2oz is about 40 quid. It's only worth 100 quid to a collector. I have a 1oz Cook islands eclectic nature fighting fish coin. Intrinsic value about 20 quid. It's for sale on freeads for 120 and that's cheaper than any other seller.
Personally I invest my money in gold, but the way the western governments are going I am thinking of investing in shares in companies that manufacture canned food and shotguns.
Bloody hell......how old is the lady manager! I thought he'd got his mum from the back lol . Cost of living crisis is worse than I thought 90 Yr old having to work at Asda petrol station 😮😮😮❤
That's true enough, for her own sake! But there must be something in it for her. She might just enjoy the job? Old folk confuse me. She must be fully compus-mentus so there is that! I bet she's a cool dude outside the job.
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 A birthday card isn't a coin of a stated monetary value... The coin is "approved as legal tender" by the Royal Mint but shops are not obliged to accept them. There you go.
@@newsbender and neither is a commemorative coin....'legal tender'..is NOT currency. They are very different. Credit cards are legal tender but you wouldnt call it currency.
These videos remind me of the time I was hard up and took my £5 coin to the post office to pay. They looked and were curious but took it without any hassle.
@@majorlaff8682 No. He makes that point quite clearly & succinctly in the video when referencing what the 81 year old manager says about £50 notes. When that message is displayed on pumps or in the shop window this type of interaction is null & voided. Apart from the 'legal tender' issue this is what these vids are challenging.
julian that started this channel has the right approach with these situations. This guy just genuinally comes across as he enjoys the drama. That poor woman
She seems ok to be fair, she was put in a difficult situation, if she took it without checking she could lose her job so she had to check and the delay was not her fault.
2017 Big Ben Silver Coin 1oz Landmarks of Britain Gross Per Unit £43.56 that is how much Royal Mint and bullion by post sell them for so why he thinks it's worth £100 is just a **** *****
How do I pay protection money to the extortion racket (council tax) with a coin? You can pay council tax via the post office but as they are a third party, they are not taking paymnet of a debt.
Aside from the financial transaction foreplay, why do you always say (quite politely) "do you want to serve this (next person behind you) customer"...? They are currently dealing with you so let the garage 'worry' about any queing problems as they are causing the queing problem & then we may get a third party interaction as well. Keep the 'pressure' on the business rather than helping them alleviate it by assisting them with their customers waiting in the queue.
You're another trouble make, it would seem. Asda has every legal right to deny accepting that coin. This is the law, your feelings do not change the law.
Does this work for paying council penalty charge notices at the council office? The back of my ticket says they don't accept cash but it is a debt not a payment for a product or service.
@@ThatLeeNoble I recon it would. I assume its for parking or traffic? They would probably refuse it, escalate it with higher charges, might try the courts but you could use it as a defense that you offered to settle at the lower amount early on but they refused to accept payment. Cant be sure court would take your side. It would all depend on the contract, which you didn't agree to on the first place.
"All UK coins, whether circulating or non-circulating, are authorised as ‘legal tender’ by Royal Proclamation, in accordance with the Coinage Act of 1971. Legal tender allows UK coins to be accepted for payment of debts IN COURT, but only circulating legal tender coins are designed to be spent and traded at businesses and banks."
The legislation does not specify only in court as you suggest but rather "The said silver coin shall be legal tender for payment of any amount in any part of Our United Kingdom."
@@julianchamberlain5399 Some people claim this only applies to paying money into court but the only process I can find to do this, via a CFO100 form, requires posting a cheque payable to Accountant General of the Senior Courts! In practice, as the police have to pay out if they arrest someone who's offered one of these coins, it'd take the likes of Asda attempting to sue to find out what a court would make of a civil claim.
@@julianchamberlain5399 thats literally from the royal mints website. where is your quote from? sounds like it was pulled from your backside. It is legal tender but not circulating currency. only circulating currency can be accepted by retailers. They are not familiar with it and have no way to check that it isnt counterfeit
It amazes me that people think a company would spend time and process to manufacture a coin worth an apparent £100 with £100 worth of silver .....can they not see how silly that is.
@365DaysofSilver I collect silver coins, there is a spot price and a premium price. Your price includes the cardboard that you removed it from. Plus it lost its value because it's been touched with bear hands and the oils from every hand are damaging it. What is stamped on the coin only decorative.
Its obvious they have not seen, that its legal tender. They really are only made for collectors, and not intended for circulation. Its the same, if you took a gold sovereign, legal tender, it only worth a £1.00, but you could never get one for a £1.00. More like £400 to £500 at todays price.
