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Starting from the battery car being blocked...

Yesterday morning, I took my son to watch a movie at Wanda Plaza.

We chose the Dragon Boat Festival morning show, which started at 9.00. The mall was not open when we arrived. Following the instructions, I pushed the battery cart to the front of the square and parked it in the innermost position as usual.

The reason is very simple. The "parking spaces" in the outer rows are reserved for "coming people".

However, when we were ready to go home after watching the movie and playing again, we encountered difficulties in picking up the car.

It was already 11 o'clock in the morning, and the battery car parking area was already full of cars - but they were only placed in the outer row, blocking the entrances and exits to the inner floor. The small entrance was actually free. There are three large electric cars, but there are only a few cars in a row inside.

Let alone pushing the car out, you can’t even get in.

I looked around the square to find the operation staff - there was no one there. When I came in in the morning, there were clearly four or five people patrolling.

Looking at the electric cars at the entrance and exit, I couldn't help but curse.

I could only try my best to move the locked battery cars. I couldn’t push them away, and couldn’t move them. The alarm bell sounded when I bumped into them. Depend on! I cursed again!

There were several young men and women in the outermost row, standing or sitting in front of several battery cars chatting. When they heard the movement on my side, they all looked at me suspiciously.

They looked at me but did not come forward. Just when I was about to ask for help, they walked away from me one by one...

In the end, I ran out of milk. With all his strength, he moved the two battery cars away. By the time I pushed the car out, I didn't even have the energy to say a curse word.

Who can I blame?

Do you blame the car owners who park their cars at the entrances and exits?

Indeed, what they did was wrong!

However, apart from a few moral condemnations, what else can we do?

Because there are no rules and no punishment! So everyone will deal with the problem in the way that is most beneficial to them, or the most convenient way.

In other words, there are rules (for example, no cars at entrances and exits) but no one enforces them. No matter how good the rules are, they are just a piece of paper, just like a fiction.

I believe that not only yesterday, the entrances and exits may have been blocked all the time, and maybe they will be blocked first. Otherwise, there would not be only a few cars on the innermost floor, while the outer rows would be piled up. Like a mountain!

So, in the future, it will definitely continue to be blocked. Without consistent maintenance and management, that parking area would still be a mess.

Although it has demarcated an exclusive parking area, surrounded it with a bright fence about one meter high, and posted the slogan "Orderly Parking"... However, as long as it seeks advantages and avoids disadvantages, it is convenient for oneself. Human nature remains unchanged, no matter how many slogans we shout or how many moral labels we put on it, it will be useless.

After all, placing it on the outside is the most convenient for entry and exit!

The following things are still related to battery cars.

Last night, we decided to go to a restaurant 5 kilometers away from home to eat Nanxiang Xiaolong. Our first choice of transportation was still a battery car. This time, a family of three took a battery car together.

According to Shanghai’s transportation control, each battery car can only carry one child under the age of 12. This obviously does not comply with the regulations.

Do it despite the violation - just because it's so convenient.

First of all, taking the bus requires changing trains, which is a waste of time; secondly, taking a taxi is too expensive, not to mention that I get severe motion sickness as soon as I take the bus; thirdly, if one person takes the child on a scooter, the other person rides a bicycle. It would be really difficult to follow me, and it would also delay subsequent schedules, such as the Go class every Friday night.

However, there are risks in taking the road like this. For example, if you encounter a traffic policeman, you will be stopped, given a lecture and a ticket. Therefore, we will not meet the traffic police if we are stuck in traffic.

But we were not very lucky. When we reached the third traffic light, we met the police. The tall and thin policeman stopped us without hesitation and scolded me to get out of the car.

When I reacted a little slower, he shouted: "You didn't hear what I said, did you? Do you have to wait for me to issue you a ticket?!"

I got off the battery car obediently. However, I knew that my husband and son were waiting for me at the next intersection, so I quickened my pace to catch up, got on again and left.

Does this mean that I am not of high personal quality and unwilling to abide by transportation regulations?

Definitely not!

The biggest reason is that the cost of violation is too small!

Every day on the road, you can see people riding electric scooters to carry people. The only thing that worries everyone is luck-as long as they don't get caught by the police.

Therefore, sometimes we really don’t talk about quality and morality! Human nature is there. If you want everyone to abide by the rules, you must have a complete supporting implementation plan and corresponding management, otherwise it is just empty talk!

If the penalties for battery car violations are raised to the same level as those for cars, points, driver's licenses, huge fines, car confiscation, or other punishments will make it impossible for people to commit a second offense. I believe few people will take any chances with these measures.

If there is only an occasional gust of wind to rectify things now, everyone should be careful; once the wind passes, they will return to their old ways and go their own way. Then, it will never be possible to prohibit battery vehicles from carrying people.

A person must be comfortable in a society where rules and morality coexist. Morality can never replace rules. Beyond rules, morality is manifested. If the rules are formulated but then enforced by morality and human quality, the result will be two losses.

I only hope that there is no shortage of rules, implementation is in place, quality is improved, and morality is demonstrated.

The above are just a few thoughts in life.