-
Website
http://consumerismcommentary.com/ -
Original page
http://www.consumerismcommentary.com/2008/09/02/thieves-smashed-into-my-car-and-stole-700-worth-of-stuff/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
¢entsiblelife
1 comment · 1 points
-
BDickson114
1 comment · 1 points
-
freeby50
2 comments · 1 points
-
ericabiz
4 comments · 11 points
-
Walt Breuninger
1 comment · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
To all thieves: If stealng is really the only way you can by then at least have the courtesy not to destroy things in the process. Be a classy thief.
A thief once stole a bike from my garage. It was a good one. Nothing broken, just a missing bike. I still didn't like it (I did lose a bike), but it would have been way worse if they kicked in the door and threw everything down.
You might want to check into the coverage from the credit cards that you may have used to purchase the goods. I had a suit jacket taken at a conference and my GM Gold Card reimbursed me for it with a formal claim and the security report from the hotel. It's worth a shot. Such benefits are another reason to buy larger, more expensive items with a credit card instead of using cash.
I am sorry for your loss. Seven years ago, I had the window of my car smashed and a portable CD-player (hidden under the passenger seat) and some CDs stolen while I was at a club on the Near West Side of Chicago. In the grand scheme of thing, they were just "stuff," but there's also a sense of being violated when this happens to a person for the first time. Never again did I leave anything under the seat, and I was still finding tiny bits of broken glass two years later.
I was not aware that apartment insurance may cover theft of personal possessions from an automobile. I'll check into this with my insurer.
-MF
The stolen stuff isn't such a big deal but the most frustrating thing is that you have to deal with insurance, go fix the broken parts, and replace everything. Some people's cars are essential to their work and it just slows everything down. Unnecessary stress is worse than the monetary loss.
Out of my situation I was impressed by the kindness of others in the blogosphere as a few days after posting about my experience 2 readers had sent me a digital camera and a new ipod shuffle! Then my coworkers pitched in to buy me a new GPS! Small blessings sometimes come out of situations like this.
The real person to blame here is the thief for being such a pathetic low life that he/she obviously was. I can't help but wonder how much worse things will get once we become so tolerant of people that refuse to work and earn an honest living like the majority of society does. Just because we work and pay insurance that makes it okay for such filth to say well he has what I want so I will take from him so I don't have to work.
I just think the more tolerant we become of this type of behavior the worse off we become as a society.
Xair
Nobody is condoning what the thief did. It's not OK to steal. But thieves have existed for tens of thousands of years and they will always exist. So, we have to do what we can to protect ourselves. In rough economic times, we may see an uptick in theft, but overall, the general percentage of people that steal and the theft rate probably remains fairly consistent.
UH2L
The loss may not be much financially, but it is the trouble and the bother of getting it all fixed.
Regards