Poll: Macdonalds - bin or leave rubbish

Do you clear your own rubbish?

  • Yes, of course, I'm not a scuffer

    Votes: 525 85.8%
  • No, I'm a scuffer

    Votes: 87 14.2%

  • Total voters
    612
Would you have a 'pro-policeman' point-of-view if somebody was to burgle your house? After all, less crime = less policemen needed = more unemployed people.
Because providing the right conditions for employment of people at McDonald's is comparable to having someone burgle your house?
 
Not exactly hard to pick up the tray I carried the food to the table on and slide all the chuff off into a bin at the end. Like what has been mentioned already, there is not a bin shortage on the way to the door.

Always lob mine in the bin.
 
Because providing the right conditions for employment of people at McDonald's is comparable to having someone burgle your house?

Both are scenarios where you are saying that doing the wrong thing is the correct thing to do because correcting it would require extra staff to be employed.
 
The rationale I use is that McDonalds constantly calls itself a restaraunt during advertisements... I wouldn't dream of taking my dishes to the kitchen and cleaning them if I went out for a meal so why should I move my rubbish. I just leave it on the table... saves me a few minutes and makes me feel good when a dirty chav cleans up my mess. I also don't flush the toilets in Mcdonalds, especially if i've had a particulary huge dump.
 
The rationale I use is that McDonalds constantly calls itself a restaraunt during advertisements... I wouldn't dream of taking my dishes to the kitchen and cleaning them if I went out for a meal so why should I move my rubbish. I just leave it on the table... saves me a few minutes and makes me feel good when a dirty chav cleans up my mess. I also don't flush the toilets in Mcdonalds, especially if i've had a particulary huge dump.

Why not take the large bag into the toilet with you and...........well I guess you can see where this is going.
 
Both are scenarios where you are saying that doing the wrong thing is the correct thing to do because correcting it would require extra staff to be employed.

If I am burgled (in your really very silly example) then I lose all my stuff. If someone is employed at McDonalds, who otherwise would not be, then the economy is helped. How are they even comparable. Is it 'doing the wrong thing' to not want to be the cause of someone being made redundant?
 
Place tray inside bin, tilt off remnants, then place empty tray on top of bin with others. Not difficult is it?

Besides, McDonalds workers have to take a lot of crap from people in general in the course of their day to day job. The hassle of cleaning up after me's one they could do without.
 
i DO NOT have any mess on the actual table, the stuff is all within the tray so its not like kids who smear ketchup all over the table, u pick up my tray the table is clean, so if the workers complain then they can STFU and get a job which doesnt require cleaning tables.

i dont give money to charity either, its not that i do not care, its that i actually want people to continue suffering.
 
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Allways bin it, however once the tray slipped out of my hand when shaking it so that time the rubbish AND the tray went.
 
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