Slashdot Mirror


Ask Slashdot: Why Do So Many of You Think Carrying Cash Is 'Dangerous'?

An anonymous reader writes: Recently, I asked Slashdot what you thought about paying for things online using plastic, and the security of using plastic in general; thank you all for your many and varied responses, they're all much appreciated and gave me things to consider.

However, I got quite a few responses that puzzled me: People claiming that paying for things with cash, and carrying any amount of cash around at all, was somehow dangerous, that I'd be "robbed," and that I shouldn't carry cash at all, only plastic. I'm Gen-Y; I've walked around my entire life, in all sorts of places, and have never been approached or robbed by anyone, so I'm more than a little puzzled by that.

So now I ask you, Slashdotters: Why do you think carrying cash is so dangerous? Where do you live/spend your time that you worry so much about being robbed? Have you been robbed before, and that's why you feel this way? I'm not going to stop carrying cash in my wallet but I'd like to understand why it is so many of you feel this way -- so please be thorough in your explanations.

18 of 660 comments (clear)

  1. Just last week, downtown Philly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was robbed by a millennial looking to raise money for a gender reassignment operation

    1. Re: Just last week, downtown Philly... by Aighearach · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It does often work. I've had similar experiences. Just a couple weeks ago a guy was following me for awhile, and when he started speeding up to catch up to me, I turned down a really dark alley, and then slowed waaaaaay down, but didn't look back. He took a couple steps down that alley, paused, and ran away.

      You don't have to be a bad-ass of any sort, you just have to be in the less desirable target category. Typically, smiling at them and showing no fear works best. You don't want to challenge them; they're probably operating from the "lizard brain." They would be willing to pick a fist fight with a grenade if it insulted their moms, so you don't want to be like "f* you." But you might get away with, "No thanks. No thanks, I don't want any." It is the real-life "these are not the droids you're looking for." Their weak minds just can't operate fast enough to fit it into their immediate task, so they move on to the next victim.

  2. Holding it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    If a thief can tell from a distance whether you are carrying cash or credit cards, well, you are holding it wrong.

  3. Cash never fails. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    To the people who think carrying cash is dangerous: cash never fails to complete a transaction.

    https://arstechnica.com/business/2014/10/slow-credit-card-verification-lands-florida-man-in-jail/

    When your card gets declined, in some circumstances, you may get arrested. So there's another form of "dangerous" when relying solely on plastic as a form of payment.

    1. Re:Cash never fails. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I was at a grocery store a few weeks ago, the power was out. Much to my surprise, they stayed open and I purchased my groceries - those with no cash couldn't buy anything as the old slide card machines no longer exist I guess.

    2. Re:Cash never fails. by spire3661 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The key term being 'creditor'. This really only applies to debts. A merchant has no obligation to take cash before the fact but he has to take cash if you are in 'debt'. A sit down restaurant that serves you first and then presents a bill HAS to take cash. A walk-up counter style restaurant does not.

      --
      Good-bye
  4. I carry cash. by kurt555gs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't feel comfortable if I go out with at least a couple hundred in cash with me. Always have. If you get robbed throwing a significant roll and running the other way is the safest thing you can do. Thieves hate it if they only get five bucks. Of course I forgot to mention that I also carry a gun. ( Legally with a concealed carry license ).

    --
    * Carthago Delenda Est *
  5. Several reasons... by dbwells · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Like any decision, it isn't just cost, but cost/benefit. If I basically never need cash, why carry it? The risk is really small, sure, but the benefit is small, too. Second, I misplace things.

  6. I've never been robbed... by brokenin2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...at least of cash like you're talking about..

    I've also always heard people say it was dangerous to carry cash, but I don't think it is that much.. At least for robbery.. I know myself though, and I'd be sure to accidentally lose it if I carried cash.. Nobody to blame but myself, but it's still "dangerous" for me to carry cash.

    My dad always carried cash though, and one time in the early years of his dementia he got lost (forgot where he parked) and ended up wandering around town. He's diabetic, and his blood sugar got way off exacerbating the situation. Some good samaritans stopped to help him out when he started looking like he had a real problem, and ended up searching his wallet to try to figure out how to help him (calling family or whatever).. When it was all said and done, at least three different complete strangers had dug through his wallet in their efforts to try to help him. When we met up at the hospital later and security passed his belongings along to us, we found that he had a little over $1000 dollars in his wallet still. Now, I have no idea for sure what he started with, but I'm pretty sure it was exactly what he still had in there at the end of the day.

    The whole incident really made me rethink that whole "people are always trying to steal from you" mentality that we get pounded into us by the pessimists of society. I think generally people almost always do the right thing when given the chance, which I guess includes not robbing you of your cash in your wallet.

