ONE 
                NOT ONE
              part 
                seven:
              
                SHOPLIFTING 
              compulsion, 
                crime - or getting your own back ?
              
               
              
              One 
                of the most potent and ridiculous Capitalist Doctrines
              
              
              
                 
                  |     NOTE: This 
                      web-page was written before the 'Banking Crisis' of 2008.It is now obvious that shoplifting is a tiny matter
 compared with the shameless criminality of banks in lending 
                      (at interest)
 what they did not have and engaging in malpractices which 
                      cost millions of people real money.
 Anyone working in a bank or 'the financial services industry'
 (the Mammon of Usury) has voluntarily implicated him/herself
 in the greatest financial swindle of all time.
 Supermarkets, themselves swindling their suppliers, as well 
                      as small businesses,
 are swindled least of all by petty shoplifters.
   In 
                      recent years the Criminal Justice System in the UK(which I prefer to call the Imperium of England
 and its Immediate Celtic Colonies)
 has started to take the view that petty pilfering is a technical 
                      offence
 - like not wearing a seat-belt, or speeding -
 rather than a moral outrage.
 Police now impose statutory fines on the spot
 which must be paid within 28 days.
 These fines are similar to those imposed for minor motoring 
                      offences.
   Nevertheless, 
                      it remains true thatthe world is run by the criminally insane, high on greed,
 psychopaths who make millions work so that they can play
 power games, make war on small nations,
 manufacture better and better killing-machines,
 run vast prison services and gulags,
 and divest a teeming planet of its resources,
 its flora and its fauna.
 These 
                      people are bankers, investors,Venture Capitalists,
 the Christian Churches (especially the Vatican) :
 the rich who want to get richer.
 They 
                      are also Crime Ministersand International Agonisations
 including those involved in 'Aid'.
 These 
                      people define Civilisation,shrivelisation;
 they make sure that the poor breed ever more
 to provide labour.
 And 
                      when the poor start to get richer,they stamp on their replacement underclass.
 They 
                      want to urbanise us all,drivelise the world, manufacture our minds
 as well as all the rubbish they have sold us
 as they tell us it's what we need in order to
 hold our brainwashed heads up high.
 The 
                      barbed-wire rollof the World Dictatorship
 of Consumer Capitalism
 slowly unwinds
 and reduces us all.
     | 
              
                
              
                IN MOST 
                OF THE WORLD PILFERING
                aka SHOPLIFTING 
                IS A CRIME 
                
              
                ...which, if you are a poor person of a beautiful colour 
                living in the Southern states of the USA, 
                could get you put away in jail
                for a very long time indeed.
              
              
              
                
                  |  
                      May 2016
 Stealing small amounts of food to stave 
                        off hunger is not a crime, Italy's highest court of appeal has ruled.
 
 Judges overturned a theft conviction against Roman Ostriakov
 after he stole cheese and sausages worth €4.07 (£3 
                        / $4.50) from a supermarket.
 Mr Ostriakov, a homeless man of Ukrainian background, 
                        had taken the food
 "in the face of the immediate and essential need 
                        for nourishment", the Court of Cassation decided.
 Therefore it was not a crime, it said.
 A fellow customer informed the store's security in 2011, 
                        when Mr Ostriakov attempted to leave a Genoa supermarket 
                        with two pieces of cheese and a packet of sausages in 
                        his pocket - but paid only for breadsticks. In 2015, Mr Ostriakov was convicted 
                        of theft and sentenced to six months in gaol plus a €100 fine.
 read 
                        more =>   | 
              
                
               
              
                
                   
                    |   In 2005, the 
                        cost of retail "shrinkage" in the U.K. was £4.3 
                        billion: 1.33% of total turnover.An estimated 38% of this - some £1.5 billion - was 
                        due to theft by employees, some of them, of course, security 
                        staff.
 This 
                        page was written a few years before an article appeared 
                        in The Sunday Times (London), of 17th December 
                        2006, averring that shoplifting had now become a serious 
                        pursuit of the hypocritical rich, who claimed to be "resisting" 
                        huge mark-ups, third-world sweat-shops, military dictatorships, 
                        globalisation, and even Swiss smugness - while, of course, 
                        getting something for nothing, which seems to become more 
                        important the richer one becomes. There are two 
                        million people defrauded in the UK every year.These are mostly scams perpetrated on ordinary gullible 
                        people.
 There are very few prosecutions - because the police need 
                        proper evidence,
 and, moreover, the victims are too embarrassed or ashamed 
                        to 'make a fuss'
 and possibly make a bad secret situation public and worse.
    | 
                