If you could fetch a burly gentleman to help start my motorcar, oh, and tell your man he ensures he pulls out my crank handle once I achieve ignition. I think the headlights need cleaned out and their carbide replenished. I'll be leaving soon, is their a man with a flag available to walk in front of my perambulator to warn the riders and drivers of horses of my approach? Be an old dear and throw in a slug of paraffin oil, a quart of candle wax and a gross of pre waxed wicks, do you exchange radiogram batteries here?
@@kevb6313 Compared to the erosion of freedom of expression, the right to attend a dance class and remain alive, the right to attend a music concert and go safely home, the right not to be r .... by some madman from Asia, the right to walk in public in military uniform without being sliced, the right to use a 100 quid coin is not only minor, but not even in much demand.
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 we are talking cash not credit cards, shops should be required by law to accept cash, stop being a NAZI apologist pushing for CBDC slavery...
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 cash has to be accepted bylaw, when it is to pay a debt, walk out the shops with the goods if they refuse cash then the police can force the shop to accept payment...
The age of that lady and she doesn't know what legal tender is. What the hell did they teach them back in the day? She was around when all these laws were created surely?
@@richardlarge4487 Bank do not control the laws. The law states, it is legal tender for a debt. A debe can be paid off in numerous ways. You can even work off a debt.
Also....I think old people working at 81 are selfish...taking up a job a younger person could have.....she says to keep her brain active..then why not do voluntery work? 🙃👍
Just thinking no children can get a start in life shurly asda should have age limit too let older people have a rest and make room for the new generation!!!!!!!!???????
I thought there was only 2 places you could actually use these. A court to pay off debt and the bank of England to exchange it, everywhere else can refuse it. Wouldn't it be good if it was more common and we had coins of actual value (gold, silver) to use in everyday transactions maybe it would get people using cash bit more rather than cashless.
Royal Mint guidelines advise that, although the coins were approved as legal tender, they are considered limited edition collectables not intended for general circulation, and hence shops and banks are not obliged to accept them.
They have nothing better to do than antagonise innocent staff for YT ticks. There’re not hurting the petrol companies just pissing off staff who just want to get through the day
Whether they are legal tender, a shop has no legal obligation or duty to accept any currency denominations. They can even only accept Australian dollars or Indian Rupees only, lol, if they wished (although that's just me being silly), as far as I see in law that is.
im glad you all think this is amusing but try being on the receiving end if some one came into your place of work and gave you the same amount of shit would you find it funny and amusing ...
They are not intended to be used as tender. Sure they can be But they are meant to be collected rather than circulated. And as any business has a right to refuse service they do not need to accept them. Youre just wasting this poor ladied time for what reason? What did you get out of this? You wasted your own time aswell.
Businesses can refuse the transaction if they don't want to accept your offer of payment, however for a debt they can't refuse an offer of payment and then state that is a refusal to pay.
@unit0033 for a purchase where goods and funds are exchanged simultaneously yes, but the terms need to be laid out at point of acquisition in cases like this. The gentleman taking the fuel knows not that his legal tender coin would be rejected as their is no signage to say so, so he takes the fuel on good faith that he will pay his debt. He then attempts to pay his debt at the counter, it is by now too late to change the terms of payment (having not made it explicitly clear that certain legal tender would not be accepted it is ofcourse presumed that all legal tender would be accepted). It's all really quite simple old boy.
@@thegymscope yes it is, as simple as most of the commenters here! You have to pay for items you purchase, companies get to specify what payments are accepted... simples
@unit0033 they do get to specify, if they have not specified at the point of goods changing hands then it becomes a debt. If you don't want to accept certain legal tender for a debt then that is your right, but you'd struggle to claim in court that you were refused payment. And when in court you could offer said legal tender once again to pay the debt. You can't be compelled to pay a debt in other forms when legal tender is offered. It's really not that difficult. I'd be happy to sit down with you and go over it all very slowly of it helps.
To be fair, I don't blame her for not taking it. Probably better if you're trying to spend a rare commemorative coin that most people have never seen, is to check they will take it before filling your car up
This guy has probably been bullied in the past so finds immense pleasure in trying to create drama and argue with old women. Shops are not obliged to accept £100 coins.
