[On a previous trip by car to Gibraltar]
Parking, as you might imagine in such a densely populated area, is a bit of a nightmare, so after failing to find anywhere, I eventually parked in a ticketed car park and accepted that, two-and-a-bit days later, when we were due to leave, we would be looking at a hefty fee. Returning to collect the car, I noticed that, on the sign displaying the car park rules (how very British), it clearly stated that, if you lost your ticket, you would have to pay for a full day. Hmm! At the exit barrier, I made a display of searching the car and my wallet and, eventually, smiling sheepishly up at the bloke in the kiosk, said, "I can't find my ticket."
"In that case," came the smug reply from Mr. Jobsworth, "I will have to charge you for a full day's parking. It's the rules, and it says so on the sign."
"That's OK, mate," I replied, handing him a tenner instead of the best part of forty pounds. "It's my fault for losing the ticket. You're only doing your job."
I was still sniggering about my victory as we drove off Gibraltar and into Spain. Kim thinks I'm easily amused by such things, but in this day and age, I see such matters as major victories for we ordinary folk against the rules and regulations of an increasingly bureaucratic state. Saving thirty pounds was pretty good too.
The Furthest Points Andy Hewitt p33