               
               
              
                If you are seen to shoplift in France, or Spain, or Germany or 
                Italy, or any number of European countries, the shop-owner or 
                the security staff will, generally, either come up to you before 
                you leave the store and remind you to pay for the items you have 
                concealed about your person, or they will accost you as you leave 
                the store, bring you to an office, and, with very serious faces, 
                make you pay for the goods that you attempted to steal. 
              There 
                is sometimes a queue of other shoplifters at this busy 
                'alternative till'. 
              Sometimes, 
                they will ask you to pay 10% more than their value - to cover 
                the costs of hiring security-staff, or as a little bonus to the 
                diligent shop-assistant. They sell their goods.
              In 
                France, Italy etc. shoplifting is regarded as a technical 
                offence (like exceeding a speed-limit), committed by students, 
                the poor, the powerless and depressed - whereas in the more vindictive 
                anglophone countries it is regarded as a moral crime against 
                society.
              
                 
 
              Insofar as there are local newspapers in France,
                shoplifting and other trivial crimes are not gleefully reported.
                This marks a striking difference from anglophone cultures
                whose newspapers are based on the principle of lurid and squalid 
                'revelation'.
               
                
                Because of this, in anglophone countries the pilferer/thief will 
                be watched, and allowed to leave the store. Then they will apprehend 
                her or him dramatically, frog-march him or her back into the store 
                - and call the police. 
              Singer-Celebrity 
                Courtney Love's youthful theft of a Kiss tee-shirt from 
                a Woolworth's in Eugene, Oregon actually led to a period in reform 
                school!
              In 
                many stores there are dummy cameras to fool shoplifters. There 
                are also hidden cameras in different locations designed to entrap 
                shoplifters. This is, of course, illegal. Security firms are 
                hired on their (quantitative) reputation for catching shoplifters, 
                not (qualitatively) for preventing shoplifting (which is 
                incalculable). Entrapment helps to improve the statistics in a 
                competitive market. 
              
              
                Now 
                CCTV cameras in big stores are connected to the internet so that 
                neo-fascist collaborators can sit at home snooping - and inform 
                the store. 
                This is Big Brother Next Door. 
              
                In Germany, many shops quite legally display signs announcing 
                that any shop-lifter must pay a Fangprämie 
                or fine for being caught - perhaps 50 euros- to the store if caught. 
                
              This 
                excellent idea has, typically, been perverted in the US, and, 
                more recently Britain. In the past few years, police have shown 
                increasing reluctance to get involved in minor shop theft, so 
                in Britain and America a new, and much more scary development 
                has taken place: "Retail Loss Prevention" by 
                private firms.
              In 2009, over 
                80,000 people were apprehended in England alone and accused of 
                shoplifting. Although many of these accusations were false and 
                without any evidence whatsoever, the firm "Loss Prevention" 
                extracted money from their victims as "compensation" 
                for large shops (such as Boots) and as "Administration Fees".
              People were 
                blackmailed by threats of civil action, though not a single civil 
                action was initiated against a single accused person. A civil 
                action is an expensive business, so "Loss Prevention" 
                frightens people further by telling them they will have to pay 
                the substantial court costs if found guilty.
              But the BBC 
                followed one case where a woman had been falsely accused of stealing 
                lip gloss (!) from Boots. No evidence of theft could be produced 
                either by 'Loss Prevention' or Boots - whose statements conflicted 
                with each other as well as with the blackmailed victim. Had the 
                case gone to court (which in all likelihood it would not) it would 
                have been thrown out immediately, and the firm would have been 
                ordered to pay court costs. The victim might then have been in 
                a position to take "Loss Prevention" to court for wrongful 
                arrest and detention.
              'Loss 
                Prevention' has an impressive website which gives the 
                implies that it works with the police, entirely within the law, 
                is legally kosher, and suitably sanitised.
              
