Originally Posted by
Hotel Kilo
Not dying anywhere, merely pointing out observations over the last few years and questioning what is the ire of GenZ and millenials not tipping the van/bus drivers.
This is rich. Hard to get cash? Use your debit card and click that little button and select amount for cash back next time you get groceries or something else. Have the cashier break the larger bill(s) down for you. It takes all of 30 seconds and you do it while already there at the store. Not hard at all.
You guys a really twisting yourselves in to justifying why you don't tip. LIke I said, seen plenty of <2 year FA's tip. While FO's just walk away.
Cash is king, always has been always will be.
As an aside from the who tip debate, I'd recommend using your debit card as little as possible. Only takes once of having to deal with fraud on your debit card to realize a credit card is far better of an option.
As said above, I'll tip, though many times I forget to break a $20 and it can be painful to get it broken at times. However, my biggest issue with it is why aren't the business owners paying a proper wage? Pay them right and good service should just be the standard. The onus should be on the business owner and not the customer. Maybe we should get tips for a smooth flight and a good landing (sorry 717 guys)? I don't think so because we get paid a proper wage (though it's never good enough

), so why shouldn't these industries pay better? Americans keep buying into this BS idea that it's ok to pay the service industry less, by allowing it to continue. Freakonomics actually did a few podcasts on tipping, pretty good stuff.
Cash is king until you go to a place that doesn't accept cash, which oddly, I'm seeing more often now. But it's never a bad practice to have a $100 tucked away in a wallet for the just in case scenarios. It might get you out of a pickle anywhere in the world.
Originally Posted by
demon llama
lol maybe next time when you go to the grocery store to write a check you can write it for $20 cash back and use them break it into smaller bills.
I went through AF pilot training with a bunch of Euros circa 2006. One day a classmate was writing a check and the Euros in our class looked at him like he had found some ancient relic. They're like, you guys still use checks? They were amazed that we'd still use something to easily counterfeited.