• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Damn it people are frustrating

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Dan, while I think you are right that the world isnt getting any better (I rant and rave like a lunatic many days when I get home from work), I don't think it has gotten any WORSE either... over all. At least there is that.
 
Dan, while I think you are right that the world isnt getting any better (I rant and rave like a lunatic many days when I get home from work), I don't think it has gotten any WORSE either... over all. At least there is that.

You wait until you get home from work to rant and rave?? Why not do it AT work? :D

fenderbass said:
I sure that son of a &#)$*@#!!&#@ is in prison by now and I hope he gets cornholed every day.
IF there's justice, he's getting his due every day/night. Unfortunately, unless you know he was caught, chances are it's not happening. :mad:
 
There's what?

We choose the life we live, maybe not always. Sometimes it is taken from us. Sometimes we dominate our little world. We live life but the end is not our choice.
 
We go to Asheville frequently and I keep some dollar bills in my front pocket for folks playing music on the street. Plain ol' beggars who just ask for dough get a friendly "peace be with you" but no money. Giving to charities for homelessness is so much more effective for the community. But I don't demean them or ignore them.

I was mugged in Memphis once, when I was 20. Single girl against two street punks? I was lucky they didn't take more than about $6 and a cheap necklace. Scared the hell outta me.
 
There's what?
Didn't say that it was delivered via the criminal justice system. :eek:
We choose the life we live, maybe not always. Sometimes it is taken from us. Sometimes we dominate our little world. We live life but the end is not our choice.

Not always true... :eek: :D

Which makes you wonder... Is the "criminal justice system" really an oxymoron these days? I mean, don't enough guilty people get 'off' and too many innocent people get put away to make you really wonder?
 
Unfortunately, the store that allowed the man to use her card could be sued, or at the very least in hot water. Failing to ask for ID, when the card has a woman's name on it, and it's a man standing there using it, should (at least) get the person who processed the transaction reprimanded.

Unfortunately, and weirdly, untrue.
There is no law requiring anyone to check id or even look at the name, nor a law protecting the establishment if they decide to go that extra step to protect the cardholder.

VISA and MasterCard do however have their own policy regarding ID-checks: You cannot require a cardholder to provide identification of any kind. If the cardholder refuses to show id, no matter what the store policy, or what the card itself* says, the merchant agreement with Visa and MC requires them to process the card in good faith, or risk losing their account entirely.

Several large companies of course routinely ignore this (and aren't corrected because it's big money they're processing) but a small convenience store can lose their account for a variety of reasons, which means a lot of hassle.

The only thing that would protect the store in that case is if the clerk KNEW for a fact that the person presenting a card wasn't the cardholder listed, without asking for that ID. As in, willing to swear in court that it's not, not "No way his name is Shirley" sure.

Of course, he bought cigarettes too, so they could have checked the ID for that, and then they would have been sure, and THAT is protected by law on any transactions including tobacco in most states (and almost as many states on alcohol sales)


* Know all those people that sign their card as "Check ID"? The card isn't valid unless it's ACTUALLY signed. You can put extra instructions on there, but it doesn't matter either way, and the merchant IS allowed (in fact, required in their contract with Visa/MC) to deny the card without the signature appearing, as the card isn't considered valid unless you agree to all terms of using it, which is done by signing ;)
 
Raenon, You seem to be pretty aware of the facts. Why? Work for a CC place, lawyer or something. Not bashing or criticizing just curious.
 
I advise people not to give anything, although I have heard the advice to keep a little cash in an easily accessible place to give up if someone attempts to rob you. Personally, I tell people to immediately run while screaming anything you want to say very loudly, unless of course there's a weapon displayed.

Robbery was a very common crime where I used to work, so I have a ton to experience with them. The vast majority of the time, when the victim fights back or flees, the perp gives up.

By the way, no robbery tonight. We're arguing over what we got right now but it's definitely not a robbery. ;)

Does the anatomy match the attire?

You wait until you get home from work to rant and rave?? Why not do it AT work? :D

That's a damn job requirement for us.

Unfortunately, and weirdly, untrue.
There is no law requiring anyone to check id or even look at the name, nor a law protecting the establishment if they decide to go that extra step to protect the cardholder.

VISA and MasterCard do however have their own policy regarding ID-checks: You cannot require a cardholder to provide identification of any kind. If the cardholder refuses to show id, no matter what the store policy, or what the card itself* says, the merchant agreement with Visa and MC requires them to process the card in good faith, or risk losing their account entirely.

Several large companies of course routinely ignore this (and aren't corrected because it's big money they're processing) but a small convenience store can lose their account for a variety of reasons, which means a lot of hassle.

The only thing that would protect the store in that case is if the clerk KNEW for a fact that the person presenting a card wasn't the cardholder listed, without asking for that ID. As in, willing to swear in court that it's not, not "No way his name is Shirley" sure.

Of course, he bought cigarettes too, so they could have checked the ID for that, and then they would have been sure, and THAT is protected by law on any transactions including tobacco in most states (and almost as many states on alcohol sales)


* Know all those people that sign their card as "Check ID"? The card isn't valid unless it's ACTUALLY signed. You can put extra instructions on there, but it doesn't matter either way, and the merchant IS allowed (in fact, required in their contract with Visa/MC) to deny the card without the signature appearing, as the card isn't considered valid unless you agree to all terms of using it, which is done by signing ;)

None of my cards are signed. No one checks and with all the swipe it yourself machines, I hardly ever hand the card over anyway.

Awareness and avoidance is a good defense. It's not a guarantee. People aint no good. But being aware of who's around and what they are doing can go a long way. Know where you are too. It can happen anywhere. Some places are more likely though.

Walking around half crazy helps too. And it's fun. :tank:
 
Does the anatomy match the attire?



That's a damn job requirement for us.



None of my cards are signed. No one checks and with all the swipe it yourself machines, I hardly ever hand the card over anyway.

Awareness and avoidance is a good defense. It's not a guarantee. People aint no good. But being aware of who's around and what they are doing can go a long way. Know where you are too. It can happen anywhere. Some places are more likely though.

Walking around half crazy helps too. And it's fun. :tank:
Around here, for anything under $25, even if they swipe the card, they don't ask for a signature. Haven't for a couple years now. Even the electronic, swipe-it-yourself ones won't prompt for a signature under $25
 
Raenon, You seem to be pretty aware of the facts. Why? Work for a CC place, lawyer or something. Not bashing or criticizing just curious.

Several years working in branch banking taught me some (and I've always enjoyed knowing the full facts, not just the bare essentials to get by...), and really taught the appreciation for contracts.
Now I run my own business in an industry that's been termed "high risk" by most CC processors... so I have to be very careful what's in my contracts, so I don't violate some provision I didn't know about and either lose the account (which as I said, is a massive hassle for a merchant) or get myself in hot water otherwise.
So, everything I mentioned is available publicly, and I just happen to care enough about the details to read it :)
 
Back
Top