let's talk about shoplifting. have you ever done it/do you still do it? have any techniques for sharing? you think it makes a difference shoplifting from a big supermarket chain or a small neighborhood shop?
i became interested in shoplifting because i'm writing a novel where one of the characters shoplifts, so i tried doing it myself to make the writing more realisitc.
so far i've snatched a few minor things both from big chains and smaller local shops, though i can't say i felt a difference. people usually say shoplifting from a big store is okay while doing it in small shops isn't, but in my opinion both acts are not okay by nature so it doesn't really matter where you do it. most employees don't get paid enough to care about people stealing in big stores anyways, and realistically you're not making a small shop go bankrupt just for one chocolate bar or something.
in regards to the act itself, most of the time it just comes down to putting something in your pocket and getting out of the store fast and acting natural. i reckon doing so in [current year] is even easier since you can hide a big portion of your face with a facemask without looking odd. what do you think?
Shops are heavy.
It's 2021 and it's impossible to lift these 2021 shops by hand.
>>1
Watch LEVERAGE and youtube "The Gentleman Thief"
If you don't look like a poor person, it's not that hard to get away with.
Fun fact: google 'female shoplifters'. My friends who've worked in convenience stores tell me about them all the time. They always eye the women. They frequently steal candy and bubblegum.
I don't understand why convenience stores keep condoms behind the counter. If someone needs condoms so much that they're willing to steal them, they probably really do need them.
I am unsure as to what possible occasions emergency condoms are required
The following redpill is gonna be hard for you to swallow. I invite you to watch the movie Manbiki Kazoku (Shoplifters) for a realistic impression of everyday Japanese life. Japan isn't clean, sparkly and odor-neutral like in your animes. The Japanese live like cattle on a farm, cramped into tiny one-room "apartments" that are filled to the brim with trash. The only reason you don't notice how dirty it is is because there's not enough room on the floor for piles of dirt and dust to form. They come home from shopping at a konbini and sit down at their floor-table thing without even washing their hands. They sleep in futons which they never wash (too big for a washing machine), they simply "air them out" every now and then. Yes, that's right, they sleep in their own fermented sweat and maybe piss until they buy a new futon. The summers in Japan are very hot and humid, yet the Japanese don't shower after getting home. They wipe their sweat into the furniture (which they never clean) and take turns in bathing in the same bathwater later at night. They slurp their ramen noodles for banmeshi and spill thick drops of grease everywhere. You can't even clean the floor properly since it's covered with tatami, mats made of flimsy rice weed, which are destroyed if you even step on them forcefully, let alone wipe them. They have no proper doors or windows, just paper-thin covers that slide to the side which are always open in summer, meaning the inside of their "homes" is teeming with insects. In winter they sit inside at a kotatsu in full winter clothing because they don't know about isolation in the 21st century. Do I need to go on? I guess you're dizzy by now. "How could the country I adored for most of my adult life be such a backwater shithole?" I hear you squeal in disbelief. I know you weren't ready for this. But reality doesn't care about your feelings. I promise, you will be better off knowing this a few years down the road.
I once stole some apple Chewits and sent them to my DQN sweetie-pie!