I’m not an American, but
I’ve literally never seen a check in my life, and I’ve been around since the late 80s.
Comment on It's a new era.
weariedfae@lemmy.world 11 months agoMan, that’s some hyperbole. Ain’t nobody believing you haven’t seen a check in 40 years. It’s not for every day use but there’s always something that needs a check for some dumb reason, like setting up direct deposit or paying the emergency plumber. Stuff comes up.
I’m not an American, but
I’ve literally never seen a check in my life, and I’ve been around since the late 80s.
I got paid by check for a gig on Christmas Eve.
Other than getting paid for a few labor jobs out of high school, I haven’t seen a cheque used ever, so I can believe it. Banks give sheets with direct deposit info, and any tradespeople I’ve hired have taken various other forms of payment.
For reference, this is in Canada though, so not the default.
Believe it, bub. In backwater places like Brazil people have on from credit and debit cards to fully digital systems like Pix. Meanwhile my town in Tennessee will take only cash or cheque for taxes.
I mean, fully digital isnt a massive flex. “Cash is king” is a saying for a reason
vzq@lemmy.blahaj.zone 11 months ago
Late 80s is only 35 years ago, but other than that believe it. It’s true.
The cheques only really disappeared in 2002 when the bank guarantees stopped, but I haven’t seen one in the wild since I was a little little lad.
More info on en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurocheque
Mt last emergency plumber was a kid in his twenties. I don’t think he even knows what a check is. But he definitely knows what a debit card is, and has a portable terminal.