Coogee, Sydney: Resident's angry note left for legally parked driver sparks war ... trends now By Freddy Pawle For Daily Mail Australia Published: 23:31 GMT, 18 March 2024 | Updated: 23:31 GMT, 18 March 2024 Viewcomments An angry note left on a car parked on a public street in a busy beachside suburb has triggered a furious debate about parking on residential streets. One local legally left her car in an unrestricted space on Mount Street in Coogee, in Sydney's eastern suburbs, for two days where there is no time limit on parking. But when she returned, she found a fuming local resident on the road had left a angry note on her windscreen. 'Please move your car,' it read. 'This is not a parking lot. You do not live in this street!' The driver posted the note on social media, adding that she 'cannot believe this is still happening in 2024'. A resident's angry note left on a legally parked car (pictured) has set off a war of words as locals slam the homeowner for being 'entitled' The image posted to the Coogee and Randwick-based Facebook Group incensed locals and sparked a furious backlash. 'I can’t believe people still put notes like this on cars,' one user wrote. 'Nobody owns street parking. Nobody!' 'Where does it matter where you park your car?' a second wrote, adding: 'Parking is for everyone and isn’t exclusive to anyone.' 'I’ve seen a few angry Kens n Karens go off on people for parking on a public street... these people are delusional,' a third added. Another wrote: 'Just laugh at the fact that these people are wasting their lives on petty things like this.' Others added their own experiences of 'entitled' residents leaving angry notes on their cars. 'In Bondi I’ve had, “We have four cars and we would like to park near our house. Park somewhere else”,' one wrote. Another said he found a note reading 'You don't live here! You don't park here,' before discovering her tyre had been slashed. The driver had legally parked for two days on Mount Street (pictured) in Coogee, Sydney's eastern suburbs, where the street has no time limit on parking But one local admitted he takes photographs and records the details of cars that park for extended times on his 'small cul-de-sac'. 'Why should entitled temporary outsiders feel the need to park outside my house for hours at a time,' he said. 'Unless of course they are (cockily) assured that rules don’t apply to them. 'Hence the polite note, and the need for details. Just in case things turn nasty.' Share or comment on this article: Coogee, Sydney: Resident's angry note left for legally parked driver sparks war of words All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility