Wasn't it?
Now my honest reply to your post:
I went through a phase where I would be willing to steal, commit fraud and much more. Now I would only participate in crime that is as victimless as possible -- I can imagine what it would be like on the other side of theft. I'm not interested in that sort of stuff any more, even though I never did anything particularly bad anyway.You think this is always plan A for someone? Lemme give you an example.
Today I stole a **** BBT card. After writing down all necessary info, I put it back in the purse (yes, I steal from ******, shut up, I don't care what you think :P) I checked the balance online. Turns out it only had a balance of $0.7*
I checked the purchases, and found out that last month the person spent $*5 on food at a Peking restaurant (in one day). $**5 dollars from Kroger supermarket. $70 at Bed, Bath, and Beyond (women's products store). The big shocker was that this person spent about $*00 online at Saks Fifth Avenue (big rich women brand-name store).
Whether you agree or not, I think that this person should be nice enough to let me use about $20 to buy a month of Maruchan Instant Ramen so I can survive.
PS: For all the fedz and poleesh agentz looking at this post, I DIDN'T use the card. What am I gonna buy with seventy-one cents??
I don't agree with ****** card fraud, since it's not exactly victimless. People lose their ***** indefinitely (until the ** company compensates them), and they usually have to pay a certain amount.
Your justification is basically communism. Communism fails in society -- no matter how hard life is for the people at the bottom of a capitalistic society, people have to have a reason to work to make something of themselves.
Just stealing from the rich is better than stealing from anybody, but my point above still applies.
I may disagree with ** fraud, but it's not like I'm going to report you. It's your own life.
One tip though: it's not wise to admit to these things online.



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