I still use a flip phone. (Work phone, use it everyday)I haven't carried cash for about a decade. Cash, flip phones, and print publications died in '07, let them go.
I still use a flip phone. (Work phone, use it everyday)I haven't carried cash for about a decade. Cash, flip phones, and print publications died in '07, let them go.
The “mask mandaters“ would just LOVE a cashless society where the government could monitor and control even MORE aspects of our lives. I read BOOKS, and spend CASH. I think that the more you “let go” the more you GIVE AWAYI haven't carried cash for about a decade. Cash, flip phones, and print publications died in '07, let them go.
Cash is still king.The “mask mandaters“ would just LOVE a cashless society where the government could monitor and control even MORE aspects of our lives. I read BOOKS, and spend CASH. I think that the more you “let go” the more you GIVE AWAY
The cash you make is reported to the IRS. The cash you save is reported to the IRS. The cash you invest is reported to the IRS. Large purchases, deposits, or withdraws made in or to cash are reported to the IRS. Every year they know what you owe, but leave it to you to find out. Every year people who live their lives out in cash get audited into oblivion.The “mask mandaters“ would just LOVE a cashless society where the government could monitor and control even MORE aspects of our lives. I read BOOKS, and spend CASH. I think that the more you “let go” the more you GIVE AWAY
Liquid assets are king. Cash is paper.Cash is still king.
Less trouble. Actually saves you money. Deals with reality in a positive fashion. Allows me to not worry about losing my cash or having it stolen. Can pay off the credit card immediately and still SAVES ME MONEY. AKA cash.What does that have to do with not being able to pay with cash?
You must learn to convince logically, grasshoppa. Last post was mo betta.Liquid assets are king. Cash is paper.
An annoying little app. I have to open it in the parking lot to have any chance of it being operational before the cart is full. Won't focus, quantity 10 when I only have one item in the cart, etc. It used to be sweet before everybody started using it, now it's just moved the line from the checkout to the scanner at the door.I use the scan and go app at Sam's. Scan stuff as it goes in the cart.. Pay with my Sam's Mastercard saved to the app. SAVES ME 5%! Show my phone to the asset protection employee at the door. And I'm outta there. No fuss, no muss.
Funny. I never have any trouble with it. Suppose it could be your phone service or operator error.An annoying little app. I have to open it in the parking lot to have any chance of it being operational before the cart is full. Won't focus, quantity 10 when I only have one item in the cart, etc. It used to be sweet before everybody started using it, now it's just moved the line from the checkout to the scanner at the door.
That is not really a valid argument.I sure get why people use self checkout. But being old and grumpy and hard headed I don’t use them and won’t till I get payed to do the work for them next thing you know I will have to do inventory, order, stock then do self checkout.
I miss the old days.
I used to use the self checkout lanes because I was always faster and didn't need to unload the cart with the handheld bar code scanner. I now use Scan & Go feature in the app and scan the items as I pick them up. A quick swipe to pay on the phone and the checker at the door scans a QR code from the phone. Super quick and zero standing in the crazy lines. I was at the Sam's in Fort Wayne last Saturday and lines were over half way to the back of the store. A quick scan and out the door with no waiting for a register.
Yes, the IRS knows what you earn, invest, and save. However, if you pay for everything with “1s and 0s” the government then knows EVERYTHING you purchase. If you totally TRUST THE GOVERNMENT to know EVERYTHING about your life, that is fine. I would prefer to purchase a case of 9mm at a gun show for cash with no paper trail.The cash you make is reported to the IRS. The cash you save is reported to the IRS. The cash you invest is reported to the IRS. Large purchases, deposits, or withdraws made in or to cash are reported to the IRS. Every year they know what you owe, but leave it to you to find out. Every year people who live their lives out in cash get audited into oblivion.
I seriously doubt that Sam's Club wants to turn the machines against us by requiring ETF. It's cheaper for payroll and eventually every bill you pass turns into 1s and 0s on a computer screen.
You want to spend a paper certificate backed by nothing.
I elect to spend numbers, symbolic of paper certificates, backed by nothing.