Note I did not buy any food for myself.

To head off questions:

  1. No, I couldn’t cook for her. I’m suffering from a long-term illness where I can’t eat solid foods and am extremely smell sensitive. My wife is at a funeral, so I had to order food.

  2. She’s extremely picky and refused to let me order anything but pizza.

  3. We live outside of town, in a not very big town, with very few pizza delivery options, and they’re all at least this expensive.

  4. No, I didn’t also have to buy her the cheesy bread or the second topping or the sauces, but it’s nice to get my daughter a treat and that is no excuse for the order being that expensive.

  5. We’re in Indiana, so this should be ludicrous in terms of pricing. This used to be the pricing I would expect when we lived in L.A. and ordered from a good local place rather than a chain.

Edit: Turns out what I should have been infuriated about is people repeatedly telling me to get takeout and having to repeatedly explain why that wasn’t an option, having people not believe I’m sick, and being repeatedly berated for not magically knowing food coupons exist on the internet when I never order food on the internet. Oh right, and also being a bad parent for not forcing food my daughter doesn’t like down her throat or starving her if she won’t eat it.

By the way, I have another thing to be infuriated about. A huge storm came in and this happened to our trees. I assume I will start being berated for not cutting them down before that happened, but because I have no power or internet at home and have to go to the library to post, your further posts telling me what an idiot I am and how I’m an awful parent and how I’m not really sick will take me a while to read. Sorry to ruin your day. Maybe you’ll find someone else to treat like shit.

Anyway, have fun telling me I’m the worst person on Lemmy, just don’t expect a quick reply.

Oh, and do tell me how stupid I am for not knowing that people who clear up and fix such damage have coupons on their website.

    • @UmeU
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      45 months ago

      I exist within the system. If I want a service which customarily involves a tip, that’s a part of what I signed up for.

      Show me the legislation to abolish tipping while requiring employers to pay a fair wage and I’ll sign it.

      Until then, if one wishes to receive a food delivery in the US, It’s sort of implied that you agreed to tip.

      Giving a shit tip to a hard working poor person because you don’t like the tipping system isn’t the solution imo.

      • @then_three_more
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        05 months ago

        I thought yanks were all for the free market, tipping is the oppositeness to this as it negates the free market whereby companies complete with wages and benefits for staff.

        • @UmeU
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          35 months ago

          There are only like 5 companies now so the free market is broken.

          They collude to keep us poor enough to not revolt, but ‘rich’ enough to keep buying their crappy products.

          If they take everything we have we won’t have anything left to give them. It’s a delicate balance that they seem to have mastered as they write our legislation.

          Tipping is just another way for the corporations to reduce the overhead by having the customer pay the wages of the employee directly, reducing both the budget for salaries and also the reducing ancillary expenses like unemployment insurance and employer wage withholding, occupational privilege tax, etc.

          Also, I like being called a yank. It feels old timey and kind of makes me think of masturbation.

          The labor market is so fucked we have phd’s competing for a job at McDonald’s.

          • @then_three_more
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            -25 months ago

            Tipping is just another way for the corporations to reduce the overhead by having the customer pay the wages of the employee directly, reducing both the budget for salaries and also the reducing ancillary expenses like unemployment insurance and employer wage withholding, occupational privilege tax, etc.

            It also makes these jobs falsely competitive against other “unskilled” jobs where tipping isn’t the norm.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 months ago

          Us yanks aren’t all for anything. I’ve certainly become quite disillusioned about the free market over the past 40 years or so.

          But in fact, free market principles suggest we would have tipless alternatives where workers make fair wages and the market could decide to reward those businesses or not. We do not have such alternatives and the market has failed us before the question is even properly posed.