- Next story American Sandwich Project – Reubens, Rachels, and Monstrosities
- Previous story The Laundromat: A Study In Human Despair
Search
TEN SECOND BUZZ
- Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024April 15, 2024205 Comments
- OJ Simpson: Football Great, Murder Suspect, and Convicted Felon, Dead at 76April 11, 2024115 Comments
- Open Mic for the week of 4/8/2024April 8, 2024158 Comments
- Open Mic for the week of 4/1/2024April 1, 2024357 Comments
- Sam Bankman-Fried Gets 25 Year Prison SentenceMarch 28, 202434 Comments
Features
Hot Posts
A Message From Devcat
We have been experiencing some system resource issues. We believe the problem may be resolved, but if it is not please bear with us.
Recent Comments
- Brandon Berg in reply to Chip Daniels on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024Most of the crackdowns are against things that aren't speech. As they should be. We need to get away…
- Dark Matter in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024That is not the dictionary definition of tantrum. A tantrum is "an uncontrolled outburst of anger an…
- Dark Matter in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024Definition of "Tantrum" : an uncontrolled outburst of anger and frustration His prescribed solution…
- Jaybird on Planning The Annual Trip Around The WorldHaving been to Iceland in the current year, I can't imagine what it might have looked like back then…
- North on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024Holy buckets! A successful union drive in the south?
- Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching UpHeh, I don't really keep track of directors... but looking at IMDB I liked Sherlock and Man from UNC…
- Jaybird in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024Update about yesterday's missile attack on Iran: There have been no missile attack on Iran tonight,…
- Jaybird in reply to Michael Cain on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching UpWe always keep out two hoodies and two sets of fuzzy pajamas per person. We have a throw blanket for…
- Michael Cain in reply to Fish on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching UpI find that I’m much less extroverted now than I used to be... Kept granddaughter #3 on Wednesday wh…
- InMD in reply to Marchmaine on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching UpI'm skeptical of the reviews. It's solidly fresh on RT but even the good ones from the top critics s…
Comics
-
On the Way To The Dressing Room After The Game
April 20, 2024
-
Planning The Annual Trip Around The World
April 19, 2024
-
April 18, 2024
-
April 17, 2024
More Comments
- Michael Cain on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching Up
- Jaybird on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching Up
- Jaybird in reply to Marchmaine on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching Up
- Jaybird in reply to fillyjonk on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching Up
- Jaybird in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Jaybird in reply to Chip Daniels on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Philip H in reply to Pinky on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Fish in reply to fillyjonk on Weekend Plans Post: The Aftermath of Catching Up
- Pinky in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Pinky in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Philip H in reply to Pinky on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Pinky in reply to Philip H on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Philip H in reply to Pinky on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Philip H in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
- Chip Daniels on Open Mic for the week of 4/15/2024
While I recognize the humor from this cartoon and while I recognize that the humor comes partially from a different time, as a former bank teller I suggest there’s another side to the “argument” that comic is making.
The teller’s job is on the line. Now (or at least “now-ish”…I was a teller about 20 years ago so some things may have changed), there is a set procedure for what’s acceptable i.d. and as long as the customer follows that procedure and the teller follows that procedure, the teller is (mostly) protected from getting fired if things go wrong. There was probably less procedural protection at the time that Clare Briggs created this comic. At the same time, the teller was probably better compensated for their labors and risks of liability.* Still and even so, it’s usually not the case that the teller is sadistically making the customer jump through hoops. The comic isn’t necessarily painting the teller as a sadist, but it is portraying the hoop jumping as something that’s perhaps intentionally humiliating.
I’ll confess that at least when I was a teller, we/I often stretched or disregarded the rules in certain cases. So the question of “why in that case and not in this case” is legitimate, even though there usually was a good or at least serviceable reason for making exceptions.
*That better compensation may actually be coming back. When I was a teller, we were basically just customer service cash handlers at my bank. Now, at the same bank, tellers have been so downsized that they have to assume greater responsibilities for “cross-selling” or for opening accounts and maybe even taking loan applications. While they’re probably not paid enough, they’re probably paid more than I was and probably have something like full-time benefits, which I did not have until I was “promoted” to “permanent part-time” status after working there for about a years.Report
Long ago, when I was a college freshman, I didn’t even get as far as this guy. There was another “Michael Cain” in town who passed bad checks. Even though he had a different middle initial, that wasn’t enough. Tellers (at banks other than my own) and clerks at stores checked the big book of bad-check writers that the Chamber of Commerce distributed, found his name in there, and refused my check.
I was bailed out when my local bank, as an experiment, offered Visa cards with a $300 credit limit to freshmen who were enrolled in one of the university’s honors courses. (This was long enough ago that $300 comfortably covered the cost of a semester’s worth of textbooks.)
I am astounded at the ease with which college freshmen today get credit cards with higher limits than I have on my card.Report
I went to college in the mid 1990s, and I (probably wisely) resisted all the numerous credit card offers I got. After I graduated, though, I tried to get a credit card and was repeatedly* denied because I lacked credit history. After a couple years, I went to grad school to get my MA and got credit card offers again. That’s how I built up my credit history.
*That’s overstating it. I think I tried only two or three times.Report
The problem with asking for papers, please, when there aren’t really papers yet.Report