A 10-hour 'pay it forward' Starbucks line in Florida came to a halt after customer number 458 intentionally put and end to the generosity.

If you're like me, you're probably thinking, "Who is this miserable villain?"

His name is Peter Schorsch, and he hit up the Starbucks drive-thru to purposely put a stop to the 'pay it forward' line because he believe that people were doing it out of "guilt," not "generosity."

When the barista asks you to pay it forward, it is no longer spontaneous.

But is the barista really "asking" you to pay for someone else's order—or is he or she simply informing you that your order was paid for thanks to an ongoing 'pay it forward' love fest, and that you can keep the amazing gesture going if you so choose?

Look, I can't speak for everyone, but I know that any 'pay it forward' gesture is well worth the faith in humanity that it may help to restore—especially given the negative headlines we've been bombarded with in recent weeks.

The only thing that would have made this 'pay it forward' line better was if the Starbucks was located in Ferguson, MO.

Schorsch—a blogger/part-time political consultant—decided to put a stop to the generosity when he saw people were driving to the Starbucks just to be a part of the action. Although he can't prove it, he truly believes this 'pay it forward' movement is just "one big organic marketing ploy" by Starbucks.

This is turning into a social phenomenon and I had to put an end to it. I love Starbucks. I have nothing against them. But this takes away the genuineness.

So, let me get this straight—Peter got into his car and deliberately drove to Starbucks to be the ONE guy to purposely shine a negative light on a 'pay it forward' movement because people were deliberately driving to Starbucks to be part of something positive?

Schorsch did reportedly tip the barista $100, which totally negates his logic; because unless he ALWAYS tips his barista this amount, this it seems to be something he did out of guilt for being the customer who went out of his way to intentionally rain on everyone else's coffee parade.

Whether it was genuine or not, did he ever consider that some people may just enjoy being part of something bigger than themselves? He should seriously look into it.

Congratulations Peter Schorsch. You are officially "that guy."

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