Meanwhile, managers and security guards at the loading station would be busy carrying on with their seemingly unproblematic existence. Inside their air conditioned ticketing office, the managers would keep on playing this announcement over the public address system advising passengers to stay behind the yellow line for their own safety. Their equally unthinking stooges would then be blowing their whistles and waving their sticks through the air to warn people that they should step back from the edge of the loading platform. Of course, nobody cares to follow them or their advisory. Because you have to be in front of the mob to be in a strategic position to worm your way through the coach’s entrance when the train stops. And you can’t afford to wait beyond forty-five minutes for a half-filled train to pass by, or you’ll be charged an extra amount (equal to what you paid when you got in) as you try to get off at your destination.
All these time, any creature with an iota of what can be considered as human intelligence would perhaps be wondering why people managing the loading station couldn’t just call the central office, and place an urgent request for an empty train. Such creature has to be reminded, of course, that an advanced technology does not necessarily imply the presence of thinking human beings. A high tech transport system like the metro rail transit in the RP can be operated by creatures with the IQ of a bug. That says a lot about how user-friendly these technologies are.
1 comment:
grabe talaga. i had witnessed the chaos in the MRT stations and inside the coaches in one of the rare times i take the MRT. the gitgitan and eveything. tsaka i realized that when you put all women together in one coach mas chaotic at mas nakaka-harass
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