Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The tip screen is a dangerous step. It’s getting closer and closer to the customer performing the entire checkout process.
I was just at a cafeteria without any cashiers. Just a touch screen to check out. Very few workers.
Can’t wait for this to happen. No tip of course
Anonymous wrote:Employers cannot deduct the credit card fee from tips paid to employees. Also, tips are always taxable, whether paid in cash or by credit card.
Interesting that you are so focused on HER avarice and not the employer's. Do you own a bar or something?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazing. A bunch of rich white professional and allegedly liberal women who purport to care complaining about leaving a few extra pennies as a tip.
The hypocrisy of DCUM is over the top.
It's not hypocritical in the slightest. It's demanding that employers pay their people well and do their jobs. Why is the restaurant industry exempt from every basic business practice that the rest of the corporate world employs? I bet you demand that Amazon pay living wages. What would you say if Amazon required a 20% tip for all delivery people? You'd think that was crazy, right? Same thing. Stop being daft.
Oh, I see, you’re putting the squeeze on the workers to get at their employers. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
I'm not putting the squeeze on anyone. I don't employ these people. The employers who refuse to pay living wages does. Why we insist that consumers pad their salaries because employers refuse to is beyond me. but sure, blame everyone but the employer.
The mature and generous and truly non-self-centered thing to do is lobby the people in charge to raise minimum wages. It’s not to refuse to tip the waiters. You’re making excuses to justify your own avarice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:just do 15 and be done with it. 0 for carry outs. i refuse to buy into this crazy tip-sh*t culture we are in
Says the person who has NEVER worked a service job.
Anonymous wrote:The tip screen is a dangerous step. It’s getting closer and closer to the customer performing the entire checkout process.
I was just at a cafeteria without any cashiers. Just a touch screen to check out. Very few workers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:just do 15 and be done with it. 0 for carry outs. i refuse to buy into this crazy tip-sh*t culture we are in
+1
Ridiculous! When I'm prompted I hit no tip. I still consider 15% decent and 20% good. If they want more then that, they need a better job. Once the employers have a hard time with staffing they will raise wages. It's called capitalism.
it's also called, "gee, why is the place I used to go to all the time closed now and the storefront is vacant?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:just do 15 and be done with it. 0 for carry outs. i refuse to buy into this crazy tip-sh*t culture we are in
+1
Ridiculous! When I'm prompted I hit no tip. I still consider 15% decent and 20% good. If they want more then that, they need a better job. Once the employers have a hard time with staffing they will raise wages. It's called capitalism.
Anonymous wrote:just do 15 and be done with it. 0 for carry outs. i refuse to buy into this crazy tip-sh*t culture we are in
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazing. A bunch of rich white professional and allegedly liberal women who purport to care complaining about leaving a few extra pennies as a tip.
The hypocrisy of DCUM is over the top.
I agree. What a ridiculous thing to whine about. It takes a small cheap person to complain about adding a few dollars for the people who served you. Their excuses are laughable.
You have a lunch for two. The bill is $20. How hard is it to leave $25? What is the big deal?
If you don’t tip everyone you interact with, then you get it. Grocery store cashier, oil change guy, mailman, tee shirt seller, etc. our points are: don’t ask for tips when you’re not serving anyone, don’t swing a screen around seeking a tip if you did your adequately paid job, don’t expect
More than 15-20% for a tip in industries where it’s historically been expected to tip, don’t expect bigger or any tips purely because: your screen asks for one, my household income can afford it, you make less than I do, you did a job that’s not typically tipped, you want more tips, etc.
I don’t get why you’re confused, but to clarify: tipping wasn’t created or sustained because paying more than the stated amount is “no big deal” to me. By even saying - what’s the big deal if you leave $5 on a $20 bill- shows you have an entitled viewpoint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazing. A bunch of rich white professional and allegedly liberal women who purport to care complaining about leaving a few extra pennies as a tip.
The hypocrisy of DCUM is over the top.
I agree. What a ridiculous thing to whine about. It takes a small cheap person to complain about adding a few dollars for the people who served you. Their excuses are laughable.
You have a lunch for two. The bill is $20. How hard is it to leave $25? What is the big deal?
Anonymous wrote:The tip screen is a dangerous step. It’s getting closer and closer to the customer performing the entire checkout process.
I was just at a cafeteria without any cashiers. Just a touch screen to check out. Very few workers.