"Got the Receipt?" Until the cashier handed over the confirmation slip following the transaction, this term had a mere, simple denotation. It has since become a cultural signifier: the assertion of evidence, an assertion heavy enough to close the debate in an age where sentences become evidence through screenshotting, blockchain records, and the endless archives of online conversations.
Traditionally, statements were offered as proof; today, a digital receipt accompanies each one: text message in the sunlight, traced transaction hash, video replayed in loop-proofs locked away somewhere dusty, but waiting for their day to come-the shining of that very tape clutched in the tight grip of justice. A receipt has in many ways become a ticket of accountability amongst all: "Don't deny it. I Got the Receipt."
In the other, much darker side of the receipt culture-therefore, it is also used in the very dramatic call outs where one error is everybody's proof and the forgiveness lost to evidence-receipts stand outside that particular storyline.
That's right: in this modern world, every action leaves its traces; every word gets into its data pool. Being inside this world implies being aware that being itself today serves as a record: every saint and sinner has a receipt for it.