The Down Range Forum
Member Section => Down Range Cafe => Topic started by: TAB on February 14, 2018, 11:52:30 AM
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So I just got done spending ~$1700 at home depot for a bunch of stuff for a 4 pled I am doing a rental turn over on. I am putting the stuff in my truck when I notice a $2 item still in the cart and not bagged up. So naturally I check the receipt, sure enough I did not pay for it. So I walk back in and go back too the pro counter and tell them what happened and pay for the item. Every one there is shocked that I would do such a thing. Are people really that dishonest these day?
I should note this was an hd that almost never go in as it is ways from me.
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Nice...
I do that quite often myself. No matter the value, it’s not mine, gotta make it right!
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To thine own self be true.
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I've done that too, and yes, I believe honesty is uncommon these days. Why? Because most people will do a lot of dishonest things if they think they'll get away with them.
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Just did it the other day (and have many times in the past) for a <$2 item, even though this store has overcharged us in the past, we still go back in and pay.
And we often get a "thank you" along with a look of bewilderment as to why we'd bother to come back in and pay for a $2 item that slipped through the cracks.
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Some years back, a guy I worked with found a bank envelope in the lot of a market with a bank inside. It contained $600 plus in cash. Rather than go back into the bank and find out who may have cashed or withdrew that exact amount, which I'm sure the bank could ascertain, he pocketed the cash on a "finders keepers" mentality and bragged about finding it... When I asked him what his wife (who I knew) thought about that, he said that she had no problem with what he'd done.
Two people who's parents should be slapped about IMHO! Thankfully, these two people cannot reproduce...
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Some years ago, my mother, who used to keep her cash in and envelope from the last mail she opened, dropped that envelope with $1,500. And she had no idea where.
Few days laster a police officer showed up at the door with all the cash and the story about what happened.
She dropped the envelope in the parking lot of a grocery store and it was spotted by a 16 year old kid who was working part time as a bagger. He took it to his manager who called the city police to report the find. The officer who took the envelope noted it had a Dr.s return address and that the envelope was numbered.
He went to the Dr.s office and they were able to identify who the envelope was sent to by that number.
Kid got $150 reward and if Karma works should still be having good things happen.
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Just did it the other day (and have many times in the past) for a <$2 item, even though this store has overcharged us in the past, we still go back in and pay.
And we often get a "thank you" along with a look of bewilderment as to why we'd bother to come back in and pay for a $2 item that slipped through the cracks.
I remember being overcharged once and the store refused to give me what they owed me. If they would have given me something I didn't pay for after that, I think I would have kept it, unless it was more than what they owed me. I never got a chance to find out.
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I was at a local market a few months back and took $50 over in cash. I grabbed the receipt and left the $50 sticking outta the self checkout.
I called when I realized my loss and they had my cash at the service desk. When I picked it up later, the clerk pointed out an employee, a young black woman who’d turned it in, so I went over, thanked her and slipped her a ten spot for her honesty...
Surprised her a bit!
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Virtue is its own reward, but a finder's fee is nice too.
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Yer' a good guy Tab.