Why would a wheelchair-bound paraplegic be going to Costco? Getting those folks in and out of those vans is a really big deal. Couldn't some able-bodied caregiver do the shopping?
Now, being a "handicapped" person myself--although no parking sticker--I might, or might not, know what I'm talking about here.
I've always noticed that among a certain class of the "handicapped"--usually the ones with bumper stickers lauding Massa Barry--there's a resentment against normal people, because normal people can get around with ease, while they can't.
It's jealousy, nothing more than that.
So anyway, so as to "get back" at normal people, they go out of their way on purpose to make as ostentatious a nuisance of themselves as possible, such as demanding "special accommodations" that inconvenience normal people.
They're trying to shaft the Man.
I'm deaf; there's certain things I can't do, certain things in which I can't partake, certain things I can't enjoy, certain things that cost others a great deal of money, time, and trouble to make "usable" for me (which end up being wasted money, as nothing really can be done).
For whatever reasons though, there's never been an ounce of envy in me, for hearing people; it's life, and my particular lot is my fate in life. It's never been anything to fret about, because God straightens it all out in the end.
But some of my brethren, well.....
It's not really that they want to do these things (wheelchaired people shopping, whatnot), but more so in their jealousy and resentment, they want to "get even" by being a nuisance.
Flame away vesta dear, but I know whereof I speak.