              But 
                they, like many 'Security Firms' actually entrap the genuine shoplifter 
                and ensure that a crime that has been committed, so that they 
                can apply pressure. This may seem to be better than calling the 
                police, a most expensive service for which they pay nothing. But 
                whereas the police require evidence and procedure, 'Retail Loss 
                Prevention' agencies do not.
              The 
                same attitude applies at a more basic level to motoring: there 
                are cameras and traps on British roads, but rarely any of the 
                elaborate 'slow-down' warnings that are so common in France. Radar 
                in Britain is used mainly to create offenders, whereas radar in 
                France triggers flashing lights to make the motorist slow down. 
                Traffic Wardens are instructed to entrap motorists who, for example, 
                park briefly in a 'Loading Bay', rather than to advise them to 
                park elsewhere. Thus I was once fined half of my weekly income, 
                a sum which a member of the lawnmowing classes would simply regard 
                as a fee.
              In 
                Germany, the act of theft is legally committed only if you hide 
                an item. The Bavarian State Supreme Court pronounced on this: 
                
                A person carrying an item openly, leaving a store in which 
                he is not physically prevented from leaving [by 
                way of a barrier etc.], to look at display racks on the 
                footpath in front, does not commit a theft of said item, even 
                when turning his back towards the racks...
              
              But 
                in the British Isles and USA the pilferer is marched to a store-room. 
                If a 'Retail Loss Prevention' firm is not plying its profitable 
                trade, he or she is kept there until the police arrive (which 
                may take a hour or two), he or she is then arrested, cautioned, 
                taken to a police-station, cautioned again, searched, put into 
                a cell to wait, then, after half an hour or an hour, interviewed 
                by detectives (!),fingerprinted, photographed and has a DNA swab 
                taken from his or her mouth. 
                Many forms are filled in. 
               
                A solicitor (attorney, advocate) may of course be requested by 
                the criminal. But if he or she, caught in flagrante, 'admits 
                guilt', this is hardly necessary.
              The 
                process and procedure take an hour or two, the thief is given 
                back the property that was taken off him on arrival at the police-station, 
                and is given a piece of paper instructing him or her to attend 
                a Court hearing on a certain date. My own experience of this proceeding 
                (for example after being caught in a Virgin Megastore - what happened 
                to them, ruthless Mr Branson ?) is that the police are themselves 
                embarrassed by the pettiness of it all, and are quite jokey while 
                they do their dreary duty.
              In 
                exceptional circumstances, the criminal is kept in the police 
                cell overnight and brought to Court the next day to be sentenced: 
                to pay a fine or go to prison. 
              All 
                this costs a great deal of money. The shop does not sell its goods.
                The police waste their time - most of it on paperwork. The criminal 
                court wastes everyone's time.
                The crime-statistics are boosted - and the prison population, 
                too. 
              No 
                wonder that the United Kingdom has the highest per-capital prison 
                population in Europe: higher even than Burma/Myanmar or Singapore. 
                It has not yet reached the gargantuan level of the United States, 
                which is less a land of the free than a land of the locked-up 
                - with notorious examples of prisoners on Death Row for 23 years, 
                just for having the 'wrong' (i.e. beautiful) skin-colour.
              
                
                  | 
                        In 
                        the past,many shopkeepers ended up
 with almost-empty tills,
 and went bankrupt,
 not because of shoplifters
 (deserving 
                        and undeserving poor, perhaps)who were transported to Australia
 for their crimes (at the very least),
 but 
                        because the rich and the titledand the undeserving rich
 were at liberty to refuse to pay their bills.
   | 
              
               
              
                techniques 
                of shoplifting > 
              
                 
 
                This strategy is not likely to succeed.
                If shoplifting in a large store, always wheel around 180 just 
                before the exit,
                just to check if anyone is following you.
               
                
                Unless the shoplifter (or framed citizen) is simply handed a form 
                of blackmail by a Retail Loss Prevention 'operative', with Notice 
                to Pay hundreds of pounds in 'compensation, fees and costs' on 
                pain of civil summons to a County Court, the compulsive shoplifter 
                goes through this procedure every time he or she is seen to steal 
                - whether it is a tin of beans, a book, or a box of candles. The 
                financial wizard, on the other hand, who makes millions of dollars 
                or pounds disappear, is rewarded with a million-dollar bonus. 
                Public servants "fiddle" expenses The 
                British law on theft, therefore, is a cynical mockery of natural 
                justice - as is a great deal of criminal law which allows the 
                Big and/or Important Boys (such a members of the august and obscure 
                Privy Council) to get off 'Scot-free', while the small fry are 
                fried.
              I 
                have seen a shoplifter taken away from Eason's, an ugly, aggressive 
                stationery chain-store with hidden cameras in Belfast, 
                for stealing a 2003 Diary which by the end of February 2003 had 
                been marked down to half-price and was almost unsaleable.
              So 
                much for a 'just and equitable society'!
              
