In Malaysia, I think cutting queue like at fast food restaurants aren't that great an issue.
I rarely see people cut queue, but I see people line up in 2 or more different lines of queue. Eg, a family visits KFC, KFC is often slower in serving than other fast food I believe. In such cases, the family would assign father 1 queue, mother 1 queue, children in another queue or 2.
So quite often the queues actually look long but just wait a while and you'll see that once one of the family members reach the counter, the rest will abandon their queue.
Of course I'm using FAMILY as an example. It could be with a couple, friends or whoever that happens to agree with the pattern.
They just couldn't bear to see the person that came later than them on another queue actually reached the counter first.
Perhaps that's a form of queue-cutting, what do you think?
Humanities Cutting queue is a Malaysian issue?, education plays a role
Sep 7 2010, 05:11 PM
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