A society is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable

in Reflections12 hours ago

https://web.facebook.com/groups/SignsFromOurLovedOnes/posts/32257673777211911/?_rdc=1&_rdr#

This is my first post here so please be nice.

This is the real story of Helen. She was arrested for theft .The judge when he saw her couldn't believe it. Helen and her husband George, who was 88 yrs old, have been married for over 50 years. He suffers from severe heart failure and depends on his medication to survive. They live on a small pension, counting every dollar by hte day, and unfortunately their insurance expired and they couldn't pay the premium(kinda reminds me of a black mirror episode). When Helen went to buy her husband's medicines, the bill was no longer fifty dollars, as usual, but this time it was over $800.She was unable buy the drugs because she couldnt simply afford it. So she left empty-handed.For three days, she watched her husband struggling for life as he could not breathe properly.In despair, she returned to the pharmacy.
While the pharmacist had his back turned, she dropped the medication into her bag.She didn't even have time to reach the door beforre she was caught.The police arrested her and charged her with theft. During the arrest, her husbands blood pressure skyrocketed. She was urgently transferred to the hospital. The following morning, still wearing her thin blouse, she was taken to court."I didn't know what to do anymore," she said in her frail voice."That's all I have left."The judge gazed at her frail, trembling, 91 years old. He shook his head." Remove those chains from her," he ordered."She's not a criminal. It's our system that has failed" he said. The charges were immediately dropped. The judge ordered that emergency assistance be provided to both of them. Because sometimes, the crime isn't in the act itself, but in the indifference of a world that leaves the most vulnerable to choose between love and survival.

The point from a side if the spectrum is that Helen didn’t steal out of greed. She didn’t pocket a luxury item, or snatch a stranger’s wallet. She took medicine, medicine that meant life for the man she had shared decades with. She wasn’t protecting wealth, she was protecting a heartbeat. We praise laws for their logic, yet forget that humans are not made of logic. They are made of needs, fears, and bond. But the real question remains, how many others are suffering unseen, waiting for someone to care? and on another side of the spectrum one could make the argument that if we allow her action to be acceptable simply because her reasons were emotional, then where do we draw the line? Should anyone who is desperate be allowed to break the law? Should we approve theft because the thief is sympathetic?. This ofcourse does not mean Helen is a villain. It means her suffering does not justify the method she chose. Breaking the law may have saved her husband temporarily, but it could have ended with her imprisonment, leaving him completely alone.