crime

Have a Break, Have a Heist: On Stolen Kit Kats and Other Existential Questions


There are crimes of desperation.
There are crimes of opportunity.
And then there are crimes that make you pause, tilt your head, and whisper that you kind of kind of get it.

Case in point somewhere between Italy and Poland, 12 tons of Kit Kats were stolen. Vanished. Liberated. Rehomed. Approximately 413,793 bars, which feels less like a number and more like a lifestyle choice.

The official statement was appropriately serious from the company where they noted that cargo theft is a growing issue.
This is no laughing matter. Also, the criminals have “exceptional taste.”

And that’s where things took a turn for me.

Because I haven’t had a Kit Kat in a decade? Maybe more. Which means I am now spiraling into the kind of late-night philosophical inquiry usually reserved for former lovers and discontinued snack foods.

If I had one today would it taste the same? Would I even recognize it? Would it be from the batch?

Imagine the moment in which you unwrap it slowly. There’s a weight to it now. History. Mystery. Possible criminal provenance.

You take a bite and think, is this illicit? Is this what crime tastes like? Slightly sweeter? A hint of rebellion? Notes of organized logistics?

Because 12 tons is not a casual snack run.

This is planning. This is coordination. This is someone, somewhere, saying to go big or go wafer.

Which leads us to the real question of what do you even do with 413,793 Kit Kats?

The possibilities are endless and deeply concerning:

> A massive underground brownie operation. The kind that requires blueprints and a structural engineer.
> A Willy Wonka–esque distribution scheme where strangers in trench coats whisper, “You want a break?” and hand out full bars like contraband joy.
>A traveling art installation titled Late Capitalism, But Make It Chocolate.
> Or a warehouse somewhere filled with slightly overwhelmed thieves staring at mountains of Kit Kats thinking, we did not think this through.

Because here’s the psychological twist no one is talking about we romanticize the heist. We do not talk about the aftermath.

The storage.
The melting risk.
The sheer administrative burden of moving that much chocolate without raising suspicion.

At some point, someone has to inventory this. And that’s when the thrill fades.

That’s when you’re knee-deep in wafer and regret, asking yourself,
Was it worth it?

But maybe that’s the real lesson here. We all, in our own ways, are chasing some version of the stolen Kit Kat.

Something we haven’t had in years. Something we’re not even sure we still like. Something we’ve built up in our minds as sweeter, better, more worth it than it probably is.

And then, if we ever actually get it, we’re left holding it, slightly confused, wondering Now what?

Anyway, if you see me eating a Kit Kat for the first time in ten years, just know I will be analyzing it like a forensic psychologist.

Is it fresher?
Is it richer?
Is it suspiciously well-traveled?

And most importantly, did I just take a break or become part of the story?

We shall see.

8 replies »

  1. “12 tons of Kit Kats were stolen. Vanished.
    Liberated. Rehomed. Approximately 413,793 bars”

    Hehe Dear Miriam Perhaps They Were Re-Distributed
    Free IN a Kind of Robin Hood ‘Woke Gift’ in Plastic Eggs for

    the Poor in a Giant Easter Egg Hunt Globally Wide

    i suppose one May Dream on in April anyway

    As Sticky Fingers eventually

    Melt Away in Kit Kat Prison
    For This Dasturdly Chocolate
    Theft all i can Say Is it Must Have
    Something to Do With the Orange Meme

    Ah Yes it Seems to Be a Giant

    Vortex Sucking Down All

    Crime to Yes

    Men

    AS Such
    Yet the Vampire Stakes
    Now Are Sending Innocents
    Back to the Stone Age in War
    Crimes at Least the Pope Has
    Risen for Easter to Say Hell no to War

    And Heaven Yes
    to LoVE iN Peace Yes
    Where Thefts disappear
    And The Giving becomes
    the Receiving Sweeter than

    Any
    Kit
    Kat
    Other
    than Purring
    Ones of Course
    in Internet Memes too hehe…

    As ‘Garfield’ Dies His Hair any
    Color Other than Orange These Days..;)

    Liked by 1 person

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