Daydreamer
Scatterbrained Creative
I was discussing school memories with a friend of mine recently whilst we shared anecdotes from the past. One of the moments I mentioned was when a teacher of mine asked me a question concerning morality.
"Let's say that you're in a supermarket and you witness a mother with her young child. She steals a few food items, such as a few carrots or some grapes for their child to eat. What do you do?"
The teacher then proceeded to call on students individually, asking for their answer. Everyone essentially gave the same response of "I would report it to management", until it was my turn.
"You'd also report it, right?" the teacher asked. I shook my head in disagreement. She looked at me with a great deal of bewildered shock. It was clear that she had become rather weary with boredom listening to the same reply repeatedly, and it was fairly entertaining seeing her suddenly jolt back into focusing. "Wait, so, you wouldn't report it?" the teacher inquired.
I explained my reasoning, how I'd give them the benefit of the doubt and assume that the mother was struggling financially, and whilst these actions are technically illegal I can tolerate someone who finds it difficult to support themselves and their children acting in such a way more than if it was someone who is well-off. Tracking down the manager just to report a minor theft done by a family who might be in a bad place seems rather insensitive and cruel if you ask me.
Of course it would be an entirely different matter if they stole a TV, but I think a few grapes or carrots is understandable. In fact, there are some supermarkets here that have open stalls with fruit and/or vegetables on (often oranges) with a sign that says "Free for kids". The idea is usually to promote healthy eating in struggling families, and occasionally on those signs there are also tips on saving money on your shop. Now and then there are leaflets next to it about such things.
Anyway, I had a discussion with my teacher about it and she thought that my answer was incorrect, so we had a bit of a debate about morality. Mainly if it should be objective (i.e. this is the law, no exceptions) or more on a case-by-case basis. It was actually a fairly interesting conversation, although I get the impression that people just wanted me to say the expected answer rather than give my actual opinion on the matter. That's a bit of a trend in my stories about school I'll admit, knowing what I'm supposed to say but bringing up my case for the opposite anyway. *Laughs* Teachers were not impressed.
"Let's say that you're in a supermarket and you witness a mother with her young child. She steals a few food items, such as a few carrots or some grapes for their child to eat. What do you do?"
The teacher then proceeded to call on students individually, asking for their answer. Everyone essentially gave the same response of "I would report it to management", until it was my turn.
"You'd also report it, right?" the teacher asked. I shook my head in disagreement. She looked at me with a great deal of bewildered shock. It was clear that she had become rather weary with boredom listening to the same reply repeatedly, and it was fairly entertaining seeing her suddenly jolt back into focusing. "Wait, so, you wouldn't report it?" the teacher inquired.
I explained my reasoning, how I'd give them the benefit of the doubt and assume that the mother was struggling financially, and whilst these actions are technically illegal I can tolerate someone who finds it difficult to support themselves and their children acting in such a way more than if it was someone who is well-off. Tracking down the manager just to report a minor theft done by a family who might be in a bad place seems rather insensitive and cruel if you ask me.
Of course it would be an entirely different matter if they stole a TV, but I think a few grapes or carrots is understandable. In fact, there are some supermarkets here that have open stalls with fruit and/or vegetables on (often oranges) with a sign that says "Free for kids". The idea is usually to promote healthy eating in struggling families, and occasionally on those signs there are also tips on saving money on your shop. Now and then there are leaflets next to it about such things.
Anyway, I had a discussion with my teacher about it and she thought that my answer was incorrect, so we had a bit of a debate about morality. Mainly if it should be objective (i.e. this is the law, no exceptions) or more on a case-by-case basis. It was actually a fairly interesting conversation, although I get the impression that people just wanted me to say the expected answer rather than give my actual opinion on the matter. That's a bit of a trend in my stories about school I'll admit, knowing what I'm supposed to say but bringing up my case for the opposite anyway. *Laughs* Teachers were not impressed.