              
                For 
                other shoplifting activity in Belfast click  HERE 
                . 
              
                
              It 
                has recently been established that activities involving "getting 
                one over", "pulling a fast one" on a person to 
                whom you are made to feel inferior, or on a business, organisation 
                or government, produce the same minor euphoria as certain drugs 
                or alcohol, and can easily become addictive.
              
              
                
                  | 
                      A survey conducted by discount vouchers peddlers VoucherCodesPro 
                        has revealed that one in five people admit to stealing 
                        items at supermarket self-service checkouts, adding up 
                        to £1.6bn ($2.4bn) worth of items every year, so 
                        frustrated are they with the ineptitude of their surrogate 
                        machine slaves. This has, naturally, been picked up by 
                        the press and featured in newspaper reports that pleasingly 
                        contain such archaic terms as pilfering (say it with me, 
                        folks: pilfering, isn't it nice?) but then again, we're 
                        threatening to prosecute people for "vagrancy" 
                        now, so why restrict our pre-industrial revolution nostalgia 
                        to language? We might as well go full-on medieval and 
                        chop these thieves' hands off. After all, £1.6bn 
                        (almost €2bn) does add up to a lot of unexpected 
                        items in a lot of bagging areas...
 read 
                        more  | 
              
               
              Inevitably 
                regarding all property as theft (from the planet), always withdrawing 
                (rather than withdrawn) I was a compulsive shoplifter. That is 
                to say: a white nigger. 
                I have been in prison for stealing groceries.
                Prison opened my eyes like those of the Sleeping Beauty.
                I learned that the British actually like (almost as much as the 
                punitive Americans) to have a large 'criminal' population to punish: 
                they live in a feudal culture of revenge and punishment. Anglo-Saxon 
                cultures inculcateinternal anger, which is vicious. Other 
                cultures tend to externalise their anger more - and are 
                despised by the Anglo-Saxon would-be world-rulers.
              Prison 
                was a strange and not unkind kind of awakening.
              
               
              My 
                life was shaped by shoplifted books which I could not possibly 
                have afforded:
                from Njál's Saga to Maupassant and Zola, from Euripides 
                to Dostoyevski, Kafka, Steinbeck, O'Connor, Hesse, Hamsun,and 
                Grass, (whom I was reading while my contemporaries were tinkering 
                with engines and talking about girls); later on came Vesaas, Genet, 
                Atwood, Atkinson...and a whole host of writers, for we are living 
                in the Golden Age of the novel in English, which I am so well-equipped 
                to appreciate.
                Thus otherwise-unavailable worlds and world-views were revealed 
                to me in 1950s Belfast - and since.
              Of course 
                I made use of the public libraries as much as I could (and still 
                do), but books (and more recently, CDs) seemed almost to be made 
                to be borrowed or stolen.
              
                Shoplifters of the world - Steal silence! Steal peace!
                You have nothing to lose but the pale shade of liberty.
              From 
                books I then graduated to vinyl records, and, living 'below 
                the bread-line' after I left home, to food, household equipment 
                and the occasional small objet d'art. 
              
                
                  | The London Review Bookshop reports a fondness by 
                    shoplifters for philosophers. Our most-stolen authors, in order, are Baudrillard, 
                    Freud, Nietzsche, Graham Greene, Lacan, Camus, and whoever 
                    puts together the Wisden Almanack.
 We caught a gent last Christmas with £400-worth 
                      of stolen books in his trousers and elsewhere. We grabbed 
                      all of the bags back, but he returned about half an hour 
                      later to reclaim a half-bottle of whisky and his dream journal, 
                      which had been at the bottom of one of the bags of stolen 
                      books. As we showed him the door he told us: I hope 
                      youll consider this in the iekian spirit, 
                      as a radical reappropriation of knowledge. | 
              
              In 
                the British Isles, shoplifters are regarded with the same smug 
                outrage that is visited on Roma.
                In France and Italy it is assumed that many people will steal 
                from shops if they get the chance. In Italy it is a kind of national 
                sport, like driving through red traffic-lights or ogling pretty 
                women.
              When 
                scheduled flights to Italy leave large British airports, police 
                are drafted in to arrest Italians - who have stolen small items 
                from the very-inviting airport shops - who are then very surprised 
                to miss their flight, spend the night in a police cell, and receive 
                a hefty fine in court the next day. So, if there are groups of 
                Italians at an airport, be very careful - even if you are a blond 
                Finn.
              So 
                far as I know, Frank Zappa was not a regular shoplifter.
              
