There's no legal requirement you have to let kids in your car You could pull up to a fare, see that it's a family with kids and be like "Oh I don't drive children, they leave snot everywhere" and cancel But you don't ever hear about people doing this Why not
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If someone got virally shamed for refusing to drive kids and Uber banned him from the app over it would people be rushing to defend him Would there be hot leftist takes saying "It's bigoted to judge someone from a different culture for not feeling the same way about children"
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The guy who was worried about the wheelchair scratching his paint What if he'd been picking up an abled person with a big suitcase And he just drove off saying "I don't do luggage" Didn't break any law, but people would likely be all "Why are you even driving for Uber"
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I doubt you'd be all calm about it if you were going to the airport and had a flight to catch "But I put my destination in as the airport on the app! Wouldn't you know I had luggage" "Yeah but I didn't change my mind until I actually saw the size of that thing"
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I've never seen as many hypothetical scenarios float around twitter as with this person denying a disabled woman a ride, most of them in defense. Tells me there is a priority list of worthiness of care in people's heads. And the needs of a disabled person rank rather low.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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May I ask a question does Uber not offer the "Uber Assist" option in the USA? We have it here and it is for riders with special needs.
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You must live in London. Uber Assist is available in a few cities, but not Nashville. And she's been turned down for a folding wheelchair and for a service dog, both of which fit easily into any sedan (and are covered by federal law and company policy).
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