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If I wanted to tip someone, I would go to a stripbar or something. It might be because i'm European but why would you pay more then is asked when you go to a restaurant. Going to a restaurant is usually expensive enough as it is.
#174 to #143
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herrdudelmann (01/23/2013) [-]
I agree, in the UK and Europe as a whole, we have a very different attitude to tipping, possibly because waiters/waitresses get better wages. In the USA though, I think that it is a bit ridiculous: I was in LA, and I went to the lavatory, where there was a man who would hand you paper towels straight out of the dispenser to dry your hands with, expecting a $1 tip for his "services". That is too far.
#168 to #143
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ermmmmmyeah (01/23/2013) [-]
I totally agree. I tip when I get quality service, not when some sour faced employee looks daggers at me because they don't earn a lot. No waiter/waitress working at a job ever expects to earn great money from the offset, why should that expectation change?
#210 to #188
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N. Korean citizen (01/23/2013) [-]
That's when the labor commissioner needs to step in. I remember when car salesmen used to make solely commission. Even then they were making $2,500-$8,000 a month. Now in this recession, for the first time ever, they are making waaaay less than that. The car dealers cannot only pay them commission. They have to AT LEAST pay them $8 an hour even if they only sold 1 car all month with a $500 commission.
#224 to #212
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stiffbeefyone (01/23/2013) [-]
What if they have a really bad attitude? I should still feel obligated to tip the proper amount? Who's to say this women didn't have an extremely negative attitude. By reading her post, I would think she would be the same at work.