                The Italians and the French, however, recognise that shoplifting 
                is the silliest and highest-risk of all 'crimes'. That it is, 
                in fact, a pseudo-crime.
                I am not talking about those people who shoplift, often to order, 
                items worth hundreds or thousands of pounds/dollars/euros. 
                The chances of an unprofessional being caught are very great, 
                and the return is tiny. 
                Small-time shoplifting is either a 'crime of opportunity', and 
                thus is undetected, or it is a (largely-female) pseudo-crime of 
                compulsion, whose in-store detection boosts the police success-rates. 
                The police detection-rate of real crime is unbelievably low: less 
                than 20%. 
              Shoplifting 
                is also a symptom of certain diseases of the brain, especially 
                Herpes simplex encephalitis. Although I suffer from some obscure 
                and minor kind of encephalitis (undiagnosed), my shoplifting probably 
                pre-dates it. In any case, I would not wish to justify shoplifting 
                on medical grounds, for the medicalisation of society has long 
                since exceeded the bounds of sanity. I would justify shoplifting 
                from all but small and specialist shops on the same grounds as 
                the punishers: supermarkets and chain-stores rip off their suppliers 
                (and ultimately the planet) causing the poor to get poorer, 
                themselves and their shareholders and Elected Representatives 
                and rulers to get ever richer.
              
                
                The busiest time for anti-shoplifting goons is midday/lunchtime. 
              
              
                Neither the police (of course), nor the judiciary, nor the legal 
                profession have raised their voices to prevent the ridiculous 
                waste of money involved in prosecuting people (usually women) 
                who pilfer underwear, food, or marker-pens. If shops insist on 
                doing everything to make their goods tempting, they should do 
                their own dirty work. They happily make a profit of up to 1000% 
                on what they sell - partly, I suppose, to cover the huge costs 
                of CCTV cameras and the staff to operate and maintain them.
              Britain 
                with its notorious voyeuristic culture is completely besotted 
                by Closed-circuit Television systems. Whole towns are under minute 
                supervision, and many open roads, too. The insane 'War against 
                Terror' is even more disquieting than you think.
              
 shoplifting 
                poem by william carlos williams
shoplifting 
                poem by william carlos williams
              
                While Anglophones love to have criminals to fear and punish, they 
                are amazingly indulgent towards big-time criminals such as Stock-market 
                insider-fraud, tax-evaders, and other 'white-collar' criminals 
                who defraud not only the state but pension funds as well. These 
                are high-status macho criminals. Shoplifting is a female crime 
                of low status - and, of course, the lower the status of the crime 
                the more severe the relative punishment. Fiddling expenses, on 
                the other hand, is almost never prosecuted. It is, more even than 
                'crimes against humanity', the most common crime of executive 
                Heads of State.
                Had Jean Genet been British, 
                he would have been executed before he became one of Europe's greatest 
                and most uncomfortable writers. Genet observed that police depend 
                on criminals for their job-security and thus are bound into a 
                vicious circle. The same is true of the anti-shoplifting industry, 
                which now includes not only 'consultants' but counsellors - richly 
                feeding off and dependent upon petty criminals.
                Only in Britain (and, of course, the United States) would the 
                compulsive and foolish Oscar Wilde have been so viciously treated.
              
                Sitting like a 
                normal at a desk
                ogling a screen
                I know that what is normal
                is grotesque.
              
                 
 
              
              
                According to the Facts 
                About Shoplifting link 
                on the (semi-literate) Shoplifters 
                Alternative website, one out of every 11 people in the 
                United States is a shoplifter. 
                How denunciatory the other ten people would be is harder to establish. 
                Ethnic/cultural origin and family background would play a part. 
                Probably one or two would regard it as relatively harmless and 
                understandable (given the way goods are displayed in shops where 
                staff congregate talking around a till), while one or two would 
                regard it as more outrageous than sexual harassment, or religious 
                or racial intolerance. 
              Shoplifters Alternative 
                tells us that now, at last, shoplifting is being looked at as 
                yet another Process Addiction over which some people could 
                be powerless. (A Process Addiction is a compulsive behaviour in 
                which a person becomes dependent on the whole behavioural process 
                for a result, rather than on a chemical. Gambling, sex, collecting 
                things and ambition are just four obvious, different and much-encouraged 
                examples of process addictions.)
                An addictive 'rush' can be induced by specific risky behaviours 
                that can alter a person's emotional state through the release 
                of adrenaline. As with jay-walking (or bungee-jumping, rock-climbing 
                or bomb-defusing) the addictive effect of shoplifting is enhanced 
                by success - i.e. by not being apprehended. People continue to 
                do it even after they are caught and shamed and fined or sent 
                to prison.
              
