So it has come to this. A nation that once prided itself on the honour of the queue, the quiet dignity of the shopkeeper’s nod, must now face the grim reality that its youth cannot be trusted with a changing cubicle. This week, a popular teen fashion brand—one of those temples of fast fashion and disposable identity—announced the closure of all fitting rooms in its UK stores. The culprit? An epidemic of shoplifting so brazen, so casual, that the only logical response is to treat every customer as a potential thief.
Let us not mince words. This is not merely a logistical inconvenience. This is a cultural surrender. We are witnessing the slow collapse of the social contract, that fragile web of mutual respect that makes civilised commerce possible. When a shopkeeper must sacrifice the very essence of retail—the try-before-you-buy ritual—to stem losses, we have entered a new phase of late-capitalist decay. One is reminded of the Roman basilicas, which once buzzed with lawful trade, only to be abandoned when the great migration of peoples brought chaos and distrust. Here, the barbarians are not at the gate: they are already inside, pocketing a crop-top.
British retail leaders, to their credit, are clamouring for tougher laws. They want stricter penalties, more police presence, and a crackdown on organised retail crime. They point to the staggering figures: shoplifting costs retailers nearly a billion pounds a year, a sum that would make even a Victorian industrialist blanch. But laws alone will not restore what has been broken. You cannot legislate your way out of a moral vacuum.
The problem runs deeper than petty theft. It is a symptom of a society that has lost its shame. We live in an age of personalised ethics, where the only crime is getting caught. The teenager who stuffs a hoodie into her backpack does not see herself as a thief; she sees a system she is clever enough to outwit. The influencer who boasts of a 'five-finger discount' on TikTok is not a criminal: she is a folk hero. And the parent who looks away does so with a shrug, because everyone knows the high street is just a stage for the performance of consumption, and the rules are as arbitrary as the prices.
Compare this to the Victorian era, when the department store was a cathedral of moral improvement. A shop assistant was a guardian of propriety, and a stolen handkerchief was a stain on the soul. We have moved from that age of earnest discipline to a postmodern playground where the self is the only god. The fitting room closure is a monument to this shift: a physical admission that we no longer believe in the decency of our fellow man.
And what of the law? The retail leaders call for tougher measures, yet they know the state is unwilling to play the heavy. Policing is a shadow of what it was, and the courts are too lenient to deter. But even if we doubled the penalty for theft, we would still be treating the symptom, not the disease. The disease is a culture that celebrates acquisition without effort, that rewards cunning over honesty, that teaches the young that the real sin is not stealing but being poor.
I propose a more radical solution: bring back shame. Shame is a cheap and effective deterrent. In medieval times, a thief might have his hand cut off; in Victorian times, he was sent to the colonies. I am not advocating, of course, such brutality, but a dose of public opprobrium would do wonders. Let us publicise the names of shoplifters in local papers. Let their neighbours know. Let their schools expel them. Let the community enforce what the law cannot.
Until then, we will continue to see more fitting rooms shuttered, more goods locked behind glass, more suspicion in the eyes of the clerk. The death of the fitting room is a small thing, but it is a sign of a larger undoing. The question is not whether we can prosecute our way out of this, but whether we have the will to reclaim the moral high ground. I fear the answer is as empty as those abandoned cubicles.








