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Crypto_Samurai
3.1K posts


@TheCryptoSquire I think it's more realistic that you or someone else will be asking the same damn thing 5 years from now...
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@Geniustechw An id10t that thinks their being cool. Please do that in a pedestrian walkway when I'm there too.
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@otokyo__ If she isn't bothering anyone or disturbing the service, leave her alone.
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@NoContextHumans But, with that said, the server shouldn't write anything on the check, unless it's a kind statement. I would fire them for that..
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@NoContextHumans Well, tips shouldn't be expected. It should be earned. If service was bad, then I wouldnt tip or give a low percentage, if that. But you also need to factor if its busy, if they are short staffed, did the server try, perhaps the line wasn't making the food on time, etc., etc
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@Bears_Hype_Man I love our city and our flag, but I do not like this design. Keep it simple, its way too much.
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@MLFootball @HGrahamNFL @thekapman @KruseSports_ @FilmstudyRavens @zachbollinger18 @RavensTalkPod @RavensTattooGuy I'm a Bears fan, and I love Urlacher, but it isn't close. Ray Lewis takes this one and it really isn't close.
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@Mishi_2210 None. A couple went to a picnic. The question is how many went the pichnic. If that was a typo, then 2 people went.
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@MrPitbull07 If you dont want to tip, that's fine and yes its your choice. But you can also pick up your food and eat it somewhere else if you don't want to. If the service was bad, that's a different story.
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I paid a $169.29 breakfast bill and left the tip at $0. Not because I didn’t notice the line — but because tipping, for me, is still a personal choice, not a fixed charge.
The meal itself was fully paid for. The prices were set, the tax was added, and the total was clear. Covering that bill already supports the restaurant, its staff, and its operations. That part of the transaction was complete.
What made this moment uncomfortable wasn’t the math — it was the pressure that followed. Tipping used to be a way to say “thank you” when service stood out. Somewhere along the way, it shifted into an expectation that can feel detached from the actual experience.
Everyone comes in with different circumstances, different standards, and different limits. Respecting that choice — whatever the number — is part of keeping trust between customers and businesses. When that respect slips, so does the desire to come back.
Credit: Lena Anderson via FB

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