They are not obliged to accept the coin, completely correct, but the chap is relying on the premise that he owes them a debt. Where through technicalities the rules are different. There's rules that state that debts can be paid using her his majesty's sterling, and coins with the queen's or now kings head must be accepted as legal tender when settling a debt. I seem to remember black belt barrister disagreeing with this practice and suggesting it could only be used when it's a debt to a court (fines etc), but these guys have won legal cases in the past involving this practice when charged with bilking.
Personally I invest my money in gold, but the way the western governments are going I am thinking of investing in shares in companies that manufacture canned food and shotguns.
"succulent Chinese meal" vibes off this gent .. love him 😂😂😂
YES! Democracy!
Ironically id rather have a £100 coin made of silver than 5 x paper £20 notes with no intrinsic value.
I agree, I would of also offered to buy the coin with cash (£100) and kept it as a nice little gift
the coin has no intrinsic value either
@@unit0033it's made of silver, of course it has intrinsic value.
2oz is about 40 quid.
It's only worth 100 quid to a collector.
I have a 1oz Cook islands eclectic nature fighting fish coin.
Intrinsic value about 20 quid. It's for sale on freeads for 120 and that's cheaper than any other seller.
@unit0033 if it's made of silver yes it does have intrinsic value
The shiny silver £100.00 commemorative coin is magnificent.
Ohh that lady is amazing so kind and beautiful. What a lovely lady.
Don't people have internet ?? A ten second search and they know it's legal tender.
I agree. Nobody knows what legal tender means though.
This is the problem, unless you are a collector, you would not know this.
I could watch videos like this all day, brilliant stuff.
glad you find this amusing when people are being attacked and abused just for doing their daily job ... hope you dont get the same sort of shit
ASDA need too give that lady a pension so she can retire
Personally I invest my money in gold, but the way the western governments are going I am thinking of investing in shares in companies that manufacture canned food and shotguns.
Lovely old lady was frightened
"i'll buy it off ya for £80"🤣🤣🤣🤣
Really nice coin my be ASDA can put it in there charity tin with there disgusting over pricing policies
Coin audits are always marvellous entertainment.
Bloody hell......how old is the lady manager! I thought he'd got his mum from the back lol . Cost of living crisis is worse than I thought 90 Yr old having to work at Asda petrol station 😮😮😮❤
2:37 She’s old for an Asda Manager isn’t she ??.
Look’s like she’s in her 90’s , and should’ve retired 25 to 30 years ago 😂
That's true enough, for her own sake! But there must be something in it for her. She might just enjoy the job?
Old folk confuse me.
She must be fully compus-mentus so there is that!
I bet she's a cool dude outside the job.
81 she told him her age as he took the piss out of her
@trickyfocus lookagain. He only gave as good as he got!
She started it. An obvious troublemaker in her time 😇
@@Nellyontheland Well said 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
She’s been / is a battle axe 🪓 for sure . I wonder if her name is Karen 🤣
@SHINBET666 I don't know about a battle axe, but...I think I'm falling in love 😵💫
If they had no value, then there would be no point in it becoming a commemorative coin, surely ?
A birthday card is commemorative but doesnt have value to anybody but the person its given to.
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 A birthday card isn't a coin of a stated monetary value... The coin is "approved as legal tender" by the Royal Mint but shops are not obliged to accept them. There you go.
@@malcolmstockbridge2569a birthday card isn't currency though, is it?
@@newsbender and neither is a commemorative coin....'legal tender'..is NOT currency. They are very different. Credit cards are legal tender but you wouldnt call it currency.
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 credit cards are not legal tender. £100 coin is both legal tender and currency. So much misinformation.
Absolutely brilliant 👏 👌
These videos remind me of the time I was hard up and took my £5 coin to the post office to pay. They looked and were curious but took it without any hassle.
I like this guy. With his facial hair and appearance he reminds me of a strongman from the 1800's 🏋️.
Hope you're doing well, Brett👍
Was there a sign anywhere saying 'This establishment does not accept hundred pound coins'?
No. "That would have foiled the whole thing"
@@majorlaff8682 No. He makes that point quite clearly & succinctly in the video when referencing what the 81 year old manager says about £50 notes. When that message is displayed on pumps or in the shop window this type of interaction is null & voided. Apart from the 'legal tender' issue this is what these vids are challenging.
@@nigeats65 Thank you. My clunky old laptop and cranky old ears miss so much. Thanks again.
@@davidhaslam1056if it wasn't for those meddling kids
There doesn't have to be. The royal mint has already stated, clear as day, that businesses don't need to accept these wallop coins.