  7. It's not dangerous by quonset · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I carry cash when I need to spend it, not simply to have something in my pocket, and not once has anyone, anywhere, ever tried to rob me.

    Those whiners who think carrying cash is dangerous are the same ones who will whine about how dangerous flying in planes is when there's a crash. That completely ignores the 10,000 other takeoffs and landings which took place that same day without an issue.

    What is dangerous is carrying a cell phone. Between running into objects or distracted driving because you're engrossed with whatever text message you're trying read/send, having a cell phone is orders of magnitude more dangerous than carrying cash. This doesn't even include people robbing you of your cell phone which then gives them access to your accounts because you've conveniently put all that information on your phone.

    The question becomes, which is worse: losing the few dollars you had in your pocket, or giving someone access to all your bank accounts?

  8. Short answer...law enforcement officers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm not afraid of carrying cash in smaller amounts; but, if you carry large amounts of cash and are pulled over and the police find out about it, odds are they will confiscate it and you will never get it back. It's the new highway robbery. I'm not gonna do the Google search for you but there are plenty of cases.

  9. Dangerous? No. Risky? Yes. by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You could put your whole life savings in a backpack, and if you didn't let anyone see that your backpack was full of cash, you'd be in no greater danger at all than carrying an equal volume of anything else in your backpack. But what if someone just randomly stole your backpack? The odds of this happening weren't any greater than if you packed the backpack full of dead weasels, but you would've just lost your life savings.

    So I usually don't carry more than $200 in my wallet to keep the risk down, but there's nothing inherently dangerous about carrying cash, unless you let other people know how that you're carrying a remarkably large amount of cash. Flashing large amounts of cash is dangerous.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  10. Cash used to be dangerous by gurps_npc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    100 years ago, there was no such thing as plastic and checks were untrustworthy. To buy most things, you had to carry cash. Worse, banks were not open 24/7, and was inconvenient. Say you go on vacation. A good vacation now a day can easily cost you $1000 a week, plus transportation. Say $2,500 for a two week vacation. Family of four, double that to $5,000.

    Would you walk around with $5,000 in your pocket today? If everyone around you KNEW that you are holding that kind of cash? In a warm, tropical country where people could live for a year on that kind of cash?

    Before the modern financial methods - credit and checks, walking around with cash WAS dangerous. Very dangerous. That was why travelers checks became popular. Eventually other methods caught up and became just as trusted and accepted. So you don't have to carry a lot of it.

    But 100 years ago, walking around with cash was freakin' dangerous. Now, it is pretty darn safe because we carry much less cash, and the potential muggers know it.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
  11. Cash is the least of your worries by kondro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having a few hundred in your pocket is nothing compared to the $1000 phone, $1000 tablet, $3000 computer, etc that we're all carrying around with us and display very visibly.

  12. CorpGov Despises Cash by Lacrocivious+Acropho · · Score: 5, Insightful

    CorpGov wants to track everyone. Everywhere. Always. Cash is difficult to monitor. With your Personal Tracking Device in your pocket, and your identify-linking electronic purchases absolutely tagged to you and you alone, CorpGov feasts. They get to do whatever they want with everything you do that they can track, and what is more definitive and commercially valuable than what you buy? And where? And when? So of course CorpGov is doing everything it can to sow the seeds of doubt about the safety of carrying cash, which they cannot so easily track. As if they held your interests in mind at all, let alone paramount. 'Cash Is Dangerous' is true to the degree that you are Sheeple.

    --
    Twice as crazy as I would be if I was half as crazy as I am.
  13. Re:Cash is dangerous ... by eaglesrule · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the other hand you have the omnipresent corporations vying to create a perfect profile of you and your spending habits. Anonymous transactions would be the natural enemy of those who sell your consumer information to insurance companies, for example, so I suppose it is to be expected to see shill posts downplaying the benefits of carrying cash.

    Personally, I use credit and a store loyalty card for buying healthy food, and cash only for junk food and alcohol. I may not be able to control where my data ends up, but at least I can fuck with it.

  14. manufactured danger by cas2000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    cash is dangerous because visa and mastercard don't get their cut of small transactions like buying a coffee, nor can they track your location and spending habits to enhance the value of the data about you that they sell.

    so they force paypass/paywave on everyone by making it impossible to get even a debit card without them, and then spend a lot on advertising to let everyone know how dangerous and scary and inconvenient cash is.

  15. Cops Steal Cash by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you have a lot of cash, that's "evidence" of drug crimes, even absent drugs, and the cops will take your money, put it on trial (cash is bad at defending itself and does not get an attorney), and buy boats, pinball machines and hookers with your money.

    ^ None of that is an exaggeration.

    http://dailysignal.com/2015/10...

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)