Same in every industry. Food industry is especially bad. Hell, I grew up on a farm in the US and we were free labor for our parents, but we wouldn’t have survived elsewise.
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Correct, and that’s the rub. Tipped workers don’t want to change the system, because by and large they are far better off with tips than simply a minimum wage (or even prevailing minimum wage for an area). So realistically the only way to end it is to get rid of tipped wages in general, raise the minimum wage, and for people to stop going to places that ask for tips to pay for their workers.
Tipped workers represent 5 million+ workers in the US. While yes, ending tipping is important, probably better ways like raising minimum wages and getting rid of ‘tipped wages’ would work to end tipping rather than just telling 5 million people they need to find different work.
But if you talk to the majority of tipped workers, they don’t want to change the system, which is likely a far larger hurdle compared to diner preferences.
Are you genuinely having more fun now than with good games from 10years ago? Even 15years ago??
I mean yes? Certainly I can put another 1000+ hours into a game from 10 years ago or 15 years ago, but people aren’t playing those games any longer, and those who do in a team setting are so far beyond anything a casual player can do it’s not even close to being remotely fun. LAN parties were amazing, but they existed because most of us didn’t have incredibly fast internet and we wanted to show off the PCs that we had cobbled together.
These days it’s easy to fire up Discord or whatever chat you want to use, play a new game with your friends that looks great, that plays well (enough), and then you can buy a new game. I’d rather play Doom Dark Ages over the original Doom. Or to go to the 10-15 years ago metric, I would much rather play Doom Dark Ages over Doom 3. But hey, when Doom 3 came out, this exact same conversation was happening, because Doom 3 wasn’t easy to run.
GalacticRobot@lemmy.worldto
memes@lemmy.world•My bank account didn't see it coming. I didn't either.
2·8 days agoSure, they do virtual credit cards, but I haven’t seen credit card companies that do it quite like Privacy does. It’s super simple to make individual cards for different ‘bills’, then pause them or get rid of the card as needed. And you don’t even need to use your actual name or information on these virtual cards, so the merchant doesn’t get your information.
GalacticRobot@lemmy.worldto
memes@lemmy.world•My bank account didn't see it coming. I didn't either.
3·8 days agoYeah, one time use card is great for things like this. And since you can use any zip code or any information, you can avoid certain additional costs as well.
GalacticRobot@lemmy.worldto
memes@lemmy.world•My bank account didn't see it coming. I didn't either.
3·8 days agoPrivacy.com’s virtual credit cards are pretty great for this. Sign up, pause or one time for the card, and then you don’t have to worry about it. I am sure there are other websites that offer similar services.
I was that dumb kid who got my first gmail invite from a friend and never thought to use my first name/last name because it was during the time that we all were supposed to be ‘anonymous’ as everyone on the internet was a murderer.


I mean, it’s not fiction if we all want things to change. I don’t think I will stop tipping those who can’t afford to not be tipped, but you do you. I’d say the better solution for someone like yourself is to stop going to those places to begin with if you are that against ‘tipping’.