Lol come back in a week and buy it of ya £80 😂😂😂
Haha
Rinse and repeat
Love these vids 👍🏼
julian that started this channel has the right approach with these situations. This guy just genuinally comes across as he enjoys the drama. That poor woman
Where has Julian gone? First time watching in ages
She seems ok to be fair, she was put in a difficult situation, if she took it without checking she could lose her job so she had to check and the delay was not her fault.
Trying to make a scone, looking up a loaf ahahahahahaha
Lady was nice and polite👍
You'd have been better off buying 5oz of silver.
Not, if you can buy them for £40. That is why he outing it.
He definitely bullied her into retirement after this 😂😂😂
These coins are worth more than the debt notes the people refusing them are obtuse.
2017 Big Ben Silver Coin 1oz Landmarks of Britain Gross Per
Unit £43.56 that is how much Royal Mint and bullion by post sell them for so why he thinks it's worth £100 is just a **** *****
God bless you lady 😇
How do I pay protection money to the extortion racket (council tax) with a coin?
You can pay council tax via the post office but as they are a third party, they are not taking paymnet of a debt.
Aside from the financial transaction foreplay, why do you always say (quite politely) "do you want to serve this (next person behind you) customer"...? They are currently dealing with you so let the garage 'worry' about any queing problems as they are causing the queing problem & then we may get a third party interaction as well. Keep the 'pressure' on the business rather than helping them alleviate it by assisting them with their customers waiting in the queue.
Ok I'll give it a go next time.
Why be even more of a dick?
How about not ruining peoples day and stop being a twat?
You're another trouble make, it would seem. Asda has every legal right to deny accepting that coin. This is the law, your feelings do not change the law.
@@adamarzo559Asda have the right to refuse the coin but that negates the debt.
The spot price of 1oz of silver is only about £25,so if you can get away with a 2oz coin valued at about 50 quid that's a result.
My guy said I'll be back in a week and buy it off ya for £80 😂😂😂😂
So the one hundred pound coin has approx 2.2 ounces of silver currently worth about 50 quid
ASDA letting thire staff done
Does this work for paying council penalty charge notices at the council office? The back of my ticket says they don't accept cash but it is a debt not a payment for a product or service.
@@ThatLeeNoble I recon it would. I assume its for parking or traffic? They would probably refuse it, escalate it with higher charges, might try the courts but you could use it as a defense that you offered to settle at the lower amount early on but they refused to accept payment. Cant be sure court would take your side. It would all depend on the contract, which you didn't agree to on the first place.
Julian "King Of The Pump's" Chamberlain ! Respect 🙏
Should invoice them for your time sitting there.
nope
@@unit0033 ..... Education my friend.
WOW, London time, i was thinking about you guys the other day-more content, thank you and well done.
If your watching old gal, I offer £85 for the cads coin.
... £86
"All UK coins, whether circulating or non-circulating, are authorised as ‘legal tender’ by Royal Proclamation, in accordance with the Coinage Act of 1971. Legal tender allows UK coins to be accepted for payment of debts IN COURT, but only circulating legal tender coins are designed to be spent and traded at businesses and banks."
The legislation does not specify only in court as you suggest but rather "The said silver coin shall be legal tender for payment of any amount in any part of Our United Kingdom."
@@julianchamberlain5399 Some people claim this only applies to paying money into court but the only process I can find to do this, via a CFO100 form, requires posting a cheque payable to Accountant General of the Senior Courts! In practice, as the police have to pay out if they arrest someone who's offered one of these coins, it'd take the likes of Asda attempting to sue to find out what a court would make of a civil claim.
@@julianchamberlain5399 thats literally from the royal mints website. where is your quote from? sounds like it was pulled from your backside. It is legal tender but not circulating currency. only circulating currency can be accepted by retailers. They are not familiar with it and have no way to check that it isnt counterfeit
@@julianchamberlain5399 deleting comments now. coward.
@@spiderbootsy No I didn't delete any comments. Maybe youtube filtered it out because it was abusive or contained a link?
The old lady Asda manager completely over reacted and was unnecessarily aggressive with you.
2oz is only worth £44 spot price
Not quite how it works mate
It amazes me that people think a company would spend time and process to manufacture a coin worth an apparent £100 with £100 worth of silver .....can they not see how silly that is.
@365DaysofSilver I collect silver coins, there is a spot price and a premium price. Your price includes the cardboard that you removed it from. Plus it lost its value because it's been touched with bear hands and the oils from every hand are damaging it. What is stamped on the coin only decorative.
