What was once a gesture of appreciation has morphed into a battleground over dignity, wages, and responsibility. For people like Dustin Anderson, the constant prompts and social pressure feel less like kindness and more like quiet extortion. He isn’t arguing against workers; he’s arguing against a system that offloads payroll onto guilt-ridden customers, while prices and “suggested tips” keep climbing.
On the other side are workers who know the brutal math behind the smile. Former servers describe paying out of their own pockets to the house if tips fall short, or surviving on a sub-minimum wage that only makes sense if customers play along. Caught between them is a culture forced to confront an uncomfortable truth: a fair society cannot be built on optional generosity. Whether tipping survives or not, the demand underneath it—livable, predictable pay—will not quietly disappear.