Summary: This spotlight details the racist history of tipping, federal and state policy governing tipped work, and the experience of tipped workers in the economy—both nationwide and in the South. Across the country, tipped workers are more likely to be people of color, women, women of color, or single parents, and are disproportionately born outside…
The first fact checker is not saying anything about this article at all, and is not refuted in the article you linked. What they are saying is that American Institute for Economic Research is an unreliable source. After attempting to read what you linked I’m inclined to agree.
Your article was so poorly written that I couldn’t get through it. I did skim enough to determine that the author’s main point is: tipping existed before the end of slavery. That fact is not in dispute and has nothing to do with OP’s article.
Tip has existed for centuries and did not start because of slavery therefore the very premise that it is a relic of slavery is false given the standard definition of relic.
It is a relic of travelers showing gratitude to their hosts.
It may or may not have been exploited by racist white people but the claim is that tipping is because of slavery and racism. It is not.
But again believe what you want. Enjoy your echo chamber. Pretend it’s only the right stuck in one.
The down votes appear to indicate how deeply people want this to be true. I find that far more fascinating.
Read the second paragraph of OP’s article. Your arguments do not remotely refute this.
ETA: I agree that the wording could be better, to make it less likely anyone would mistake the claim the way you have.
I cannot find a single claim of this slavery aspect that doesn’t trace back to Saru Jayaraman as a source.
They are a fair wage activist. They have an agenda is getting people to believe tipping is evil. They have no credentials as a historian of any kind.
It’s really quite ridiculous how much people want to believe things and me having doubts makes them see me as the fool.
“…given my own chosen definition of relic such that the article can be characterized differently”