Main, home of the dope ass bear.
THE MAIN RULE: ALL TEXT POSTS MUST CONTAIN "MAIN" OR BE ENTIRELY IMAGES (INLINE OR EMOJI)
(Temporary moratorium on main rule to encourage more posting on main. We reserve the right to arbitrarily enforce it whenever we wish and the right to strike this line and enforce mainposting with zero notification to the users because its funny)
A hexbear.net commainity. Main sure to subscribe to other communities as well. Your feed will become the Lion's Main!
Good comrades mainly sort posts by hot and comments by new!
State-by-state guide on maintaining firearm ownership
Domain guide on mutual aid and foodbank resources
Tips for looking at financials of non-profits (How to donate amainly)
Community-sourced megapost on the main media sources to radicalize libs and chuds with
Main Source for Feminism for Babies
Maintaining OpSec / Data Spring Cleaning guide
Remain up to date on what time is it in Moscow
view the rest of the comments
It's really not
I mean, not really if you treat it like a debit card and never spend more than you actually have in the bank. Then you benefit from whatever points or rewards your credit card offers
I’ve never heard that saying before, I like it!
Yeah it’s certainly a slippery slope that has some serious consequences if you don’t use discipline and stay within your budget
I don't know that it's a saying, except in the sense that it's a thing that I said just now.
For me, it's a cashflow thing. If I use credit that's one month I do not have to spend my own money on something - it also allows for larger purchases in one place, whereas I might have to move a bunch of money around and wait days if I paid cash.
Credit card companies make their money on merchant fees, the people who get trapped in cycles of debt are just the gravy on top for the fuckers.
So what happens if someone who isn't lucky enough to have a good education in finance experiences sudden financial hardship and then relies on paying more on credit than they have in the bank? (An extremely common occurrence) Would you say the debt makes the situation better or worse?
And then, does that make you rethink whether its "not really" bad?
You refinance or ask your credit card companies for grace.
Or go bankrupt.
Very good point. I was responding to the “everyday purchases” not being all that bad to use a credit card for if you already have the money for it.
Sudden financial hardship is a much different situation and I agree, the debt would make it worse
Right, but I think the implication in "people" after "95% of sales" there is pretty clearly "our whole society", which presents the above problems. With the context, it made your comment read as "this doesn't need to change, and if it goes bad, it's your fault". But I'm glad you understand. We just very commonly have people from the Lemmiverse here with comments to the effect of "the status quo is good, actually".
Credit is evil, I agree. I also feel terrible knowing that whatever treatlerite points I get are paid for by someone getting fucked over. Either through transaction fees or insane interest rates.
theres a lot of us that pay off balances immediately and use the credit card for convenience, security and perks.
credit cards have way better user protections for fraud than debit cards. if there's a bogus charge, i can dispute it without that money going missing from my cash account. the onus is on the card company to figure it out, because i don't have to pay for it. so they invariably reverse the charges while conducting their investigation. debit fraud can be brutal, because the longer the bank dawdles, the more fees and payment rejections you can incur while your balance is artificially low.
i only need to carry a little bit of cash, and my particular card gets cash back between 2-4% on all kinds of shit like groceries, fuel, retail household items etc.
the only time i pay with some other method is when there is a card convenience fee / cash discount... which is becoming more frequent and often exists with independent contractors and muncipalities.
using a CC for everyday purchases is not any more precarious than using other forms of payment unless you can't trust yourself to stay in a budget... in which case, you shouldn't use checks or a debit card because you can totally go crazy with those too and get buried in fees, not to mention the punitive banking moves like reporting to chexsystems, after which you're gonna be punitively de-banked and forced into the realm of short term loans and those strip mall check cashing services with exorbitant fees.
Noted, adding credit cards to my mental list of evil capitalist bullshit that ostensibly leftist hexbear users will vehemently defend, right next to car ownership
"socialism is when u use cash and checks. the more cash u use, the more socialism you are doing." - carl marcks
I don't use credit (or debit, for that matter) for any small business / mom & pop / farmers market stuff since that processing fee is killer. I do use it for everything else from gas to groceries and such.
I had my debit card skimmed at the gas station, $500 drained from my bank account from a gas station two states away. I didn't see that money for a month, and I really needed it at the time lol. Now whenever I get scammed I just call my CC provider and they send me the money back while they work with their fraud department.