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I also don't like the word process. That's offensicve and dehumanizing. Process is what you do in the Chicago stockyards. Boarding Procedure would work but being insulted .....by advocates of the PC crowd is a bit too much when you fly tell them so. Attack back! Also one stands on a podium and behind a lectern. Not only PC but illteratti speak.
Do the Reacher! As in Jack. And while I'm at it boycott the movies. Stick to the books.
It's a security mechanism- nothing more, I have an open account at Avis, have a card on file and rent about 15 to 20 a year for business travel. I never stand in line, I never pay a deposit, and I just do a quick reservation on my phone and pick it up in the airport parking lot. It's about getting their property back, and they absolutely have a right to ensure they do. If someone has terrible credit and doesn't have a bank card, it's probably not profitable to bother with that customer segment anyway. If it was, they wouldn't bend over backwards to please frequent business travelers.
This is an essential philosophical underpinning for the use of credit cards. Too many people use them for electively purchasing things they do not need; on the other side of the spectrum are people who are so afraid to use them that they won't use a credit card to buy necessary food when they run out of money. Neither of these operational policies is functional: use credit cards for essentials to allow you to process debt as part of an ongoing cash flow.
Jan
Jan
A credit card is legal tender, it is denominated in U.S. Dollars, it's just a mode of conferring the dollar, as a check blank does.
Meaning he would accept a silver quarter for a gallon of gas. I remember 22 cent gallon gas when we had real money. When you do the math using current silver prices on the melt value of a Washington silver quarter (about .1808 oz Ag) that is about $2.82 cents. Roughly a gallon of gas just a short while ago.
Right from the horse's mouth so to speak.
case it was one particular airline). In 2005 I went
from Va. to Minnesota to visit my (now) late father,
and got a supposedly discount ticket--I went to the
airport a few days ahead of time (in a cab) and those b--t--ds charged me extra for paying cash!
I suppose, under free enterprise principles, they
are entitled to refuse cash, but not to commit
criminal fraud, and I think they should have
warned me ahead of time.
I asked a self-service gas station owner one time just to see. He had posted a sign saying no $50 or $100 bills. I asked “if I have already filled my tank and offer to pay with a $50, what would you do?” He knew the law and said he posted the sign for security reasons (i.e. so as not to have to keep a lot of cash in his register to make change) but that he would have to accept the offer of payment or I would get a tank of gas at no charge. What has happened since then is that stations post a sign that you either pay with a credit/debit card or PREPAY with cash. This way they can lawfully refuse your $50 without giving you a tank of gas.
The essence of the legal tender law is that YOU MUST accept government paper for a debt and to refuse the government's paper in payment of a debt means the debt is forgiven. This is especially critical to the Fed's ability to inflate the currency.
Once upon a time (and I have examples of this) the phrase in the upper left of a Federal Reserve Note said “THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER FOR ALL DEBTS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE, AND IS REDEEMABLE IN LAWFUL MONEY AT THE UNITED STATES TREASURY, OR AT ANY FEDERAL RESERVE BANK”. Check your FRNs. Today they only include the first 11 words. Your FRN's are redeemed by your local grocery store or gas station. They give you something of value for your paper. The Fed or the Treasury will only give you more paper (or junk coins) – ask to redeem a $20 to day at a bank and your choices are on the order of “do you want two 10's, four 5's, or 20 1's?”
So, any business can refuse to accept your paper for any reason as long as you do not owe them a debt. If a business wants to do business with credit cards only that is there choice. If they want to do business in bushel's of corn that is also their choice. You of course are free to do business elsewhere.
And if you think about it, not having a cash drawer at an airline ticket counter makes life so much easier for the airline employees.
Of course I have no proof of that . They don't sign for anything anymore nor did they send a bill by letter. I found out by check for an overdue refund..I'm sure they are finding which one of their employees can make the bill go up not down. or even mark it as paid.Go figure.
"Q: Is it legal for a business in the United States to refuse cash as a form of payment?
A: Section 31 U.S.C. 5103, entitled "Legal tender," states: "United States coins and currency [including Federal Reserve notes and circulating notes of Federal Reserve banks and national banks] are legal tender for all debts, public charges, taxes, and dues."
This statute means that all United States money as identified above is a valid and legal offer of payment for debts when tendered to a creditor. There is, however, no Federal statute mandating that a private business, a person, or an organization must accept currency or coins as payment for goods or services. Private businesses are free to develop their own policies on whether to accept cash unless there is a state law which says otherwise.
SOURCE: Board of Governors, FAQs (http://www.federalreserve.gov/faqs/cu...)
Notice the line that says State Law, We've run into that before on other issues.So check your own state because with airlines it's 50 for 50.
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