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    Categories: life

45-Year-Old Man Refuses To Give Women His Seat On Trains Because ‘They Never Do The Same’


45-year-old Nirpal Dhaliwal refuses to offer women his seat because a woman has never given up a seat for him.

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He appeared on ITV’s Good Morning Britain and pointed out that the fares are the same for women and men.

“Firstly, if a woman is able-bodied, why should I? Guys pay for the train ticket as much as women do, they have a long day at work, they’re knackered and if she’s physically able why should I give up my seat for her?” he said.

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“If she’s pregnant, she’s got a health problem or physical problem – yeah.”

The long debate came after feminist writer Caroline Rothstein said to her followers on Twitter that she refused to let a man help her with her luggage on a plane.

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“Saying, “No thank you, I got it,” to the middle-aged white man on the airplane who offered—and began—to take my suitcase out of the overhead compartment for me was a quickly calculated act of resistance,” Rothstein wrote on Twitter.

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Nirpal then said: “There was a Twitter storm yesterday where a woman tweeted about some guy trying to help her with her luggage, getting it out of the compartment in the plane.

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“She regarded him as an oppressor. Guys are getting their head bitten off, or certainly getting an earful just for helping. That’s confusing for guys.”

He then said that a woman has never given up a seat for him, adding: “It’s a one way street though. A woman’s never given up her seat for me, that’s even when I’ve had a football injury and I’ve been limping down the carriage.

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“I’ve never had a woman open a door for me, pull out a chair for me – nothing.”

Feminist Noreen Khan responded: “I would never be offended if a man was chivalrous. For example if he decides to hold the door open or says ‘would you like help with your luggage?’ I would say ‘yes please’.

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“Even if I haven’t asked for it I still wouldn’t be offended. Us women, we would do the same as well for men. If he wants to hold the door open, I’ll happily hold the door open too.”

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She added: “Whenever I go on a tube or train, I never expect a guy to give up a chair for me – why should he? Unless a woman’s pregnant I think or like you said with health issues, I would never expect that.

“It’s those small gestures like if you go on a date and the guy holds…” Nirpal interjected. “Why can’t we have small gestures too?”

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