• Cosmic Cleric
    link
    11 year ago

    Unfortunately that’s not the reality in full service restaurants in the US

    As someone who lives in the US and was actually at a full service restaurant just last night, I can’t agree, just depends on the place/region.

    Also, if you are basing your existence on just the goodwill of others, that’s not a smart or healthy way to live.

    Really get tired of repeating the same points over and over again, so I’ll just leave it as “everyone is the captain of their own ship”, metaphorically speaking.

    It’s okay to not to tip for normal service.

    Tipping is supposed to be done for extraordinary service, above the call of what the employee is normally required to do for the customer.

    If the employee is not earning enough then that’s a matter for between the employer and the employee to resolve, not the customer.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      11 year ago

      From all I’ve heard, wait staff actually like tipping because, if you’re good, you can make a decent amount of money that way.

      I personally would love to get rid of the tipping culture in the US, as I think we’ve passed a point where tips are just being asked for in far too many places, but the idea that tipping is bad for waitstaff is something I think they might, on a whole, disagree with.

      And where are you in the US where tipping at a full service restaurant is not customary?