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Telenil's avatar

As a European, I'm mystified by these American rules where the price on display and the amount you pay are only mildly correlated. You get a $20 meal, but then you have to add taxes that depend on where in the US you are (possibly on the product as well?), and if you add a further 10% on top of that taxed-up price, your American friend goes back to the counter to add an other 10% with an apologetic smile. Here, I know how much I have to pay by simply adding the price tags together, and if you want to tip, you leave a couple euros on the table, or perhaps wave the change away if you paid cash.

Americans were sensible enough to draw their streets in straight lines intersecting at square angles, why is it that a system where the price tag is exactly the amount to be charged could not take root in American culture?

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Shannon McBride's avatar

You seem to be forgetting the worst tip scammers of them all - bathroom attendants. Luckily, they seem to be a dying breed, but there's nothing worse than having someone expect to get paid for turning on the tap and handing me a paper towel completely unasked for

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