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371 points greggyb | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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not_a_bot_4sho ◴[] No.41978402[source]
Funny story. I used to see Steve almost every weekday for a couple of years.

I can't speak to his business skills, but I can attest that he never once offered a tip for his daily black iced tea. We'd even have it ready for him before he showed up so he never had to wait! He would pay with cash, and I'd hand him his change and drink, and that was that.

It's funny to me now: one of the richest men in the world and he never once offered a tip.

Frugality aside, he was always very polite and warm so I can't be mad. Makes for a good ice breaker story.

Edit: holy moly, this is a sensitive subject. Please remember this was from a time before tipflation. Tipping meant you left your change behind once in a while only if you felt the desire to show appreciation. It wasn't an obligation. Yes, I still do think it's a funny story. Roast me for being entitled lol

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switch007 ◴[] No.41979977[source]
Rich people are the most oddly tight people I've ever met. They'll buy a £5m house one day then the next spend 30 minutes arguing with the gardener that the broken 10 year old mower should just work and most definitely doesn't need replacing
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1. throw4950sh06 ◴[] No.41980340[source]
They probably bought an expensive one that should be working longer than that. You don't get rich by buying cheap shit that breaks often.
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2. switch007 ◴[] No.41980503[source]
You don't get poor from that level of rich replacing a lawnmower

The mower was £500 (my Dad was the gardener)

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3. throw4950sh06 ◴[] No.41982914[source]
It's the mindset, not the specific action.