
I thought whaaaat . . . this must be because stupid people are eating the Tide Pods. After all, most of the merchandise in this Kroger grocery store is edible. (Not so much the chicken.) But, no, it was because stupid people were stealing them.
People were stealing so much laundry detergent that my grocery store had to put it behind locked glass doors. To buy some, you ring a bell and an employee comes to unlock the case for you. This is for a $12 item, mind you.
(It’s not clear to me how this procedure prevents theft. Can’t the thief still walk out with the merchandise? Maybe the stupid thieves haven’t figured that out yet.)
There’s a whole movement out there legitimizing shoplifting. Mainstream “influencers” now say shoplifting is OK – in fact, the shopkeepers deserve it because the people have been ripped off by “corporations.” (I guess limited liability companies, limited liability partnerships, general partnerships and sole proprietorships are in the clear.)
You know the ways that corporations – The Man – have ripped people off: By paying their employees what the employee agreed to accept. By charging customers what the customers agreed to pay. By closing no later than closing time and opening no earlier than opening time. By keeping it too cold in the frozen food aisle. All the usual ways that corporate America rips us off.
This we-been-ripped-off-by-The-Man sentiment seems part of a broader trend in America. At one of our storied Ivy League universities, Princeton, they’ve allowed students for the last 133 years to take exams un-proctored. Rather than supervising the exam room, the university let students simply sign a statement saying they hadn’t cheated. Their word was their bond.
No more. Students have deluged the university with reports that, notwithstanding the statements, cheating was epidemic. Students believing we-been-ripped-off-by-The-Man were getting payback from The Man.
The university conducted an anonymous survey. It showed that about 30% of students admitted to cheating. Presumably, some additional percentage cheated but didn’t admit to it.
So, there were the 30% who cheated and lied about it on their statements but told the truth about it in the anonymous survey; there were many others who cheated and lied about it in both their statement and in the anonymous survey; and there was the small minority who didn’t cheat and didn’t lie about it anywhere.
Now that their examination rooms have become a den of cheaters and liars, Princeton is abandoning their 133-year-old policy. They will begin proctoring exams.
Princeton is consistently ranked in the top three universities in the country. One wonders about the integrity of lesser-ranked schools.
Such as Harvard. The grade of “A” is the usual grade at Harvard these days. Some 60% of grades today are A as compared to about 25% just two decades ago.
Harvard’s faculty is finally voting this month on whether to limit in each class the percentage of students receiving an A to 20% plus four students. (The “plus four students” rider is apparently to allow small classes or seminars to still receive all As.)
Grade hyperinflation would seem a victimless wrong, but it’s not. There are at least two victims. One is the student who truly deserves an A. His A is cheapened by the A given to the student who deserved a B. The other is society at large, including employers and graduate schools who are defrauded into thinking they’re getting a Harvard A student when they’re really getting a Harvard B student.
This deception has been widely accepted. Among Harvard students, the proposed change has been met with near-violent resistance by a majority.
But of course. The majority of students are not truly A students but would like to say they are. I’d ask them “Who is John Galt” but most of them would look at me blankly.
I say Harvard students should earn their A the old-fashioned way, like they do at Princeton. Cheat. After graduating, they can steal and eat Tide Pods.
You and me? See you back at the Gulch.
Locking EVERYTHING behind glass is now the norm in NYC. When stores go out of business due to theft, (as one CVS near me did and many inner city grocery stores have to) residents picket and scream. Brains are in short supply in NYC these days, now more than ever before. They elected a communist, what further proof do you need?
Stores should not be allowed to profit, and should not be allowed to close!!!
Or so the Socialists believe…
Too funny. I’ll bet you can find one or more people in this country who believe that…
And now Mayor Mad-Mamdani has announced his first free gov’t owned store will open next year. Not a thought as to what this will do to the grocers trying to make a living in the area. Until it fails, that is. Ever wonder the where of the lack of education in our country has brought us? Look no further than the young NYC voter.
I am from the east coast, attended a private liberal arts school, st. Lawence university. Transferred to Colorado state university in 1984. Had a class in wildlife biology. Day one, professor said, “ I only give 5 A grades per class with 75 students.” I told him I would be one, which I was; changed my life. I am a successful arborist working in the Roaring Fork Valley. Whether it is personal or professional, you only achieve what is expected. Thanks for your writings Glenn, you are a breath of fresh air in our now woke state.
I was young for my grade. In fact, I didn’t turn 18 until November of my freshman year of Engineering School. Calculus proved hard, and I only got a B.
But my mind grew. In the spring of my second year, I got the highest grade in the class in Differential Equations.
Isn’t it revealing that I remember that now, over 50 years later? Maybe I’m greedy, but I’m glad that As were unusual in that class.
My grade in Chem 101 convinced me that I didn’t really want to be a dentist. I convinced myself that I didn’t really want to spend my life looking into the open mouths of difficult children, but it was really the grade. Anyway, I wound up being a school teacher and spent my life looking in the open, yapping mouths of difficult children anyway. . . at no where near the pay. *sigh*