But sometimes - especially when the regulations are enforced and the outcome is just so barmy, the cause of the so-called "little man" can be helped by the support of those around him and justice can be done.
Monoprix (screenshot from BFM TV report)
Such is surely the case of Kader, a 59-year-old employee of the French supermarket chain Monoprix in the southern city of Marseille.
Last Monday he was sent home from his job and threatened with being sacked.
His crime?
He had supposedly "stolen" six melons and two lettuces.
Except there's a very good reason for the inverted commas.
As the regional daily La Provence reported, Kader had simply retrieved them from a bin at the back of the store where, as out-of-date products, they were waiting to be collected and taken to the nearest landfill.
It appeared that such behaviour was tantamount to "misconduct" and as far as Monoprix rules were concerned employees weren't allowed to take home food even if it were destined for landfill; it said as much in the work contract Kader had signed.
"I didn't know," the shelf-filler who had been working for the store for the past eight years told the newspaper.
"I'm so ashamed. I've never, ever stolen anything in all my years of working," he continued.
"I told my manager, 'If I've stolen something, call the police'. I'm not a thief and I've never taken a thing in my life."
Management at the store remained stumm, refusing to talk to the local media.
But the story soon spread and was reported nationally.
Kader repeated what he had told La Provence on national radio Europe 1.
"When I passed the rubbish bin I saw the melons and lettuce ready to be thrown away," he said
"I thought they were in a reasonable state so I decided to take them home - just to eat," said the father of six.
The unions were soon on the case, pointing out that Monoprix's main shareholder, Casino , had just reported record profits but according to company rules, "appeared ready to fire a man for taking home food that was going to be thrown away."
A demonstration was held outside the shop. Kader's colleagues were interviewed and expressed how "pathetic" they found management's decision.
Monoprix's official Facebook page started receiving complaints and there were calls from some Internauts for a boycott of the store.
And an online petition was started, calling for Kader to be reinstated.
So much bad publicity and on such a scale for a management stance that was surely both as untenable as it was ridiculous.
The Powers that Be at the store finally caved in on Friday, seeing sense and reducing Kader's penalty to a simple one-day reprimand for having failed to follow company regulations.
Regulations which the national daily France Soir says the company had hidden behind in an attempt to explain its (over)reaction and which officially aimed, "To protect human health by avoiding the consumption of spoiled products."
Kader spoke to the local commercial television station, LCM, after he had received news that he was being reinstated.
"I was moved by the reaction of the media, my colleagues and the unions," he said.
"I would just like to thank everyone for the support they've given me."
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