this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2026
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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/30909420

According to the linked leaflet, the EU’s payment services directive ensures that “You can no longer be charged extra costs by a merchant when you pay using a card issued in the EU.” But they neglect to extend reciprocity to cash payers.

Incidentally, this exacerbates adversely discriminatory treatment of Americans who face uniquely poor treatment by banks. Cash is the sole notable refuge from shitty banks.

Upcharging cash payers violates human rights. This is not only attributed to banks discriminating on the basis of nationality. We have a human right to:

  • self-determinism
  • autonomy
  • consumer protection
  • privacy

Penalising cash payers is an assault on any consumer who exercises their self-deterministic right to live autonomous and independent from banks.

No consumer protection is more important than the right to opt out of a transaction. It’s the only consumer protection that one can give themself without relying on others. Surcharging consumers who opt out of banking is an attack on that option. It puts a price on consumer protection.

Banking inherently entails abuse of privacy. The digital footprint is huge and undermins data minimisation rights.

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[–] activistPnk@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Indeed the EU is not worried about marginalising Americans. That is the thesis of the thread. Whether they /should/ give a shit is a separate question. As it stands, there are multinational “accidental Americans” in the EU who have lived in Europe their whole life (with an EU-based nationality). They also get treated as Americans by EU banks despite their other nationality.