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With the intention of not incriminating myself, I won’t regale you with any personal experiences of shoplifting, but I have seen many a person swipe a couple of groceries or stuff clothes into deep pockets. We’ve been taught all throughout our lives that stealing is wrong. I mean, the Eighth Commandment states, “Thou shalt not steal,” and in New York, shoplifting is classified as a misdemeanor which can carry a hefty fine. So shoplifting is wrong, right?
You could probably tell how I feel about shoplifting by the headline of this article. Shoplifting is a crime in name only, like how hopping a turnstile and jaywalking are crimes. They’re technically crimes, but that shouldn’t stop anyone from doing it. There are many reasons that people shoplift: maybe you’re a kleptomaniac who can’t control your urges, maybe you get a thrill from it or maybe it’s just the most convenient thing to do.
Firstly, we must identify what shoplifting is and how widespread it is. I define shoplifting as discreetly taking a product that you plan to use from a store without paying for it. According to Capital One Shopping, over 9% of the US population, or over 29 million Americans, are shoplifters – so you’ll be in large company.
When you research shoplifting statistics and articles, you’ll find that most businesses conflate the petty and mostly non-confrontational crime of shoplifting with more serious and brazen crimes like violent smash-and-grabs and organized threats. They all get combined into the catch-all term of “organized retail crime.” Retailers have a vested interest in drumming up moral panic about shoplifting to pressure lawmakers into enforcing harsher punishments and increased surveillance as well as justifying unpopular policies like locking up deodorant and toothpaste as a way to “deter shoplifters.” The National Retail Federation estimated that only 0.07% of total sales are lost due to the broad crime of “organized retail theft” – hardly a drop in the bucket.
Shoplifting correlates heavily with age. The Office of Justice Programs found that about 67% of shoplifters are under the age of 30 with about 32% of those being teenagers or younger. I’m sure you’ve seen many of your peers shoplift, and I want you to ask yourselves, how many times have these incidents become violent?
An obvious justification for shoplifting is financial hardship that prevents a person from being unable to afford groceries. We often think about shoplifting as a personal trouble, a failing in an individual’s morality that allows them to shoplift. We don’t evaluate the social institutions that make basic needs inaccessible for many people. One of the most shoplifted goods is baby formula, and it paints a grim picture that such an essential product is so expensive and so scarce that people have to resort to stealing it.
So, if you do have the money to buy the goods you need, should you still shoplift? Well, with how unfriendly superstores have become for the consumer, that answer becomes a bit more complicated. Inflation has caused normally affordable items to become overpriced, causing a strain on the consumer. Pair that with understaffed stores that result in workers having too many responsibilities to effectively help customers. And oh, the self-checkout lines – don’t get me started on the self-checkout lines! I mean, they’re practically begging you to shoplift. The only security is an inattentive teenage cashier checking their phone to see when their shift finally ends.
But not all shoplifting is created equal. The right and wrong of shoplifting doesn’t come from what you’re stealing or how much you’re stealing but who you’re stealing from. You shouldn’t be shoplifting from your local markets and small businesses that are just trying to make a living. But the mega-franchises and superstores are fair game. These companies don’t care about you, only your pockets, so why should you care about their profit margins?
[email protected] • May 29, 2024 at 7:16 am
What an utterly infantile, illogical, immoral, and, frankly, stupid article. Truly embarrassing in its fallacious pronouncements, stated with breezy confidence by the dim-witted author. Kindergarten students evince a stronger sense of morality and logic than this witless college student.
"Mega-franchises" and "Superstores" employ millions of American workers. They are owned by retirees, pension funds and employees who hold company stock. The notion that stealing from publicly-traded, large companies is somehow not only allegedly morally acceptable, but, a laudable and victimless crime, is truly asinine and offensive. And, further, law-abiding consumers and citizens ultimately pay the price for rampant and pervasive shoplifting, in the form of higher prices for goods; fewer jobs resulting from store closures; and, property devaluation and blighted neighborhoods, resulting from a paucity of businesses and the convenience that they offer.
[email protected] • May 1, 2024 at 1:17 am
If you run a "big business" out of business, what will happen to the people they employ? Should they steal too? Should we run these local businesses out of business by pushing everyone to order through Amazon Prime? Hmmmm
[email protected] • May 1, 2024 at 1:10 am
I am speechless with how incomprehensible this rationale is. You shouldn’t steal AT ALL.
[email protected] • Apr 2, 2024 at 10:39 pm
He’s right. Big grocery chains don’t care you. They only care about your dollars. Fcuk them like they fcuk you.
[email protected] • Jan 16, 2024 at 8:33 pm
Who ever wrote this article is a fucking moron.
[email protected] • Oct 1, 2023 at 3:40 pm
complete braindead article. You would be the first person irate if someone stole your I-Phone checking in with the police every few hours. Stealing is stealing, shame on the Chronicle writers for fearing to say NO to this article.
[email protected] • Sep 28, 2023 at 12:53 pm
One of the worst and most naive takes I have ever had the unfortunate privilege of reading.
“An obvious justification for shoplifting is financial hardship that prevents a person from being unable to afford groceries.“—what about the Louis Vuitton & Gucci stores? Dick’s Sporting Goods & the Apple stores? A lot of nutritional replenishment comes from commiting theft in those grocery stores right?
The length of self-checkout lines and your inability to remain patient is justification for you to steal? Is this article supposed to be satirical?
Shoplifting is indicitive of one’s own moral failures and shortcomings. It’s not a collective of martyrs trying to put food on the plates of their families. You seem to engage in this type of behavior yourself so with that I say, “shame on you”.
I understand you’re only a freshman in college but this is nothing but pablum mixed with a very shallow and elementary understanding about the nature and causes of these issues. You’re not even criticizing those commiting the crimes. You’re championing them and even giving justifications and advice on why they commit these crimes and where to commit them.
READ MORE. EDUCATE YOURSELF. Formulate an opinion that is actually yours and not some bitter and resentful take that your ideologically-possessed
professors (who should have their credentials pulled into question immediately) spew to you.