@@A-Astley I was looking for a nibble and instead I got a great reply! You should join me in SS mate
In a debt a £100 coin is worth its face value, regardless of its silver value
Love these videos
They should put the old lady on a coin to commemorate her polite although ill-informed service on behald of ASDA...
I will certainly not be working at 81. Looking to take out some of my pensions at 55!
Wait until Rachel Reeves ruins that ambition!
Been waiting weeks for one of these videos
Its obvious they have not seen, that its legal tender. They really are only made for collectors, and not intended for circulation. Its the same, if you took a gold sovereign, legal tender, it only worth a £1.00, but you could never get one for a £1.00. More like £400 to £500 at todays price.
Don't want to clutter the till up with £20 notes. lmao..
If you could fetch a burly gentleman to help start my motorcar, oh, and tell your man he ensures he pulls out my crank handle once I achieve ignition. I think the headlights need cleaned out and their carbide replenished. I'll be leaving soon, is their a man with a flag available to walk in front of my perambulator to warn the riders and drivers of horses of my approach?
Be an old dear and throw in a slug of paraffin oil, a quart of candle wax and a gross of pre waxed wicks, do you exchange radiogram batteries here?
What is the point?
Not having your rights eroded
@@kevb6313 Compared to the erosion of freedom of expression, the right to attend a dance class and remain alive, the right to attend a music concert and go safely home, the right not to be r .... by some madman from Asia, the right to walk in public in military uniform without being sliced, the right to use a 100 quid coin is not only minor, but not even in much demand.
Julian, another good job, but you might want to correct the mispelling in the title, changing "certainately" to "certainly" . 😎
Thankyou Lawrence. ❤
@@julianchamberlain5399 You're welcome. Keep it up!
He definitely fancied her
It's a civil matter, and no defacto court is legal in England, so how does this get sorted out?
Nice coin
Trust JC he knows wot is wot gal
Welcome back
how can shops refuse legal tender, just walk out with the goods if they do...
Shops can choose the form of payment....a credit card is a legal form of payment but they dont have to accept it.
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 we are talking cash not credit cards, shops should be required by law to accept cash, stop being a NAZI apologist pushing for CBDC slavery...
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 Keep on topic WEF shill, how much is Bill Gates paying you to promote a cashless slavery?
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 wasn't talking about debit cards you sill NAZI cabbage...
@@malcolmstockbridge2569 cash has to be accepted bylaw, when it is to pay a debt, walk out the shops with the goods if they refuse cash then the police can force the shop to accept payment...
81 fantastic lady
Lo❤e it😂😂😂
The age of that lady and she doesn't know what legal tender is. What the hell did they teach them back in the day? She was around when all these laws were created surely?
ask a bank it is not legal tender
@@richardlarge4487 Bank do not control the laws. The law states, it is legal tender for a debt. A debe can be paid off in numerous ways. You can even work off a debt.
no definitive value for anything, money is just valuable because people agree it is
Also....I think old people working at 81 are selfish...taking up a job a younger person could have.....she says to keep her brain active..then why not do voluntery work? 🙃👍
hahahaha eighty quid icing on the cake that
Just thinking no children can get a start in life shurly asda should have age limit too let older people have a rest and make room for the new generation!!!!!!!!???????
Hahah quality hahahah. 😅😅😅
Well that’s not going to happen so get over that….. just brilliant 👍👍
winker!
Has it got the King's head on it ?
Take the coin asda
A nice old Girl about 128 i think 🤣🤣
Love it ,👌
Hahaha! 😂😂😂
Blimey
Youve changed your image!
😀
I thought there was only 2 places you could actually use these. A court to pay off debt and the bank of England to exchange it, everywhere else can refuse it. Wouldn't it be good if it was more common and we had coins of actual value (gold, silver) to use in everyday transactions maybe it would get people using cash bit more rather than cashless.
Royal Mint guidelines advise that, although the coins were approved as legal tender, they are considered limited edition collectables not intended for general circulation, and hence shops and banks are not obliged to accept them.
not obliged to accept anything they dont want to. shops can state cash only or card payment only if they wish
... unless as payment to a dept. ❤
@unit0033 Yes. If stated before the pump is used or the meal is eaten etc.
The garage cant put them in the bank this is a terrible thing to do to a 81 year old woman
They have nothing better to do than antagonise innocent staff for YT ticks. There’re not hurting the petrol companies just pissing off staff who just want to get through the day
You are literally just trying to be difficult with form of payment to make yourself feel special.
