The Scotsman

Let rudeness triumph

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was it OK if I just took it? However, I failed to go through with my retaliatio­n and wandered off, tail between my legs, to work.

I have spent the days since beating myself up about my complete lack of any ability to stand up to bullies. My colleague, on the other hand, has no particular problems with tackling people when their actions annoy him. He has had no fewer than two seagull-related settos with strangers in the past few months, when he has reprimande­d fellow seaside-goers for feeding the vulture-like creatures. It’s a subject he feels passionate­ly about.

“As I get older, I find it increasing­ly hard to bite my tongue,” he admits (we are exactly the same age). “But as soon as I do it, I wish I hadn’t. It’s this totally British disease, you don’t want to get into an argument with people, even when you know you’re in the right.”

It perhaps is a peculiarly British disease. In other countries, they don’t seem to have this problem. On visiting a tourist attraction in Bucharest on a recent visit to Romania, I got told off by the surly staff three times in the space of five minutes. They were irritated that I had asked for a ticket when what I should have requested was a tour; I’d creased the money in my wallet, rendering it less aesthetica­llypleasin­g; and I’d asked for a small, half sugar in my coffee, when clearly the right thing was to have a whole one. Cue a lot of head-shaking, tutting and eye-rolling.

No, Romanians never have a problem with telling you when you’ve done something wrong and I find it quite endearing – and brave. To be fair, the reprimands are more of a Communist-era throw back, usually from the older generation, while younger workers in cafes, restaurant­s and so on offer something more like the “have a nice day” American-style service.

However, in March, a French waiter working in Canada tried to sue his former employer for violating his human rights by firing him, after he had been allegedly “combative and aggressive”. His argument was simple: he was French. Guillaume Rey argued that his “direct, honest and profession­al” demeanour was how he had been taught to act while working in France. However, his former boss claimed that Rey had nearly reduced a colleague to tears as a result of his actions.

Was he right? We all know that the North Americans are particular­ly OTT when it comes to the service industry. I have an American uncle who introduces himself by name to any waiter or waitress who serves his table and expects them to be his best friend by the end of the meal. It is lovely – my uncle is a very jovial, chatty person – but can a European be expected to react in the same way?

While there is undoubtedl­y a difference in expectatio­n, depending which country you are in, I believe there is a base line of politeness that should not be crossed – and stealing someone’s newspaper from under their nose definitely crosses it.

A US study last year found that three quarters of the population believe that people are more rude than they were 20 or 30 years ago, while only 4 per cent say that people are less rude. No such survey exists on this side of the Atlantic, as far as I can see, but I would imagine the results would be similar.

This is not a good, or healthy, way to exist. Being nice, friendly and polite doesn’t take much effort – whether it is in our cultural DNA or not. On a side note, while the whole cafe-newspaper incident was undoubtedl­y irritating, I am cheered by the fact that someone was willing to get into a spat over a hard copy of a daily newspaper.

Who said print journalism was dead?

 ??  ?? reading of newspapers so seriously, she is less happy about the sheer rudeness of one woman who ‘stole’ her paper
reading of newspapers so seriously, she is less happy about the sheer rudeness of one woman who ‘stole’ her paper

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