Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stores and restaurants are now passing the credit card fee on to the customer. I use more cash for small totals when the the store convenience fee is far more than the credit card fee. Simple math skills flummox the average young cashier.
Which stores and restaurants? I need a list so I can avoid.
My dry cleaner tells you up front that you get a discount if you pay cash, which is wayyyy more palatable. I am always prepared with cash.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher. Many don't handle cash or coins. They use cards or their phones.
It's impacting their math skills.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, you're just old, my dad was making the same complaint in 1995.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sometimes pay with cash to break my ATM $20s. Within the same week I had two instances of cashiers no longer being able to count back the proper change. In both cases they were younger people. I suck at math but there's a way to count back change that doesn't involve calculation. And sometime the register even tells you what to return.
Why are you getting cash from an ATM if not to make purchases? This sounds like you are creating an issue for yourself and others.
It’s easier to use a CC —even at a food truck or the farmer’s market— and you get points or cash back rewards.
Most toll systems no longer take cash.
Public transportation systems take cards.
Houses of worship take checks or let you set up ACH.
Schools don’t want cash for lunch accounts or field trip fees.
Even laundromats use apps and CC.
Is pulling cash from the ATM for purchases just an excuse to complain on the internet about young service workers?
Most terch savvy people advocate paying in cash to limit tracking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stores and restaurants are now passing the credit card fee on to the customer. I use more cash for small totals when the the store convenience fee is far more than the credit card fee. Simple math skills flummox the average young cashier.
Nobody here goes to the nail salon? A bunch of them have signs about charging for the cc fee. All kinds of mom and pop places, immigrant-owned spots, farmer's markets, small transactions--I feel like a jerk for using a card for a $3 transaction.
Nail salons support human trafficking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sometimes pay with cash to break my ATM $20s. Within the same week I had two instances of cashiers no longer being able to count back the proper change. In both cases they were younger people. I suck at math but there's a way to count back change that doesn't involve calculation. And sometime the register even tells you what to return.
Why are you getting cash from an ATM if not to make purchases? This sounds like you are creating an issue for yourself and others.
It’s easier to use a CC —even at a food truck or the farmer’s market— and you get points or cash back rewards.
Most toll systems no longer take cash.
Public transportation systems take cards.
Houses of worship take checks or let you set up ACH.
Schools don’t want cash for lunch accounts or field trip fees.
Even laundromats use apps and CC.
Is pulling cash from the ATM for purchases just an excuse to complain on the internet about young service workers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stores and restaurants are now passing the credit card fee on to the customer. I use more cash for small totals when the the store convenience fee is far more than the credit card fee. Simple math skills flummox the average young cashier.
Nobody here goes to the nail salon? A bunch of them have signs about charging for the cc fee. All kinds of mom and pop places, immigrant-owned spots, farmer's markets, small transactions--I feel like a jerk for using a card for a $3 transaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump is advocating for a bill that will require all bricks and mortar companies to accept usd cash.
That's rather progressive of him. Usually it is the lower income and cash-job-gig folks who only have cash for paying.
Anonymous wrote:I sometimes pay with cash to break my ATM $20s. Within the same week I had two instances of cashiers no longer being able to count back the proper change. In both cases they were younger people. I suck at math but there's a way to count back change that doesn't involve calculation. And sometime the register even tells you what to return.