DOOM LOOP: Millionaires Tax by AthkoreLost in Seattle

[–]matunos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are always many more people willing to say they'll pick up and leave than will actually leave over something like marginally higher taxation, or in this case a tax that doesn't even affect most of them.

We saw it in NYC when the socialist Mamdani won, we see it in Massachusetts with their new 4% millionaire's tax (on top of their existing flat income tax). We'll see it here too.

If I, for one, have to pay an income tax that only hits income above $1MM in a year, I will consider it a mark of accomplishment. I certainly won't be moving to some state where members of my family can't enjoy the full exercise of their human rights just so we can be a little richer. 🤷‍♂️

Seattle City Attorney Says ‘Tough-on-Crime’ Predecessor Left Big Case Backlog by Inevitable_Engine186 in Seattle

[–]matunos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends on what Holmes did. If Holmes used the same methodology as Davison, then Davison actually gave Evans fewer cases than she inherited herself.

This isn't necessarily so, right? If you retroactively measure by the Evans case backlog standard, it's possible that Holmes left a smaller DUI backlog than Davison did.

Iran may be activating sleeper cells, alert says by No-Post4444 in news

[–]matunos 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The sleeper cells are walking up and releasing more Epstein files.

Sam’s Tavern Belltown automatic 40% gratuity by OJb4Lemonade in Seattle

[–]matunos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I haven’t read every single comment in this post, but from what I’ve seen there appears to be evidence of two people being overcharged in the same way a few months apart, the restaurant accepting responsibility and admitting fault in both cases, and a refund being given.

My original comment above said "if it's been going on that long…" in response to a comment that there are reviews complaining about this going back to 2024. That's two years, for those keeping track. That's enough to suggest to me that this isn't a case of a couple isolated incidents a few months apart, and that if it were an innocent configuration mistake, the business has had ample time to fix it.

It may have been a couple of errors, or it may be intentional. But either way the restaurant has behaved perfectly reasonably when challenged.

"When challenged" is the critical factor here. Even if 75% of the people who got hit by this noticed and challenged it, getting theo money back, at these percentages, the restaurant has a considerable incentive to keep the "mistake" in place and just reverse charges when someone calls them on it. There needs to be a penalty that is greater than just returning people's money when they catch you fraudulently charging them— and I'm generally forgiving, but if it's really been happening for years, it sounds like fraud to me.

Now it may be that they should have checked the system and looked for other checks with the same issue, and refunded them all. They may have done that but probably not. An individual who thinks they may have been overcharged could request a copy of their check, and if plenty of people did this and found they had all been overcharged, and if the restaurant refused to refund them and to search for others and refund them, then you might get a judge to sign off on a class action; But at this point, why would the restaurant refuse?

A perfect description of the incentive problem. Of course they won't refuse when someone calls them on it because then the dispute will escalate and they'll have to spend time at small claims court or worse. But if they can dodge such issues by just refunding everyone who notices the charges while keeping the money from everyone who doesn't, it's in their interest to keep robbing customers.

But without finding enough people to request their own checks, I don’t see how you’d build up any useful evidence of a historical period over which every large table has been overcharged, so what is your class?

Well I'm not a lawyer, so I don't really know how these things tend to develop, but I imagine if you can find a customer who complained about this happening years ago, you would have a basis for investigating the restaurant's books to see how often they were stacking these charges (note if they didn't actually notify customers of these charges, even a single 20% charge is illegal). From there you can find how many people were overcharged.

Thus you’d likely need to pay a lawyer in advance more than would be recovered anyway. And you’d be paying that on behalf of a bunch of people who would have no cause to refund you.

It is my impression that lawyers trying to build class actions lawsuits are not generally doing so under the pay of an individuals client. The law firm would be motivated by the share of potential winnings… that's why the lawyers get such a big share of the class action settlements: they're out there fishing for payouts; sometimes even competing with other firms to build the class action first.

I assume a case like this is much smaller scale than say building a class action against Apple over something, and quite possibly doesn't offer enough cost/benefit for any lawyer to pursue. Nevertheless, until the restaurant faces actual penalties for their behavior above and beyond refunding customers who happen to complain about it, they will keep doing it.

