I tip at my Starbucks every so often, but it is just because the girls always start my stuff when they see me at the door and the coffee is prepared just how I like it (tall, mocha frap with no whip). They also give me discounts here and there or a free bagel :).
So, when they go above and beyond, I do tip at Starbucks.
Unless the law has changed since I last waited tables, you have this backwards.
Servers get paid well under the minimum wage on the assumption that tips will make up the rest of their wages.
Servers must pay taxes on a percentage of the tables they wait on, based on the assumption that they are earning tips that must be taxed. I can’t remember what the percentage was, but something like 12 or 13% of the bills of your tables.
The catch is, you have to pay that tax even if the people don’t tip you. So if people don’t tip, you end up paying taxes on the tip they should have left.
I’ve never heard of the employer paying the tips if the customer doesn’t- if this is a law, it isn’t one that was enforced anywhere that I ever worked.
Also, I don’t tip at fast food restaurants, because they are already paid (not the sub-minimum server wages), and because most fast-food places have rules that forbid them from accepting tips anyway.
I’m fascinated by people arguing FOR tipping fast-food employees, because I can’t help wondering if they’ve ever actually done it. Typically, their tips would be politely rejected.
I’ve never seen anywhere else, in my entire life, internet or otherwise, people taking the issue of tipping so seriously as we do here. It rivals witty banter as a value judgewent, with both sides so feverishly divided over the issue you would think it was a Bush thread.