Despite years of angry think pieces and Reddit threads decrying Christians who leave fake money emblazoned with Bible verses, some still have yet to get the memo that offering religious pamphlets instead of actual cash tips is a certified asshole move.
“Customer just handed me a folded up ‘fifty’ as a tip,” @BisqueBoi wrote on Twitter alongside a snap of the offending bill, snarkily questioning if the recipient, often an underpaid worker, is “disappointed” in receiving religious propaganda rather than actual cash. “I hate this place and I hate everyone and I hate myself.”
customer just handed me a folded up “fifty” as a tip
— Rhine Stoned Cowboy (@BisqueBoi) June 5, 2023
I hate this place and I hate everyone and I hate myself pic.twitter.com/yjOp8Z6jKA
Amassing more than 4.7 million views in its first day on the site, thousands of commenters begged to differ with @BisqueBoi, taking aim not at them or their restaurant, but at the absolute douchebags who pulled such a self-righteous stunt.
“It should be legal to assault people who do this,” joked @twilitdreaming.
“This may strike people as harsh but I feel like people who hand these out should have to endure a punch from the wait staff,” quipped @Actually_Tina, while @joblessthursday argued that “service and retail workers should be allowed to hunt annoying customers for sport.
if you would give this trash to someone you are no friend of jesus just fyi https://t.co/pPgFj196S2
— dramaturgically ali (@probablyalissa) June 5, 2023
Find their church and put this in their donation thing and see what happens. :)
— Hunny Bird (@hunnybirdVT) June 6, 2023
Meanwhile, others began questioning whether being this much of a douchebag could be classified as a sin itself.
“This is what taking God's name in vain actually looks like,” wrote @JoashPThomas.
Petition to add an 11th and 12th Commandments to Christianity: Tip your goddamn servers and don’t be an asshole.
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