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This Country is broken. 18:24 - Aug 13 with 1264 viewsMK1

Theft from Charity shops is at an all time high. I didn't even know that people stole from them, but it's up 20% nationwide from last year.
Gutter fodder, the lot of them.

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This Country is broken. on 18:30 - Aug 13 with 1208 viewsjontysnut

I was in Wakefield recently and a few charity shops were connected by walkie talkie ( or whatever the modern version is) sharing the movements of known wrong 'uns.
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This Country is broken. on 18:31 - Aug 13 with 1196 viewshomer_123

This Country is broken. on 18:30 - Aug 13 by jontysnut

I was in Wakefield recently and a few charity shops were connected by walkie talkie ( or whatever the modern version is) sharing the movements of known wrong 'uns.


Cups and string?

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This Country is broken. on 18:32 - Aug 13 with 1190 viewsSwansea_Blue

Yeah, all shops seem to be struggling. The amount of items that have security tags on them is getting ridiculous. Even stuff for just a few quid. And loads of foods. Are people getting increasingly immoral/scummy, or are they increasingly desperate?

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This Country is broken. on 18:35 - Aug 13 with 1173 viewsAxeldalai_lama

Whilst I understand your point, how desperate must you be to steal from a charity shop? I doubt they're selling it on down the pub for a huge profit, I imagine it'll be clothes for themselves or kids, maybe toys for kids too. None of which makes it right of course, but possibly easier to forgive.
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This Country is broken. on 19:00 - Aug 13 with 1070 viewsMK1

This Country is broken. on 18:35 - Aug 13 by Axeldalai_lama

Whilst I understand your point, how desperate must you be to steal from a charity shop? I doubt they're selling it on down the pub for a huge profit, I imagine it'll be clothes for themselves or kids, maybe toys for kids too. None of which makes it right of course, but possibly easier to forgive.


No forgiveness from me. People donate to try and help deserving Charities, not low life who think the world owes them something.

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This Country is broken. on 19:18 - Aug 13 with 1008 viewstonybied

Is it scummy people are getting more common and stealing from easy targets, or is it that more people are getting desperate and struggling to survive, turning to this as a way to get by. As pointed out by another poster it's hardly likely it's being done to sell on and make a profit. It's just another side effect of the cost of living crisis, is it not?

Perhaps I'm just naive.
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This Country is broken. on 19:18 - Aug 13 with 1001 viewsbartyg

This Country is broken. on 19:00 - Aug 13 by MK1

No forgiveness from me. People donate to try and help deserving Charities, not low life who think the world owes them something.


Compassion you describe that is lacking from your posts.

Who, pray tell, are the charities set up for?

Maybe we should be considering what is driving increasing numbers of people to steal food and clothes.
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This Country is broken. on 19:37 - Aug 13 with 904 viewsMK1

This Country is broken. on 19:18 - Aug 13 by bartyg

Compassion you describe that is lacking from your posts.

Who, pray tell, are the charities set up for?

Maybe we should be considering what is driving increasing numbers of people to steal food and clothes.


If I donate clothes to The British Heart Foundation, I expect them to make some money from them. It's not just hard up people who shop in Charity shops by the way. Just because you can't afford something, doesn't give you the right to just take it. Maybe ask if they have clothes in the stores that they may be able to let you have for free or at a discounted price. Some of the clothes donated don't make it to the shop floor. No need for theft.

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This Country is broken. on 19:49 - Aug 13 with 845 viewsBlueBadger

This Country is broken. on 19:18 - Aug 13 by tonybied

Is it scummy people are getting more common and stealing from easy targets, or is it that more people are getting desperate and struggling to survive, turning to this as a way to get by. As pointed out by another poster it's hardly likely it's being done to sell on and make a profit. It's just another side effect of the cost of living crisis, is it not?

Perhaps I'm just naive.


Realistically, probably a little from column A and a little from column B. We've spent the last 15 years as a country fostering a culture of intolerance to anyone poor, vulnerable or 'different' and actively legislating and making policy about it.

This will make a lot of people fall into one of these two camps.

