• @[email protected]
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    026 days ago

    Like I said to the other commenter, I am very sympathetic to what sounds like an awful childhood, I just don’t think it’s much of an argument in support of cash.

    What about kids that don’t have a grandma like that? Or who’s parents discover the Toiletries their kid bought?

    Much better to focus on supporting kids being neglected in a general sense rather than relying on the existence of cash.

    • @[email protected]
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      226 days ago

      So since some kids don’t have a nice grandma, the ones that do should suffer while we “fix” it? No. Tell you what, you fix it, then we can talk about going cashless. Why should those kids suffer while we work towards a fix, you think we just flip a switch and all of a sudden every parent is a good parent? I hate to be the one to show you what it’s like down here outside of your ivory tower but there is no such instant solution, unfortunately we do not have an all powerful benevolent dictator (I guess, /s) who can change things at will, our system is slow.

      • @[email protected]
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        126 days ago

        That’s the thing though. No one is talking about going cashless - there’s just a general anxiety that because no one uses cash governments will discontinue it.

        I’m not arguing that cash should be discontinued, merely that this odd grandma argument isn’t really an argument in favour of the use of cash generally.

        • @[email protected]
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          226 days ago

          Well, people are, you maybe not, me definitely not, “important people” maybe not, but people indeed are. Just scroll back through this thread, you’ll see em. Maybe they added their comments after you or something.

          And imo this odd grandma argument is a good example, because I lived it I guess.