Rachel Rogers and Jennifer Ferguson, employees at a Lululemon in Georgia, were fired for neglecting to stand by mutely during a robbery and for then calling 911.
“They’re just full-blown, like, running circles around you grabbing as much as they can,” Rogers told WSBTV. “So, our reaction is to scream, ‘No! Get out! Leave!’ ”
The two employees called the police. The same thieves were caught when trying to rob another Lululemon store in the area the next day, perhaps because police were on the alert.
But two weeks later, Rogers and Ferguson were fired, without severance pay, for violating the retail chain’s policy of zero tolerance for calling 911 to report a robbery.
“We are not supposed to get in the way. You kind of clear path for whatever they’re going to do,” Ferguson said. “We’ve been told not to put it in any notes, because that might scare other people. We’re not supposed to call the police, not really supposed to talk about it.”
In a post blasting the company, Jennifer’s husband, Jason Ferguson, observed: “If we, citizens of the community, allow criminal activity to go unchecked, that is tacit approval for them to continue their ways.”
And how long can we hold onto our belongings and our civilization if we meekly usher in the Visigoths and Vandals and tell them go ahead, take whatever you want, we won’t try to stop you or even call the cops after it’s all over?
A lot of people, including higher-ups at Lululemon, have forgotten that property rights are at the foundation of civilization.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
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4 replies on “Don’t Make It Easy”
The best response is to make as many people as possible aware of the policy of Lululemon. Special attention should be given to informing people as they are released from prisons or from jails, and posting to online fora frequented by members of Antifa, of BLM, &c. Let’s hurry along the lesson.
A free society is based upon an individuals right to choose their volitional actions and to be assured of the result, to their advantage or detriment.
Private property and it’s protection from the theft by others is a key to an ordered society and understood by all thieves (just take their cell phone and note the reaction).
Elimination of any consequence for theft will not serve us well. If I was the local law enforcement officer I would request the retailer close their store rather than inject thus poison into my locality.
Management should be charged with aiding and abetting.
Property rights are human rights, else the 14th Amendment is meaningless.
I wish MORE businesses had a “if you call the cops for any reason, you’re fired” policy.
And shotguns under every counter, with a semi-annual refresher course on their use.