Skybird |
06-12-17 01:58 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Quatro
(Post 2490687)
This is a spiritual problem, Sky. Your people don't like other people touching their stuff. While we just pick up the bags the cashier packs and leave the store. They have to touch them to scan them anyway, plus ya'll seem to bring your own bags too and we are now being forced to with plastic bags being banned in most stores.
The Japanese had the same spiritual problems when the war was over they wouldn't wear the clothes we sent over to repair the war damaged citizens.
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No, it is somethign different. There is nothing wrong and no difficulty in packing our just bought stuff into our bags ourselkves. If we need somebody elser to do this for us, that is like somebody carrying us around on his arms, feeding us, cleaning our lower end when we made our poopoo. Its like being treated like an idiot who is disabled, is slobbering and cannot drink without spilling half of it on the table, so to speak.
Many people here also do not like cashless payment. Its simply takes more time. A good cashier beats card terminals easily, every time, no matte rhow long the line (and I did that as a job for several years as a temporary aid, so I know it for sure). Also, we want to maintain cash payment so that the plundering state finds it more difficult to force people to keep their wealth and possession in digital format where state can expropriate it by force easily by a simply pressing of a button, so to speak. Also, banks and credit card companies can dicate terms and conditions and take just any fees they want if cashlessness would be enforced. Finally the mobsters of the central banks could enforce the plundering of those people via negative interest rates who so far do evade this robbery by keeping their money somewhere else and outside the reach and control of banks. Monopolies are always a bad thing for the sonsumer, and depening on companies is always a lousy idea - its better if business and companies depend on their customers, for else the customer is no free customer, but lifestock to exploit.
Cashless payment may give you that "Hey, I'm cool, man!"-moment for just a second of your day, Rockstar. But the longterm costs are much, much, much higher. You pay, in the end of this criminal development, with loss of protection of private property, and loss of civil rights and liberty. Is that really worth it? Its like locking yourself to a sinking boat, and throwing the key away. OInce the money is gone completzely, what you then are left with is planned pseudoi money and planned economy where they tell you what you have to want and what you have to do. Germans have been there. Twice. State-run economy ain't no pleasant thing to experience. And it always ends in just one way. Always the same way.
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