Cathy2 wrote:Twenty years ago, credit cards were an American-thing and a travel convenience. I remember going to a department store in Zurich, Switzerland to buy some clothing before heading back to Eastern Europe. I pulled out my credit card, which caused quite a flurry! Someone had to go to the chief accountants office to get the credit card processing machine and forms. When the cashier processed my card, other girls from the floor came to watch how it was done.
stevez wrote:...someone slipped me a car wash token masquerading as a quarter in some change I got yesterday...
paulette wrote:Well I guess I can be considered a WSA. I usually pay by cash as I did today at Garden Fresh in Northbrook.
paulette wrote:Well I guess I can be considered a WSA. I usually pay by cash as I did today at Garden Fresh in Northbrook. The bill was $107 and I gave the cashier $120. While he was checking and counting the 20's the woman behind me was in such a hurry that she stormed to another checker almost knocking over the woman behind be to check out her 4 avocados and 2 other items. So do I have to switch to my check card to make everyone happy.
Paulette
riddlemay wrote:Stealing is stealing.
Mike G wrote:Special holiday weekend edition of Just Kinda Missing the Point Of Why You're In Business:
2) Panhandler on Ashland near downtown walking toward my car window to beg for change... while talking on his cell phone. I kid you not.
On a related note, it chaffs my arse to be in a retail establishment, buying something from a clerk who is on his/her cell phone throughout the transaction.
Mike G wrote:It's not stealing. It is mooching, though. I don't take one, either.
The White Bicycles (Witfiets) can be found at various locations in Amsterdam. They represent a revival of a concept that was tried in Amsterdam in the 1960s. Back then, Luud Schimmelpennink an environmentalist, along with an activist group dreamed up a plan to put free bicycles on the streets of Amsterdam. They figured if there were enough bicycles people could just grab one wherever they were and leave it at their destination for someone else to use.
justjoan wrote:please watch who you're calling an asshole. i pay by personal check regularly; i intend to continue (though apparently not at whole foods). last time i looked it was a legal and common transaction. even IF it takes a few seconds longer than using a debit card (and plenty of other behavior can slow those people down), i think you should all keep your opinion of check writers to yourselves. justjoan
justjoan wrote:i pay by personal check regularly; i intend to continue (though apparently not at whole foods).
ronnie_suburban wrote:justjoan wrote:i pay by personal check regularly; i intend to continue (though apparently not at whole foods).
Honestly, why? I'm always curious why people who write checks don't just have debit cards. There must be some good reason, right?
=R=
riddlemay wrote:The receipts you get from using your debit card may show a balance (I wouldn't know, I also don't use debit cards--I use credit cards and pay off my bill monthly), but then you end up with lots of different pieces of paper instead of one continuously updated record.
stevez wrote:riddlemay wrote:The receipts you get from using your debit card may show a balance (I wouldn't know, I also don't use debit cards--I use credit cards and pay off my bill monthly), but then you end up with lots of different pieces of paper instead of one continuously updated record.
Actually, using a debit card gives you a complete running balance online without you having to do anything. All of your transactions (deposits as well as debit transactions) are automatically recorded for you and available 24/7 on the web. Welcome to the 90's!
David Hammond wrote:Maybe people write checks because they feel a greater sense of security, holding the paper in their hands, doing the numbers themselves, recording the information in their registers, while we watch.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Honestly, why? I'm always curious why people who write checks don't just have debit cards. There must be some good reason, right?
=R=
Since research shows that consumers who use debit cards more often are also more likely to overdraw their checking accounts, card-issuing banks can reap an additional $1 million from nonsufficient-fund fees, according to the Mercator report. Another study revealed that customers who used debit cards more than 20 times a year paid an average of $223 in NSF fees annually, compared with $40 for those who didn't use debit cards at all.
Until 2003, banks routinely declined debit-card purchases and ATM transactions for amounts that exceeded a customer's balance unless he or she had decided to link the account to a line of credit, credit card, or savings account to cover overdrafts. But since then, the number of banks using overdraft software packages has increased 80 percent. The software allows banks to pay overdrafts without alerting customers that they are exceeding their balance, according to the Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer advocacy group. Customers don't realize that they'll be charged a fee, which average more than $30, if they proceed with the transaction. This fee is essentially a finance charge for a short-term overdraft loan, which the bank swiftly recoups from the account holder's next deposit. When translated into an annual percentage rate, overdraft fees on debit cards can exceed 1,000 percent.
Ann Fisher wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Honestly, why? I'm always curious why people who write checks don't just have debit cards. There must be some good reason, right?
=R=
There's a very good article in the current Consumer Reports that answers that question. I'm hoping it's not behind the subscription wall, so you can read it for yourself here.
Here's the bit I found most telling:Since research shows that consumers who use debit cards more often are also more likely to overdraw their checking accounts, card-issuing banks can reap an additional $1 million from nonsufficient-fund fees, according to the Mercator report. Another study revealed that customers who used debit cards more than 20 times a year paid an average of $223 in NSF fees annually, compared with $40 for those who didn't use debit cards at all.
Until 2003, banks routinely declined debit-card purchases and ATM transactions for amounts that exceeded a customer's balance unless he or she had decided to link the account to a line of credit, credit card, or savings account to cover overdrafts. But since then, the number of banks using overdraft software packages has increased 80 percent. The software allows banks to pay overdrafts without alerting customers that they are exceeding their balance, according to the Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer advocacy group. Customers don't realize that they'll be charged a fee, which average more than $30, if they proceed with the transaction. This fee is essentially a finance charge for a short-term overdraft loan, which the bank swiftly recoups from the account holder's next deposit. When translated into an annual percentage rate, overdraft fees on debit cards can exceed 1,000 percent.