inu-kun said:
Coming from a relatively wealthy family, it's equal, when you are a kid then it's hammered to your head that stealing from rich is "better" but now as an adult it's saying that one's rights are inferior because he doesn't suffer as "badly" for it, giving examples from real life would derail the thread completely so I'll refrain.
It's funny, because I was about to point out that last bit as a reason why it is better to steal from the rich.
Just goes to show to what extent this is a matter of perspective.
Though to be fair the argument that it is better from the rich isn't one about rights. Far from it. It's one about consequence and suffering.
It has nothing to do with rights, as a concept, but rather the idea that it simply has less effect on the wealthy.
However, it's also a matter of proportion.
If I steal $100 from a very poor person, I may in effect have stolen their entire supply of food for 2 weeks...
If I steal $100 from a multi-millionaire, I've merely annoyed them a little, and in practical terms they'd barely notice.
Of course, if I empty out the entire bank account of a very wealthy person, this may well have a pretty big effect on their life.
Though again it depends on context. (How much of their wealth is tied to what they have on the bank?)
I think though, that if you frame it in generic terms it loses most of it's meaning.
The only way it works out as 'better' to steal from the rich, is if you are talking about stealing stuff of roughly equal value (or in an approximation of equal value) from both parties.
And the only thing that makes it better is the reduced impact it has on them.
But, for it to have a reduced impact, it must represent a relatively trivial amount.
Stealing $1 from a homeless person would be unbelievably vicious, but stealing it from someone on minimum wage is more like a minor nuisance, while stealing it from someone one a multi-million dollar income would be so trivial that they likely wouldn't even notice.
You can keep increasing the amount, and soon you'll in effect be stealing everything someone has...
But I guess you get the point here. It's better only to the degree that it has less practical impact. (And stealing something with personal or sentimental value negates the argument completely anyway...)