If we could be made moral by Act of Parliament there would be no such things as “ hold ups ” and food sophistication. Of these two evils I should prefer the former had I the choice. It is no more blameworthy, it is less harmful, and it is not likely to become a permanent feature of our social life. A successful “ hold up ” is by the nature of the case self‐advertising. It forms the basis for a “ drama ” or a “ sensation.” It “sells well” and is honoured with “displayed” head lines. On the other hand, a police chase at sixty miles an hour over half a county when the true nature of raspberry jam is in question is unthinkable. Publicity, if you can get it, has, like adversity, its “ sweet uses.” It makes the public “ sit up and take notice” and brings the offence, if not the offender, into the limelight. But the chase of, what A. H. Allen, of Sheffield, once called, “ the poor unfortunate adulterator ” calls frequently for a degree of ingenuity on the part of the executive officers of a local authority that suggests the wonders of detective fiction. The sport may require a good deal of ground bait before the fish is hooked, or, to vary the metaphor, several full dress rehearsals before the one and only performance is staged and the fine of one guinea and costs inflicted. Our “hold up” friend “does time,” and for the period of his sentence can do no further mischief, while the merchant in search of illicit profits seldom gets further than the police court, and if a large business concern which has “ neither a body to be kicked or a soul to be damned ” happens to be the offender, then eminent counsel is briefed, legal entities and quiddities are politely discussed, no one's feelings are hurt, a fine may be inflicted—which, in any case, is relatively trifling and is written off as a bad debt—and “the prisoner leaves the court amid the congratulations of his friends.” In neither case is the slightest social injury inflicted. Bill of Pimlico or Walworth has nothing to lose, the “ directors ” have lost nothing. If the way of transgressors be hard, then the case of the adulterator is the exception which proves the rule.
Article navigation
1 October 1932
Review Article|
October 01 1932
British Food Journal Volume 34 Issue 10 1932 Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-4108
Print ISSN: 0007-070X
© MCB UP Limited
1932
British Food Journal (1932) 34 (10): 91–100.
Citation
(1932), "British Food Journal Volume 34 Issue 10 1932". British Food Journal, Vol. 34 No. 10 pp. 91–100, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011251
Download citation file:
112
Views
Suggested Reading
Narrating The City: spaces Of Urban Change, South London
Open House International (June,2008)
“See You Again Next Week?” : The Pimlico Connection Student Tutoring Scheme
Education + Training (February,1994)
Corporation blameworthiness and federal criminal fines
Journal of Financial Crime (February,2020)
Being at Home: Space for Belonging in a London Caff
Open House International (September,2009)
The role of blameworthiness in the federal probation sentencing of corporate environmental offenders
Journal of Financial Crime (April,2022)
Related Chapters
4. Rivers and canals
Civil Engineering Heritage: London and the Thames Valley
The Great Agency Muddle
The Future of Agency: Between Autonomy and Heteronomy
Researching Drinking Cultures in Sport: Making Difficult Ethical Decisions
Sport, Alcohol and Social Inquiry: A Global Cocktail
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
