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Okay well to start off that's not what I said…
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You didn't say anything, dude; you just gave someone a green light to keep something that you decided to take free reign on offering up which doesn't belong to you … Probably to sound cool, or justify your own immorality.
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I gave him advice on what he should do if he plans on returning them. Because tbh taking them to an office lost and found may be less helpful; if the person who lost them was seeking them out they'd probably retrace their steps to find them. Not assume some stranger decided to drop their 30$ headphones off at the office.
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Taking lost headphones to the office is less helpful? Wow, you really just like rewriting the rules of reality, don't you? Now the lost & found, designed to be a helpful arena for anyone who loses something to find their lost goods—has become an impediment to the person finding something that doesn't belong to them. Yea, what a huge hurdle to losing something … I'll tell ya, that lost & found. Of all places—it helps NO ONE find something they lost, and really adds to throw stumbling blocks into people's path. *rolls eyes*
And they certainly can't retrace their steps to find something they found when dude is holding onto it; your logic is wicked. Admit it.
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I then told him that he shouldn't feel guilt for picking headphones up off the ground and keeping them, I didn't say anywhere theft is okay. Then I said that the internet is great at throwing things out of proportion; which you and Conquest proved very well.
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Oh, well as long as MrSimons says others shouldn't feel guilt in keeping someone else's property—he
must be a savior! He lets people get away with things!!! YAAAAY!!! All hail King Simons!!!
This kind of reasoning has been decaying society for quite some time; guilt is a reflection of our own inner sense of reasoning—not something we are forcing onto him; you are tempting him to appeal to his greed to look & sound cool. Grow up