[Post edited 13 Aug 19:51]

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This Country is broken. on 20:01 - Aug 13 with 744 viewsPendejo

I used to volunteer at a hub that gave everything away... and people still "stole" stuff, by that I mean the general rule was "take what you need, no need for greed" there were various groups that would take everything off the rail, any and every size.

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This Country is broken. on 20:17 - Aug 13 with 675 viewsJ2BLUE

I remember laughing at a sign in a charity shop saying thieves would be prosecuted when I was a kid. It seemed so absurd anyone would steal from there.

It's now the reason I don't put anything in those charity clothing banks as some people dig out the donations and go through them.

No doubt part is desperation. Part is people being absolute scum.

Truly impaired.
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This Country is broken. on 22:21 - Aug 13 with 498 viewsSwansea_Blue

This Country is broken. on 19:18 - Aug 13 by tonybied

Is it scummy people are getting more common and stealing from easy targets, or is it that more people are getting desperate and struggling to survive, turning to this as a way to get by. As pointed out by another poster it's hardly likely it's being done to sell on and make a profit. It's just another side effect of the cost of living crisis, is it not?

Perhaps I'm just naive.


I asked the same question as I’m unsure (naive?) too. A very quick search suggests desperation is part of the story. Just so unnecessary given all the money flowing around. Surely as the 6th(?) richest society we can find a way to not leave people so desperate that they resort to having to steal to eat. It’s a travesty.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c07zr9vpveyo.amp

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This Country is broken. on 23:20 - Aug 13 with 405 viewsStNeotsBlue

This Country is broken. on 18:35 - Aug 13 by Axeldalai_lama

Whilst I understand your point, how desperate must you be to steal from a charity shop? I doubt they're selling it on down the pub for a huge profit, I imagine it'll be clothes for themselves or kids, maybe toys for kids too. None of which makes it right of course, but possibly easier to forgive.


You'll get the odd old girl/boy who gets their thrills from nicking stuff just for the sake of it. But they're a tiny minority, the majority will be smackheads and crack addled sorts who are desperate for nothing else but their next score.

Needs to be more education at an early age of the dangers of drugs, more focus on rehabilitation rather than lock them up to punish purely for sake of appearing to do something, rather than actually doing anything that might produce good results for all our society.
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This Country is broken. on 06:54 - Aug 14 with 253 viewsAxeldalai_lama

This Country is broken. on 23:20 - Aug 13 by StNeotsBlue

You'll get the odd old girl/boy who gets their thrills from nicking stuff just for the sake of it. But they're a tiny minority, the majority will be smackheads and crack addled sorts who are desperate for nothing else but their next score.

Needs to be more education at an early age of the dangers of drugs, more focus on rehabilitation rather than lock them up to punish purely for sake of appearing to do something, rather than actually doing anything that might produce good results for all our society.


Forgive my ignorance, but my local charity shop sells 3 dvds CDs and books for £1. Second hand clothes for a couple of quid, toys from 50p. How are these crack addicts finding a market who are fine with people's second hand goods, but won't pay 33p for a book, or £1 or £2 for a toy or t shirt? And even if there was such a market they'd be in and out of the charity shop with armfuls of stuff before making enough for their habit, Shirley?

Like I said I'm almost definitely missing something, so happy to be educated.

For clarity I'm not supporting these people or saying it's right on any level, of course stealing is wrong, just seeking to understand as the picture painted by some here doesn't add up to me.
[Post edited 14 Aug 6:55]
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This Country is broken. on 07:06 - Aug 14 with 219 viewsSonOfSpock

Shoplifting has effectively been decriminalised so sadly people will do it anywhere. It's even poorer form to do it on charity shops
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This Country is broken. on 08:37 - Aug 14 with 92 viewsDJR

Public Perception vs. Reality

Public perception of crime often diverges from reality. A 2024 survey by think tank More in Common revealed that 69% of respondents believed crime rates were rising. However, data indicates that most types of crime have been in decline for decades.

The disconnect can be attributed to:

Media Influence: Sensationalist headlines focus on high-profile crimes, reinforcing fears.

Selective Political Rhetoric: Politicians often highlight specific data points to support their agendas.

Personal Experience: Individual encounters with crime or anecdotal evidence can skew perceptions.

This misalignment has real-world consequences, influencing voter behavior and policy priorities.
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