Today, Americans love tipping more than ever. Tipping accounts for around $44 billion in the U.S. food industry alone. However; tipping isn’t what it used to be. Tipping has turned from a gratuity into a moral obligation and it has become more of a problem then you might think. Despite common belief, tipping doesn’t incentivize hard work. The factors that go into tip size have virtually nothing to do with the quality of service. Credit card tips are larger than cash tips. Large parties with sizable
If someone is buying a pair jeans for 50$, the cashier does not say, “That will be 40$ and you decide if the cobbler gets to eat tonight” This is an irrational practice that perfectly describes tipping. Right now, waiters/waitresses and Americans alike, probably hate hate people for even questioning the custom of tipping, but bear trough, by the time one finishes reading this essay, they will agree. Tipping is a custom we would be better without. Let us get something cleared up if one lives in America
People who have money have an obligation. I wouldn 't say I 'm entitled to tell them what to do with it but to use it wisely. People that have money do not always use it wisely if he could be entitled to tell them what to do with the money he would. When it comes to spending your money spend it on what you care about like education, public health, or human rights. Charles Feeney was an important philanthropist because he had private foundations and he kept them growing through tech investments for
Defendants that cannot afford private attorneys are called indigent defendants and must rely on public defenders. With the sixth amendment to the Constitution Right to Counsel, the state must provide an attorney in felony murder cases. (Cornell University Law School Legal Encyclopedia) With the need for a public defender there are three ways of implementing an indigent defense program, first is to offer a public defender. (Wood) A public defender is paid by the city, county or state to represent