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Restaurant lets generous customers pay for extra meals, needy customers eat for free

2 Comments
By Scott Wilson, RocketNews24

Celebrate the season of giving (and receiving) all year round.

You’ve probably heard of customers “paying it forward” at restaurants before. One customer offers to pay for the customer after them, and then they offer to pay for the customer after them, and it continues on and on until potentially hundreds of people end up “paying” for each other.

As nice as “paying it forward” may sound though, usually all it really ends up being is the first customer paying extra, the other customers paying more or less the same, and then the last one getting the free food. Their hearts are certainly in the right place, but the end result is rarely all that different.

But one restaurant in Japan does “paying it forward” a little differently. They have a system set up wherein, if you’re feeling generous, you can buy as many meals as you want. You don’t eat them all yourself of course; instead the restaurant adds the number of meals you bought to a sign, and anyone who needs a free meal can order one of them, for free.

The numbers on the sign indicate how many of those meals have already been purchased by others and are available for free to anyone who wants them. Now that’s kindness in action!

Here’s what Japanese netizens had to say about the “Pay It Forward” Menu:

“What a wonderful idea.” “I’d like to try that! Both pay and receive!” “Nice. I just hope no one takes advantage of it.” “This is how society should be.” “I wish every restaurant in the world did this.”

Agreed on that last point! It’s such a simple idea that, with a little bit of work, it could probably be integrated into a lot of different restaurants, cafes, and even other stores too. Random acts of kindness could happen so often they wouldn’t even be “random” anymore, they would just be “kindness.”

_Source: Twitter/Ko_JaM via My Game News Flash

Read more stories from RocketNews24. -- The legality of adding free green onions to your ramen -- Eat like the judges and lawyers of Japan at this theme restaurant in Kumamoto -- 10 surprising things about America (according to this crazy Japanese travel pamphlet)

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2 Comments
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This is good only if the homeless and poor gets to eat the meal that is being paid for, instead of those who actually afford to buy their own meal.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

How do they differentiate a person that is really in need of a free meal and a person acting like they need a free meal?

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

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