              
                 
                  |  
                      There 
                        are many acceptable things
 as dishonest as shoplifting:
 being a judge or jihadist,
 for example; dyeing one's hair
 and shaving - and pretending to care.
   | 
              
              
              Shoplifters Alternative 
                defines two 
                categories of shoplifters: professional and non-professional. 
                A professional shoplifter steals to resell merchandise (usually 
                for a fraction of its retail value), perhaps in order to satisfy 
                other addictive behaviour such as drug-taking. Although there 
                are gangs of professionals who steal very expensive items, most 
                professionals are poor.
              The 
                non-professional shoplifter is someone who obtains some emotional 
                satisfaction from the process of stealing successfully. This individual 
                is not stealing just for monetary or material gain but (also) 
                to medicate a feeling of injustice or an internal conflict. 
              Reasons 
                for non-professional shoplifting include the attempt to overcome 
                unresolved issues toward an authority figure; a sense of social 
                injustice; a sense of entitlement to overpriced goods (or due 
                to the aggressive environment of the shop); the relief of stress 
                through the adrenaline rush associated with the process of stealing; 
                the abatement of emotional discomfort linked to feelings of depression, 
                anxiety, anger, grief, powerlessness or boredom. 
              
              Walmart (Asda in the BritIsles) is, of course, 
                the greatest robber baron in history.
                The world's poorest are forced by supermarkets to subsidise, by 
                disease, starvation and labour,
                the underpriced groceries and clothing of the rich. 
              
                In an article titled "Shoplifting Can Be Addictive" 
                by Shoplifters Alternative, 
                the authors claim to describe the process that occurs as the shoplifter 
                enters a store until he or she leaves. This alleged dynamic "involves 
                a concurrent continuum of tension and excitement as the shoplifter 
                contrives to conceal an item and eventually or quickly leave the 
                store with it. Tension builds as the shoplifter encounters potential 
                threats to the process and a sensation of excitement each time 
                a possible threat, such as a salesperson or hidden camera, is 
                overcome. The ultimate "high" occurs when the shoplifter's 
                tension turns into excitement as he or she successfully leaves 
                the store without being caught. This "high" temporarily 
                relieves the emotional dilemma, whether positive or negative, 
                that precipitated the theft process."
              This 
                wacky analysis has been dreamed up by someone who has never shoplifted. 
                To some (especially poor) shoplifters he whole process is stressful. 
                Leaving a shop without being apprehended does not necessarily 
                produce much of a "high" - it can just as easily produce 
                a feeling of relief. To complicate the complex, a Shoplifters 
                Alternative survey 
                found that 80% of shoplifters said that they didn't even think 
                about getting caught.
              In 
                another piece of tergid jargon, they say that published reports 
                suggest that there are no specific demographics that delineate 
                the profile of the 'typical' shoplifter from others. However, 
                it has been found that adults steal more than teenagers (only 
                a small proportion of offenders caught are under 18), and that 
                one third of those caught find it difficult not to re-offend. 
                (In France I still steal food items from supermarkets, such as 
                cheeses or coffee under my armpits or in underpants. In Northern 
                Ireland I do the same in Asda-Walmart, just to keep my hand 
                in, for there the tag-alarms are often not manned, so printer-cartridges 
                can be stolen even without cutting off the security-tag!)
              Shoplifters Alternative 
                 sensibly considers 
                shoplifting to be distinct from kleptomania - because 'the stealing-behaviour' 
                of a kleptomaniac is impulsive rather than due to a compulsive 
                psychological/physiological need. Kleptomania is also not premeditative. 
                
