I said I use coin op shit. It takes way too many quarters to use that shit.
Sorry, I thought it was obvious that making people carry around large quantities of metal dollar coins is a bad idea for anyone wanting to spend any reasonable amount of money, and that you were implying using cards to replace the paper dollar and quarters, rather than simply replacing it with dollar coins.
Easily stackable, foldable, lightweight paper money is much more practical for most people than un-foldable, harder to carry in wallets, heavier, louder coins. Nothing stops anybody from easily getting dollar coins right now, but there’s a reason most people didn’t want to spend them when they were first introduced, or even after the government sold them for exactly $1 online (shipping was free), and I don’t think
But if you really prefer dollar coins, you can get them from your bank today, or order them from the mint online. Many coin operated machines actually take them.
denominations below quarters AREN’T useful
They are for people spending smaller amounts of money, like children who very often buy candy worth anywhere from $0.10 to $0.25 (not including tax, which requires them to have more smaller coins)
and paying 3 dollars in quarters is insane.
Three single dollar bills will get you there much faster.
Cash machines jam all the time.
Whatever cash machines you’re using must be very badly maintained. I haven’t had a single cash machine jam on me in my entire life.
This is why most pay machines now are credit card
Most machines are now credit card based because nobody has to then physically go to the machines to actually empty the money out of them.
The half penny was eliminated when it was worth more than a dime in todays money.
Cool, I still think the dime right now has enough value to justify being kept around for a bit, especially if we’re getting rid of other smaller denominations, as it provides more of a transitionary period for people to adjust to spending and receiving larger denominations, especially when rounding of purchase prices made with physical money is still being normalized.
Sorry, I thought it was obvious that making people carry around large quantities of metal dollar coins is a bad idea for anyone wanting to spend any reasonable amount of money, and that you were implying using cards to replace the paper dollar and quarters, rather than simply replacing it with dollar coins.
Easily stackable, foldable, lightweight paper money is much more practical for most people than un-foldable, harder to carry in wallets, heavier, louder coins. Nothing stops anybody from easily getting dollar coins right now, but there’s a reason most people didn’t want to spend them when they were first introduced, or even after the government sold them for exactly $1 online (shipping was free), and I don’t think
But if you really prefer dollar coins, you can get them from your bank today, or order them from the mint online. Many coin operated machines actually take them.
They are for people spending smaller amounts of money, like children who very often buy candy worth anywhere from $0.10 to $0.25 (not including tax, which requires them to have more smaller coins)
Three single dollar bills will get you there much faster.
Whatever cash machines you’re using must be very badly maintained. I haven’t had a single cash machine jam on me in my entire life.
Most machines are now credit card based because nobody has to then physically go to the machines to actually empty the money out of them.
Cool, I still think the dime right now has enough value to justify being kept around for a bit, especially if we’re getting rid of other smaller denominations, as it provides more of a transitionary period for people to adjust to spending and receiving larger denominations, especially when rounding of purchase prices made with physical money is still being normalized.