I watched Dumb and Dumber with my nephews on Thanksgiving. There's a part in the movie where Lloyd spikes Harry's drink with a laxative. This got me thinking of a few posts on CS where the subject of food tampering came up, and this is an issue I've wanted to post about for a long time. I'd like to hopefully discuss the topic without condoning malicious variations.
We all agree that spiking a SC or Co Irker's food, no matter how sucky they are, is wrong. The food was intended to be consumed by that person.
But let's say a known food thief is allergic to peanuts. You are not. You bring your food to work and you purposely include an ingredient with peanuts to protect your food. You label your food and put it in the fridge. Food thief picks your food anyways and suffers the consequences. Who is at fault? My argument in this case is the food thief had it coming. Karma hit pretty hard.
Or in this situation: You bring in food with the intent to get back at the food thief. You have no plans to eat it, and is in fact harmful to anyone who eats it, and so it's not intended for anyone. It only serves as a trap. You put your name on the container, then lay the trap for some poor thief to find. In this case, I would argue that this is almost as bad as spiking someone's food because not even the owner intends to eat it.
I'm very interested in where people draw the line. In discussing this, I hope we're not encouraging intentional food tampering and petty revenge.
We all agree that spiking a SC or Co Irker's food, no matter how sucky they are, is wrong. The food was intended to be consumed by that person.
But let's say a known food thief is allergic to peanuts. You are not. You bring your food to work and you purposely include an ingredient with peanuts to protect your food. You label your food and put it in the fridge. Food thief picks your food anyways and suffers the consequences. Who is at fault? My argument in this case is the food thief had it coming. Karma hit pretty hard.
Or in this situation: You bring in food with the intent to get back at the food thief. You have no plans to eat it, and is in fact harmful to anyone who eats it, and so it's not intended for anyone. It only serves as a trap. You put your name on the container, then lay the trap for some poor thief to find. In this case, I would argue that this is almost as bad as spiking someone's food because not even the owner intends to eat it.
I'm very interested in where people draw the line. In discussing this, I hope we're not encouraging intentional food tampering and petty revenge.
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