The Butcher
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Knew this thread was a Reservoir Dogs argument waiting to happen.
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It's worth noting that Mr Pink is the only one who made it out of that bloodbath alive.The Butcher said:Knew this thread was a Reservoir Dogs argument waiting to happen.
Probably because you're being an asshole?
That, and you seemingly don't care. You may notice this, but without waiters, your order doesn't get to you.
Whether or not you realize it, those waiters are working hard. And trust me, without waiters, your food gets messed up. Except, they don't have a minimum wage; their wage is off of working hard.
Basically, what you're saying is that I don't care that you made sure my food doesn't get fucked up, that it gets to you in a way the chef understands (which I assure, isn't exactly what you think it is), and that you're not paying for a service provided.
Again, asshole
Барбоса;4580887 said:I will tip - either a percentage or rounding up to a whole note amount. However, tipping in general makes me feel uncomfortable as in many cases, particularly in the US, it helps perpetuate a broken system.
I defend the girls at Sonic because they aren't tipped for shit. When I worked at like, an actual restaurant the servers ended up making more than I did. I was making 8 bucks an hour while these chicks would usually clear 100 bucks a night in tips on the weekends.
It's worth noting that Mr Pink is the only one who made it out of that bloodbath alive.
That's a shit example, for one street cleaners are paid by the city, & make a very good living, with very good benefits, also they're paid out with my tax dollars, two I pay a monthly garbage bill, & around Christmas I have the option to add a little extra & I do, normally about $5-$10.
I'm not sure I buy the broken system argument. I get where it's coming from and used to think the same thing myself, but then I started moving around parts of the world where tipping isn't customary and was frankly shocked by the poor quality of the service.
I see tipping simply as a method of incentivizing service staff to give a shit, and it works. The service in the UK and America is pretty exemplary, and a thousand miles away from the service in countries that do not perpetuate the broken system we have here.
Tipping is worth every penny.
I'm not sure I buy the broken system argument. I get where it's coming from and used to think the same thing myself, but then I started moving around parts of the world where tipping isn't customary and was frankly shocked by the poor quality of the service.
I see tipping simply as a method of incentivizing service staff to give a shit, and it works. The service in the UK and America is pretty exemplary, and a thousand miles away from the service in countries that do not perpetuate the broken system we have here.
Tipping is worth every penny.
I also do not understand the attitude some of you have towards those who don't tip - surely your attitude should be aimed at the managers who get away with paying waiters/waitresses so little, rather than the people who choose not to pay for their food AND the salary of the employees?
Funny story about tipping. Or at least I thought it was.
When I was in Florida last year, we went to a steak house but I can't remember what it was called for the life of me. That said, I don't think it was a massive chain restaurant - just a small steak house off the main road. When we went in, weren't seated right away and it must have taken us about an hour to finally get seated and get our starters out.
The food was okay but nothing special I would say. The steak was a little rarer than I would like but it was still a good attempt. Nevertheless, we asked for the bill and it came back around 30% more than what we were expecting to pay. When I looked at the bill for the 6 of us, I noticed that they had added a "Tip" line to the bottom of the bill. The "tip" was actually added to the bill! What the fuck is that!?
Obviously, the service and food didn't really merit it but we felt as though we had to pay it since it was part of our bill.
Am I way off? Can I refuse to pay that or is it just like a tax or something?
but I think the obsession with how you 'MUST' tip is crazy in the USA. It's at your discretion and, to me, based solely on service I received. There shouldn't be a 'you're an asshole' frame of mind if you don't do it.
That's a shit example, for one street cleaners are paid by the city, & make a very good living, with very good benefits, also they're paid out with my tax dollars, two I pay a monthly garbage bill, & around Christmas I have the option to add a little extra & I do, normally about $5-$10
I was shocked at the amount people tip when I first went to America, even for bad service. KB and I went for a meal one night; the waitress got my order wrong twice and we complained about her to a manager. I eventually just ate the meal that was wrong as KB had finished his food by this point. I therefore could not believe, in my English frame of mind, that he still left her a tip!
I also do not understand the attitude some of you have towards those who don't tip - surely your attitude should be aimed at the managers who get away with paying waiters/waitresses so little, rather than the people who choose not to pay for their food AND the salary of the employees?
Besides, don't the company have to make up the difference if the server doesn't make minimum wage with their tips? I therefore see no truth to the $2 an hour rate that gets thrown about - they make at least minimum wage. Now, minimum wage may be set too low, but that's a different argument entirely.
As for 'That's still too low for what they do' - which of us don't believe we get paid too little for the amount of work we do? Yet there is no thought to tip other people in low paid jobs who may work just as hard, if not harder.
I'm not someone who won't tip, though I don't eat many places in the UK for it to be an issue, but I think the obsession with how you 'MUST' tip is crazy in the USA. It's at your discretion and, to me, based solely on service I received. There shouldn't be a 'you're an asshole' frame of mind if you don't do it.
I started work today at 12:00pm and ended at 1:00am at 9.50 an hour, making 42.60 in tips.
Can you translate that to real money?