              
              
                 
                  |  
                      What 
                        many store-owners refuse to realise is that crude fluorescent 
                        lighting, harsh décor, screaming displays of goods 
                        (not to mention tinnily-broadcast aggressive music and 
                        advertising) encourage not only panic-attacks but shoplifting 
                        as well.
 On 
                        the other hand, some 
                        supermarkets (especially in France, where employment costs 
                        are very high) now consider they can save more through 
                        staff wastage than they lose by stock wastage.   | 
              
              
                Shoplifters tend, of course, to regard their (often infrequent) 
                activity as a victimless crime, no matter what background they 
                have. After the first occasion, many people quickly become addicted 
                to the little satisfaction of stealing something and getting away 
                with it. Some, indeed, may not plan to steal when they first go 
                into a mall or hypermarket or store, but they can't help it once 
                they're inside. This suggests that there is, after all, no difference 
                between addictive shoplifting and kleptomania.
              Other 
                websites remark that soon as a new anti-shoplifting measure is 
                introduced - whether directed against theft by staff (more than 
                50% of the loss-value of all store-theft) or by potential customers 
                - people find some way to beat it. Stores, needless to say, spend 
                millions of dollars trying to stop shoplifters: a bit like trying 
                to catch water in a sieve. The cost of prevention and of shrinkage 
                are passed on in the retail price.
              
                 
                  |  
                      In 
                        the 'good old days' of the 1960s, before global warming 
                        was even dreamt of (though the hideous overpopulation 
                        of the planet was a concern for some), I could walk into 
                        a record and hi-fi store with a large raffia bag and casually 
                        put a big Bang & Olufsen tuner-amplifier into it and 
                        walk out. With the same bag I subsequently stole many 
                        LPs - classical, of course. My large raincoat, bag and 
                        beard were simply ignored in favour of my 'polite' accent 
                        and interest in Sibelius symphonies - even though I bought 
                        nothing in the store!
 I am, if anything, ever-anomalous. Today, I would have 
                        to be much more subtle and savvy. But today, such items 
                        can be obtained so cheaply that I prefer, in the lovely 
                        twilight of my life, to buy them through eBay or shoplift 
                        them without fear of prosecution through Torrent (P2P) 
                        and other sites.
   | 
              
              "Experts" 
                say that the most popular stores affected by shoplifters are grocery 
                stores. 
                Thefts from retail outlets occur mostly in urban main shopping 
                areas. The figures for the city of Sheffield (England) have remained 
                steady over several years at about 3,000 - which is, of course, 
                is an unquantifiable fraction of offences committed.
              
              Apart 
                from the paid-for carton of apple-juice, this man is also carrying
                2 x 250g packets of coffee in his armpits, two Rocamadour cheeses
                in his underwear, and a flat sheep's cheese in each pocket.
               
              
               
              The 
                picture below is criminal in Britain, because one of the photographs 
                involved in this picture was taken in a slaughterhouse. It is 
                criminal even to take photographs inside a meat-market. It is 
                a crime to piss against a wall.
                It is a crime for a man to have sexual, especially non-penetrative, 
                fun with two or more other men. 
                Never mind that abattoirs are crimes against nature.
              
              The 
                same viciousness is apparent in America, where it is also a crime 
                to take photographs in slaughterhouses.
                It is interesting that anglophone Britain and America are two 
                of the most moralistic and militaristic Empires in history - and 
                Britain the most criminal empire in history - precisely 
                because of .their 
                moralistic hypocrisy riding upon an obsession with achievement 
                like Pelion on Ossa.
                This (and their attitude to shoplifting) may have something to 
                do with the adversarial (rather than investigative) basis of their 
                legal systems.
                
              What 
                a sense of satisfaction I had when I gave away my British Passport.
                I have contributed nothing (for example through direct taxation) 
                to the malignant state, enriched by slavery, that invented capitalism 
                and its ingenious machines, and waged war against the world for 
                three hundred years with crimes against humanity and nature, including 
                speciecide all over the planet, genocide in Australia & Tasmania, 
                and attempted or partial genocide in India, Burma, Canada, Southern 
                Africa - and Highland Scotland.
              
              I 
                am a pseudo-criminal in a criminal state - a state which actually 
                celebrates its most monstrous monarch, Henry VIII, the Saddam 
                Hussein of the 16th century. I have gone back to shops which caught 
                and successfully prosecuted me for trivial appropriation-of-goods 
                offences, and I have stolen ten times as much stuff to give away 
                to Charity Shops and the like. As with the 'War on Terror' 
                and the 'War on Drugs', the war on shoplifters cannot 
                be won.
              2020