I can’t speak to foodbanks in all areas, but the ones I’m familiar with give you one week of food, and you can only go once a month. If you have any special dietary needs (allergies) or babies that need formula or diapers, a week is definitely a help, but what about the rest of the month?
In my area, I’ve seen one bedroom apartments go from $700 to $1,200. And that’s the base line. I looked recently, and couldn’t find a one bedroom for under $1,200 where my adult daughter lives. The same adult daughter pays almost $600 for a room in an apartment with three other people.
People are going hungry, because they work full time and barely make their rent. Our groceries have gone up an insane amount. A 4L of milk was around $5. It’s now over $8. Bread is over $4 a loaf. People who struggled but managed a few years ago are now desperate.
If I saw someone stealing food or baby formula? No, I didn’t.
If people are genuinely concerned about the rise of shoplifting, they need to look at the root causes. Morals are wonderful, but if you’ve got a baby you don’t have formula or diapers for, children without food in their bellies, I’m guessing that theft swiftly becomes a viable option.
It’s not shoplifting food that’s the moral failing, imo. It’s that we live in a society that allows people to go hungry.
And make no mistake, the corporations that own the grocery stores aren’t losing money. Record profits happening there. They claim to pass shoplifting on to the customers, but really? They could easily absorb those costs and not notice. They use it as a defence to explain rising costs, so people turn on each other rather than get mad at the CEOs getting millions in bonuses.
Personal property theft is one thing, imo. Stealing food from a billion dollar profit company is another, especially when corporations are responsible for the COL inflation everyone is suffering from. Betting if they brought prices down, shoplifting would decrease dramatically.