Where do people go to get sir'ed or ma'amed?
I've never been sir'ed or ma'amed in my entire life. UK here
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>>8178502
Mostly in the Southern USA or on American Military Bases
>>8178502
I get gendered at least 10 times a day working as a cashier senpai come to cuckistan
>>8178502
Uh, at any restaurant or place that has a checkout aisle?
>>8178509
Holy shit when was Murray this hot?
Only places I've ever been sired was constantly in Burgerland and by one black security guard at the Paris Disney store for sitting in some steps leading to a wall.
Very glad to live in a you-culture, I'd find this shit infuriating even if I was cis.
>>8178527
In the '70s
Ozzy Osbourne was hot then too
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old age is a thief
>>8178558
>I'd find this shit infuriating even if I was cis.
i live in a you-culture, but i wouldn't mind being gendered as i pass
i get gendered at work by american tourists, and that's kinda nice, but maybe because it doesn't happen every single day
>>8178558
Iktf, at this point I'm more upset by the whole concept that it's polite to assign strangers a binary gender pronoun based on the most cursory of impressions
I was at a snow cone cart the other day in the middle of a big, pretty liberal west coast city, and the guy there called me "sir" but then after I spoke to reply to him my voice must have confused him, because he looked funny and switched to calling me "partner." Good compromise, I guess? I feel kind of bad for confusing him.
I get "sir-ed" and "ma'am-ed" mostly at airports, I think because stewardesses are trained to do so. So, mostly in American customer-service oriented situations, or if you're hanging out with Southerners who were raised to do so. In, say, Arizona through to Texas, you're going to hear "partner" a lot more, which isn't a particular gender. Everywhere else in America, you're more likely to be called "dude" "man" "bud" etc no matter your gender, I guess as a casual replacement for "sir" or "ma'am."