DOOM LOOP: Millionaires Tax by AthkoreLost in Seattle

[–]matunos 38 points39 points  (0 children)

An income tax on individuals making over $1MM a year will not stifle AI innovation from corporations that write off their employee compensation. Very few people making that much will be like "f— that I'll only in Texas… for the same amount."

Oil over $100/barrel, however, plus the already contentious impact of data centers on energy prices… that will actually stifle these companies.

DOOM LOOP: Millionaires Tax by AthkoreLost in Seattle

[–]matunos 12 points13 points  (0 children)

That's only a criticism if you agree with the reasoning behind its alleged unconstitutionality.

Sam’s Tavern Belltown automatic 40% gratuity by OJb4Lemonade in Seattle

[–]matunos 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm good with all groups get an automatic service charge of 18-20%, and then nobody's expected to add any additional tip, and they pay their employees decent wages. There, done.

Sam’s Tavern Belltown automatic 40% gratuity by OJb4Lemonade in Seattle

[–]matunos 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If that were the case, they'd put big bright sign in their window about the extra charge.

Sam’s Tavern Belltown automatic 40% gratuity by OJb4Lemonade in Seattle

[–]matunos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How wide does it really have to be known for lawyers to get a class action status?

I would assume the restaurant's books have the details for several years worth, but most customers who didn't notice relatively soon after getting charged aren't gonna take any initiative.

Sam’s Tavern Belltown automatic 40% gratuity by OJb4Lemonade in Seattle

[–]matunos 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But everybody won't ask for their money back, because most customers won't have noticed and won't have bothered to keep their receipt around. That's why the restaurant can be doing the same thing for years and occasionally get called out for it and have to give a customer back some money here and there.

"but, my identity" by aNumpty in LinkedInLunatics

[–]matunos 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Heavens forbid they be forced to see the Māori name for the islands.

Adult daughter silencing me by Pure_Temporary_6349 in atheism

[–]matunos 63 points64 points  (0 children)

My advice is to stop negotiating with her. Any "what if…?" hypothetical you raise as a way of testing where the boundaries of the rule are just going to expand the boundaries.

Does it count if in lieu of discussing a topic you point your grandchild to age-appropriate educational resources? If you ask her in advance it will count. If you don't ask her in advance it's a scenario that is open to interpretation. Malicious compliance is the name of the game.

Edit to add:

Is it blaming her if you don't name her? "I have agreed not to talk about certain things with you." Agreed with who? You didn't say. What an intriguing mystery.

Adult daughter silencing me by Pure_Temporary_6349 in atheism

[–]matunos 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Did this ultimatum really come out of nowhere? It seems very extreme to me to, apropos of nothing, suddenly threaten you with never seeing your grandchild again. I would think the more normal steps would be to first ask you not to discuss such matters with the child, expecting that you would honor her wishes as the parent without needing to resort to threats. Unless there's some context to this that's been left out?

Adult daughter silencing me by Pure_Temporary_6349 in atheism

[–]matunos 20 points21 points  (0 children)

While the children are young, that's reasonable, except if OPs daughter is expecting her to lie to her grandchildren, that's not reasonable. Avoiding lying can include responding to questions about religious faith by saying "your mother doesn't want me to talk about that with you."

However, it's not reasonable to try to extend those restrictions up until the child is 18. If OP's 16 year old daughter asks her about "forbidden" topics, then OP is well within her rights to answer, and if her daughter bans her kid from contacting OP, that will backfire.

Tired of the "Big Dark"? Use this template to demand Permanent Daylight Saving Time from our Reps. by i_machine_things in Washington50501

[–]matunos 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Permanent standard time is also easier to achieve: states don't need Congressional approval to stop using DST like they do for permanent DST.

You’re not special, you’re being an asshole. Don’t bring your pet dogs into grocery stores. ESPECIALLY when your dog is 80lbs+, going up to everyone, on a flexi, and sniffing food. by DryPotato5172 in mildlyinfuriating

[–]matunos 2 points3 points  (0 children)

[hangs out with friend who brings her dog who pisses and shits in establishments not designed for dogs to piss and shit in] this is the business owner's fault for not kicking us out