Coming Soon 👀 At the beginning of April, you’ll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
My retirement income gets deposited to my checking account. I seldom carry cash anymore because when I do have it, I always find a reason to spend it. Unless I go to the bank or get ‘cash back’ when using my debit card, I just don’t have cash on me.
Consider this: it has gotten difficult in recent years for the Salvation Army’s Christmas Kettle campaign- so few people carry cash that they have now had to resort to providing terminals for debit transactions at locations.
Also, consider the plight of the homeless: there is a push around here to get the public to register at the bottle depots, drop off their bags of bottles tagged with their ID number without sorting them, then the staff tally it up and make a direct deposit to the client’s bank account. The homeless, with no access to banking, are going to be frozen out.
Templo S.U.D. about 4 years ago
very amusing, Carl
blunebottle about 4 years ago
I’m not laughing.
Doug K about 4 years ago
We take cash. But we don’t give change.
Egrayjames about 4 years ago
My retirement income gets deposited to my checking account. I seldom carry cash anymore because when I do have it, I always find a reason to spend it. Unless I go to the bank or get ‘cash back’ when using my debit card, I just don’t have cash on me.
Jeffin Premium Member about 4 years ago
Well, we sure aren’t gonna take your cardigan.
wrytercat about 4 years ago
It’s amusing when someone has only one card with them and it doesn’t work, but they also don’t have any cash.
rickmac1937 Premium Member about 4 years ago
We’re already there
blunebottle about 4 years ago
Consider this: it has gotten difficult in recent years for the Salvation Army’s Christmas Kettle campaign- so few people carry cash that they have now had to resort to providing terminals for debit transactions at locations.
Also, consider the plight of the homeless: there is a push around here to get the public to register at the bottle depots, drop off their bags of bottles tagged with their ID number without sorting them, then the staff tally it up and make a direct deposit to the client’s bank account. The homeless, with no access to banking, are going to be frozen out.