Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul B.
Just to clarify:
I was alright with paying the 80 pesos*. My problem was with the driver being greedy and thinking he could take advantage of me after we dropped Jonny off. My point was that we need to stop making ourselves victims. They scam you once, they think they can scam you again.. and this applies to foreigners as a group.
Also, I'm sure you are right about locals getting scammed too but they are not targeted as often or as extremely as foreigners are.
*because with Jonny I wasn't about to suggest that we find another taxi. But when I'm alone I always convince the driver to put the meter on. I am hardcore about this issue to the point where I am ready to report a taxi driver to the DOTC if he tries to scam me. I have not had any problems yet.
Firstly, without trying to sound like a deuche, my time is valuable and whilst "principles" are all good and well, it's simply not worth my time to argue about cents and dollars.
Secondly, to the guy that said he walks away even when they're yelling at him, that shows incredible naivety about the dangers of the Philippines. A lot of people carry here - you should avoid conflict at ALL costs. Always. And that's not just in the Philippines, I've seen people get glassed at clubs in Australia which result in facial scars for the rest of their lives over the most ridiculously trivial things. Good luck with that attitude. It's not +EV. My friend's fiance got a bottle smashed on his face after he made an insulting comment to some random South African fans when they were watching an Aust/SA cricket match at the casino - he was in hospital for weeks, his face is horribly scarred, Australian Medicare pays for most of the hospital bills but he'll need to pay tens of thousands for plastic surgery to attempt to reduce the scarring. I call him Frankenstein and he's a f**king moron imo.
Thirdly, negotiating reasonable off-meter rates can be +EV - when I first got here 18 months ago, I would occasionally insist on the meter. Very often, one of two things would happen - I would be forced to wait ages for another cab (wasted valuable time and tilt) or the cab driver would sulkily put the meter on and then take you for a merry-go-round taxi ride all over the joke that is the Manila traffic system (wasted valuable time and tilt).
Fourthly, there are moral considerations. Whilst that specific taxi driver was a dick trying to charge you another dollar for a 100m drive, these taxi drivers run on incredibly low profit margins due to the very high price of fuel and ever-increasing daily rates for them to hire their taxis. If he wants $2 instead of $1 for a fare, I'm not going to argue with him. The poor guy is working hard for his family, when so many of his countrymen are slumming around being lazy and doing nothing.
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Yes, I splash money around here and I'm very generous with tipping and whatnot when the service is of a quality that deserves it. And yes, sometimes that generousity bites me in the ass occasionally, like when I gave this massage girl 5x what she asked for and she repays me by hanging onto me and screaming that I didn't pay her (she got bodyslammed into the floor by the security guard and fired on the spot - she was new and I was a regular there so she couldn't have picked a worse target), but I will continue to overpay for hard work as I'm happy to do it and I can afford it. If it slightly drives up the cost of living for other foreigners, I have no problem with that. Life is so cheap here anyway....
Last edited by yoyo; 11-05-2008 at 03:01 AM.
Reason: adding rambling...