Not to me, because in the software I use the thing gets actually deleted once I paste it somewhere else, not before. It's more like tagging the thing(s) for moving to a location to be disclosed later.
It could get deleted in other ways (for instance YouTube has this horrible habit of deleting your comment in progress when you finish watching a video).
I always use cut (+ immediately paste back if needed) rather than copy because it gives me the visual confirmation that the object has indeed been put in the buffer.
Not to me, because in the software I use the thing gets actually deleted once I paste it somewhere else, not before. It's more like tagging the thing(s) for moving to a location to be disclosed later.