessary trip to the kitchen.
What I was asking was not unreasonable, and when I was telling my workmates later, the "Flicker" overheard me and told me off for reporting it to others. He's the most miserable b*s*a*d I've ever encountered, and it's no wonder staff can occasionally be moody if we can get treated like this.
Workers should not be treated like something disgusting that the customer has just found on the bottom of their shoe.