Film, Media & TV1 min ago
With The Cost Of Meals For Eating Out Going Up ,should People Still Tip
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If so how much?
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No best answer has yet been selected by gollob. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have objection to Americans displaying products without tax price on shelfs then adding a price at the checkout.
My same objection goes for paying for a £10 burger and £3 fries and being expected to pay a £14.40 minimum.
If they want more money, add it to the food and drinks now some "unspoken" custom.
My same objection goes for paying for a £10 burger and £3 fries and being expected to pay a £14.40 minimum.
If they want more money, add it to the food and drinks now some "unspoken" custom.
I found the increase in price at the checkout a bind too. But it's just a choice by each society independently, rather than wrong. I don't much care how much of the bill goes to the supplier and how much to government, I can't withhold any of it anyway. I'm more concerned about what it is I'm going to be asked to pay. Surprised all societies don't feel the same.
//I've dined at some of the most world class hotels known to man.//
Then you will (or should) realise that waiting (properly) is not an unskilled job and to suggest that it is insults those people who have chosen it as a profession. The problem in the UK is that many establishments employ people who are unskilled to wait on their tables. It is seen (as is evident from your remarks) as a menial job, something that people do when they can get no other job, something that students do for pocket money, something that people do to pay the rent whilst waiting for something better to turn up. But having a professional waiter/waitress serve you, one who knows about the food and drink they are serving, knows about how it's cooked, knows about the ingredients and most of all knows how to make your evening just a little better than ramming some food down your gullet from a cardboard box, demonstrates that the job is skilled and worthy of proper reward. Whether you choose to reward them additionally as a personal contribution is of course your choice.
Then you will (or should) realise that waiting (properly) is not an unskilled job and to suggest that it is insults those people who have chosen it as a profession. The problem in the UK is that many establishments employ people who are unskilled to wait on their tables. It is seen (as is evident from your remarks) as a menial job, something that people do when they can get no other job, something that students do for pocket money, something that people do to pay the rent whilst waiting for something better to turn up. But having a professional waiter/waitress serve you, one who knows about the food and drink they are serving, knows about how it's cooked, knows about the ingredients and most of all knows how to make your evening just a little better than ramming some food down your gullet from a cardboard box, demonstrates that the job is skilled and worthy of proper reward. Whether you choose to reward them additionally as a personal contribution is of course your choice.
TheDevil
I have objection to Americans displaying products without tax price on shelfs then adding a price at the checkout.
Tough...that's the way it's done there. You're paying several different taxes...local as in state and city ...and will vary from state to state. So...labelling everything individually isn't practical.
I have objection to Americans displaying products without tax price on shelfs then adding a price at the checkout.
Tough...that's the way it's done there. You're paying several different taxes...local as in state and city ...and will vary from state to state. So...labelling everything individually isn't practical.
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