It’s hard to understand how someone can live with themselves after doing this.

Disney is revamping the way guests with disabilities can access rides at its theme parks, four months after a splashy New York Post [2]  [2]investigation revealed wealthy Manhattan moms were hiring disabled “guides” to accompany them on their trips to Disney World.

The guides, some hired through agencies for up to $1,000 per day, would pose as family members, enabling an entire group of people to go to the head of the line.

But then there’s this story.

Joey Prusak was appalled when he saw a customer at the suburban Minneapolis Dairy Queen store where he works pick up someone else’s $20 bill and slip it into her purse.

So when the woman got up to the counter to order, Prusak refused to serve her unless she returned the money. When the woman refused, the 19-year-old store manager went a step further: He gave the visually impaired customer who hadn’t realized he’d dropped the money $20 out of his own pocket.

“I was just doing what I thought was right,” Prusak said Thursday as he recalled the incident from earlier this month. “I did it without even really thinking about it. … Ninety-nine out of 100 people would’ve done the same thing as me.”

Unfortunately, I fear Joey is wrong on that last point.

Thank goodness there are parents who still raise their children with a clear sense of right and wrong, or morality and ethics.