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10-08-2015, 12:03 PM | #46 | |
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I once had charge card info stolen as well. Never figured out how it happened. Just noticed charges for classified ads in a Chicago suburb's newspaper. I travel non-stop almost, however, so there's no telling when (beyond the month in which it happened, and even that's just a guess) or where the info was stolen. The card issuer took care of it, sent me a new card and that was the last I heard a thing about it. All the best.
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Tony ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ '07, e92 335i, Sparkling Graphite, Coral Leather, Aluminum, 6-speed |
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10-09-2015, 11:54 AM | #49 |
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10-09-2015, 12:09 PM | #50 | |
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Is there no tipping in Canada? What about restaurants?
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10-09-2015, 01:24 PM | #51 |
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10-09-2015, 01:26 PM | #52 | |
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I am Australian too, and our (correct) opinion on tipping is that it is ridiculous and we loathe it with a passion. Just pay the man ffs, why am I supposed to an instant performance review of your staff? |
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10-09-2015, 01:26 PM | #53 |
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there was terrible information if you paid $700 a night at SLS, that is insane, you could have rented a house for the weekend for that much
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10-09-2015, 01:30 PM | #54 | ||
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10-09-2015, 02:12 PM | #55 |
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i didn't stay there and that's in CDN dollars with ocean facing balcony. I also do all-in, not north American speak where people quote prices excluding taxes, fees and other BS.
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10-09-2015, 02:19 PM | #56 |
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Guy that repaired the door in our room, guy that sets up the umbrellas (why can't i do this myself??), towel guy, bus tour guy, bags guy ..... IT NEVER ENDS. Plus the 18% forced tip and guilting on further tipping at restaurants.
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10-09-2015, 02:32 PM | #57 | |
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10-09-2015, 02:53 PM | #58 |
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But that's my point, why am i guessing, why do i have to go through this?? Just charge me what it costs and be done with it. It's utterly pointless.
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10-09-2015, 04:23 PM | #59 |
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That 18% shit is a miami beach thing. You don't get that at 99% of places in south florida outside of miami beach. Maybe it's because of all the tourist not tipping I dunno.
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10-09-2015, 04:40 PM | #60 | |
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10-09-2015, 05:11 PM | #61 |
I can haz cheezburger?
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When I first moved here back in summer 2013 we went to all the tourist area's. Then after getting to know our area (Kendall near Dadeland Mall), meeting new friends, etc... we began to go out to local bars, restaurants and things of the like. We only go to South Beach area to go biking around South Point Park which has great scenic views, however, other than that we stay away from all tourist areas. For the beach we'll hit up Las Olas in Ft Lauderdale as its more family friendly IMHO and less crowded than South Beach.
As for the hotels, yeah on South Beach they can be pricey as I pay lots of them for our clients to stay and my eye pops out when I see breakfast rates at $55/per person. |
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10-09-2015, 05:20 PM | #62 |
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I've been in South Florida since 1986 and go to Miami Beach once / year (maybe) - for the Miami International Auto Show (which is coming up). I don't recall the last time I was there for anything else. South Beach was nice to be around in my early 20's but not so much in my late 40s. I get why people visit and that's exactly why it's so expensive. People line up to pay it. Personally, as a local, there are plenty of other places I'd rather be but what was OP going to do? His wife wanted to go to South Beach. So he did what he had to do.
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10-09-2015, 08:19 PM | #63 |
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But it ain't $55. In typical north american style, and i have no fucking idea why, you piece out the cost of things and only list a portion of it. I know you're used to it but it's fucking asinine. That $55 is really $55 plus tax and tip, so closer to what, $70 at least.
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10-11-2015, 12:45 AM | #64 | |
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In U.S. there are two types of tax that can apply to goods: sales taxes and excise taxes. The former are, in many states, legally required not to be included in the price tags in order to make it obvious to consumers that they are paying a sales tax. The remainder of states, the businesses in them have no vested interest in including sales tax (assuming it's levied) because doing so would only make the goods appear to be priced higher when what affects the total price being higher is the sales tax. The latter are almost always included in the price of the item. Many people don't realize they are even paying the excise tax. Excise taxes are a meaningful share of the price of items such as gasoline, alcohol and tobacco products. One type of excise tax that isn't included in the price of an item is the titling tax on vehicle purchases. To consumers the two types of tax may seem like the they are the same things, particularly if they (1) are rate-based, (2) share a rate and (3) the rate is publicized; however, they are not. Excise taxes don't have to be rate based at all; they can be a fixed (for a given time period) sum (a fee, if you will) levied against every good of a given class. Also, they are levied against owners, producers and sellers whereas sales taxes are levied against consumers. Take the excise tax on cars bought/sold in Maryland, for example. The burden of paying it falls on the title owner, who, in most cases, is also the buyer, but it doesn't have to be. (I bought my kids' cars, but they are the title holders. It would technically be their burden to pay the titling tax; however, I would also pay it on their behalf if I lived in MD.) It looks like a sales tax because it's set at 6% of the "book value" (which, for used cars, isn't what accountants define as "book value") or 6% of the "purchase price," and 6% is also MD's sales tax rate, but the reality is that there is no sales tax on cars in MD. In D.C., however, the excise tax on cars is based on vehicle weight rather than selling price. Even for D.C., however, if one reads the tax code, one sees that the tax is levied against the issuance of the title, not the sale or gifting of the vehicle, thus making the tax an excise, not sales, tax. When does the difference matter? It matters when individuals and businesses calculate their income taxes and the related deductions. Some jurisdictions may allow income deductions for excise taxes paid (rarely -- sometimes property (excise) taxes can be deducted), others for sales taxes paid, others for neither, and others for both. So, while understanding the differences is generally in the purview of accountants and legislators, the differences are important. Governments generally like excise taxes because they aren't as apparent to consumers and because they are generally less avoidable. Consumers generally don't like any form of tax, but if they are going to have to pay them, they generally prefer to be aware of them and their extent. Of course, some consumers would prefer that the tax be shown in the "sticker price" of an item, often just to avoid having to "do the math." Doing that, while nice in theory, would present something of a problem for sellers who are willing to negotiate on the prices of the goods they sell and given the way point of sale systems and accounting systems work in U.S. may for some businesses require reconfiguring/reprogramming their software routines. The fact is that folks will find something to gripe about no matter which way the "system" works re: showing or not showing the taxes being paid as part of any given transaction. All the best.
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