........... Another stupid person...... Wake up, this is education.
For our entertainments 🤪👍
It's sold as a coin that can be spent and that's exactly what he is doing with it😂
TT.
Whether they are legal tender, a shop has no legal obligation or duty to accept any currency denominations. They can even only accept Australian dollars or Indian Rupees only, lol, if they wished (although that's just me being silly), as far as I see in law that is.
You are right but refusing legal tender for a debt negates it.
@@julianchamberlain5399 doesnt work that way and you know it.
She's a Tough Old Bird good on Her
Why would you do this to a guy on min wage just to try and get clicks on RUclips, If it was me id tell ya to go and put it as a drive off
Excellent, we need people like you for entertaining videos haha
..............Yes but you are stupid.
Its not a drive off though is it? Its asda refusing payment of a debt and having that debt negated. Poor training
@@Jessicacaca00no but you still in court 😅
@@trickyfocus i dont follow? The one time julian was arrested for using these coins, he won £5000 compensation for wrongful arrest
im glad you all think this is amusing but try being on the receiving end if some one came into your place of work and gave you the same amount of shit would you find it funny and amusing ...
@@richardlarge4487 He just paid with cash you fool.
Do you need a safe place ha ha ha
Wasting everyone's time and effort in an attempt to be right for once. Sad.
was he right!
@@unit0033 .........Yes he was.
They are not intended to be used as tender. Sure they can be
But they are meant to be collected rather than circulated. And as any business has a right to refuse service they do not need to accept them. Youre just wasting this poor ladied time for what reason? What did you get out of this? You wasted your own time aswell.
Businesses can refuse the transaction if they don't want to accept your offer of payment, however for a debt they can't refuse an offer of payment and then state that is a refusal to pay.
@@thegymscope you have to pay with what the retailer is willing to accept, if they state no cards you must then use cash etc
@unit0033 for a purchase where goods and funds are exchanged simultaneously yes, but the terms need to be laid out at point of acquisition in cases like this. The gentleman taking the fuel knows not that his legal tender coin would be rejected as their is no signage to say so, so he takes the fuel on good faith that he will pay his debt. He then attempts to pay his debt at the counter, it is by now too late to change the terms of payment (having not made it explicitly clear that certain legal tender would not be accepted it is ofcourse presumed that all legal tender would be accepted). It's all really quite simple old boy.
@@thegymscope yes it is, as simple as most of the commenters here! You have to pay for items you purchase, companies get to specify what payments are accepted... simples
@unit0033 they do get to specify, if they have not specified at the point of goods changing hands then it becomes a debt. If you don't want to accept certain legal tender for a debt then that is your right, but you'd struggle to claim in court that you were refused payment. And when in court you could offer said legal tender once again to pay the debt. You can't be compelled to pay a debt in other forms when legal tender is offered. It's really not that difficult. I'd be happy to sit down with you and go over it all very slowly of it helps.
Absolute bell mate get a life
To be fair, I don't blame her for not taking it. Probably better if you're trying to spend a rare commemorative coin that most people have never seen, is to check they will take it before filling your car up
But then he wouldn’t have any content
@@marktaylor5757 lol maybe he should make different content then
...........Please wake up.
@@PumpTheRod it’s 9 15 pm I’m well awake
@@marktaylor5757 I'm afraid your eyes are wide shut my friend.
This guy has probably been bullied in the past so finds immense pleasure in trying to create drama and argue with old women. Shops are not obliged to accept £100 coins.
What a silly comment
They are not obliged to accept the coin, completely correct, but the chap is relying on the premise that he owes them a debt. Where through technicalities the rules are different. There's rules that state that debts can be paid using her his majesty's sterling, and coins with the queen's or now kings head must be accepted as legal tender when settling a debt. I seem to remember black belt barrister disagreeing with this practice and suggesting it could only be used when it's a debt to a court (fines etc), but these guys have won legal cases in the past involving this practice when charged with bilking.
.............Wrong end of the stick. No wonder our county is in such a mess.
Stop annoying the shop workers,you need a good hyding
Nice one haha💪🏻
What’s this guys channel?
Complete tool
There is a wise old saying, 'It takes one to know one's 😂
@@motiveintentionsincerity yup, you owned me there, champ. Stop inbreeding, man. You’re the result.
LOVE IT!! 👍 Can't wait to see the next 1 guys. 🫡✌️✊️❤️
Personally I invest my money in gold, but the way the western governments are going I am thinking of investing in shares in companies that manufacture canned food and shotguns.