That'd never happen here, cos back before we changed to decimal currency & we all learned to song
'Out go the Pounds, the Shillings, & the Pence, and in come the Dollars a-and the Cents' waaay back on the 14th of February 1966; someone here in Aus got smart when they drew up the new laws around what is 'legal tender' & what it's legit to use as money for & up to what value..... :shocked: So all our lower denomination coins have a limit on the amount for which they are 'legal tender' & legally acceptable for - I don't recall exactly what the lmits were & I can't be bothered looking it up now, but when we still had them it was something like $1 for 1 & 2 cent coins, it's still about $5 for 5 & 10 cent coins, $10 for 20 & 50 cent coins, $20 for $1 & $2 coins, and we even have similar limits on the lower denomination notes......
So anyone trying the same thing here, & rocking up with 6 wheelbarrow loads of coins like that to pay a tax bill or anything would rapidly become even more pissed off once they discovered that the
only places all those coins are legal tender here is at the Reserve Bank or the Australian Mint!! :yikes: Even our 'normal' banks don't
HAVE to take them or exchange them, & if push came to shove & someone got stroppy or pedantic about it all, said person could be arrested for even trying to pay with something that was 'not legal tender'! :shocked:
So when it comes to that particular vid, us Aussies
really can roll our eyes & say to each other with feeling, '
that'd only happen in the USA!'

:roflblack: