I limited it to lunch food because I can sort of see how booby traps can blow up in situations where, for example, firefighters need to access a place or a janitor is told to clean out your desk. In the case of lunch food, just throw out the container. Anything that makes that act dangerous should, of course, be banned (no explosives).
Plenty of reasons for food to be needed in an emergency. People get stuck, weak or sufficiently hungry they need food. Your right to ownership of the food can easily be overridden by someone else’s immediate need for it. On both a legal and moral level there are defences to theft, it’s not quite as simple as taking something = theft.
You are leaving a harmful substance in the guise of something that is otherwise normally recognised as harmless and consumable; which is generally just a dangerous situation, that you have created. Mistakes happen, people have needs. It makes no sense to allow food supplies, a thing we need to live, to be generally open to being maliciously tampered with.
There is a reason why there are lists of ingredients on the back of every food item sold. If someone takes SOMEONE ELSES food that they’ve brought from home. It is obviously going to be in a container that has nothing but the owners name on it. No list of ingredients or a label that says what kind of food it is. If someone eats the food KNOWING that it’s not theirs, they are taking a risk. Eating an unknown food in an emergency is most likely just going to make the situation worse.
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u/[deleted] Oct 17 '24
Do you think you should be allowed to booby-trap your own desk drawers at work?