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565

I mean, at least it was not because they couldn't figure out how to make change.

Archive: https://archive.today/k2Ofn

From the post:

>Gen Z cashiers are infuriating their bosses when they take cash from customers. According to reports young workers are deeming some bills counterfeit when they are in fact legitimate. According to one boss of a frozen yogurt shop in Florida, teenage employees had to be told that the bills they had refused to accept because they were fake, were actually 'just old.' Sam, 22, told Newsweek that the £10 and £5 notes that were confiscated at the store were 'pre-1999 as far as dating goes, so at least 25-30 years old.

I mean, at least it was not because they couldn't figure out how to make change. Archive: https://archive.today/k2Ofn From the post: >>Gen Z cashiers are infuriating their bosses when they take cash from customers. According to reports young workers are deeming some bills counterfeit when they are in fact legitimate. According to one boss of a frozen yogurt shop in Florida, teenage employees had to be told that the bills they had refused to accept because they were fake, were actually 'just old.' Sam, 22, told Newsweek that the £10 and £5 notes that were confiscated at the store were 'pre-1999 as far as dating goes, so at least 25-30 years old.
[–] 8 pts

A few years ago, maybe 2016, when I was working as a cash-handling bartender at a beer-garden, I refused to take an old $100.00 bill from a nigger trying to buy a miller lite and chicken-wrap to go.

The bill looked fake, and the negro looked shady.

Manager came out, didn't want to look racist, bill passed the marker test, and ok'd the transaction.

Bill was fake. Most fake bills are larger denominations from older generations.

This isn't a gen Z problem, it is a nigger problem.

[–] 0 pt

Sounds like you encountered the young george floyd.

Interesting that it passed the marker test though, must have been a "washed" bill. I think they work on the paper mostly. You need the light too and maybe even the scanner for the metal strip to be sure.

[–] 1 pt

The most important thing to check for is a large, uncommon bill ($50 or $100) with someone trying to buy something small, that they can walk away with. Older bills are more suspect than newer bills.

But I have made similar comments about this in the past.

https://poal.co/s/AskPoal/667355/1afbff8e-a8c4-4a31-a7b2-be5cad0e9e06#cmnts

[–] 2 pts

Small…..like a banana?

[–] 1 pt

Yeah, When you are trying to buy $5-12 with a hundred that is usually a red flag.

I do always ask if they can break a $50/100 so maybe I seem sus sometimes but I don't exactly look like the type that is going to lie/rip you off if you get what I mean.