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104

This can only exist in a humongous high-trust society.

Archive: https://archive.today/LolyC

From the post:

>That was the situation our boss, Yoshio, laid out for the staff at SoraNews24 headquarters. It should have been a simple, ordinary errand to run…but our crack reporter Mr. Sato volunteered for the task, and if you know the guy, you also know that projects rarely stay ordinary when he’s involved.

This can only exist in a humongous high-trust society. Archive: https://archive.today/LolyC From the post: >>That was the situation our boss, Yoshio, laid out for the staff at SoraNews24 headquarters. It should have been a simple, ordinary errand to run…but our crack reporter Mr. Sato volunteered for the task, and if you know the guy, you also know that projects rarely stay ordinary when he’s involved.
[–] 3 pts

We had a florist stand in rural Connecticut back in the early 2000s that just had a jar for cash and asked for the vases back or any extra vases you didn't want. Blacks moved in and stole everything. The town got someoney together and left it for the lady, but we could no longer have nice things. Everyone knew who did it, it was a tiny town.

[–] 2 pts

Coming to Chicago soon, I bet. /s

[–] 1 pt

Small, rural White towns sometimes have this. I’ve never seen it in any large urban area full of strangers.

One thing I notice is that it’s mostly things that adults buy. Kids might want the TVs, but it’s not like an unstaffed store selling Pokemon cards.

Aside from that I give the Japanese a lot of credit for this.

[–] 1 pt

I have seen "Honor" farm stands. They are getting fewer and fewer as the "diversity" finds them though... At least they are not targeted as often now that most of them switched to "digital" payments.