Do you agree that it is wrong to unlawfully ( and intentfully ) confine people without their consent? If yes, then let us continue?
This is taking the conversation from the personal ethics discussion, to the discussion of the ethics of law.
It is wrong for me, as an individual, to
unlawfully confine a person without their consent. Yes. I think it would be ethically OK for me to confine a person without their consent for reasons of protecting them, or others, from harm -- like in the situation of a mentally disturbed person, a person "chemically out of it," or someone that I had valid reason to believe presented some actual threat of danger -- but, I would consider that probably a lawful purpose, even if some court might not actually agree later on. I would likely be responding to an immediate situation of danger, and would not likely do legal research on the particulars prior to acting.
The only distinction between unlawfully confining people without their consent for a crime they committed and lawfully confining people without their consent for a crime they committed is the law.
I agree that the distinction between behaviors, according to how they are defined, and whether or not they are considered lawful or unlawful actions, is what is used to determine whether or not some action is considered a "crime," which is a legal distinction, and is a matter of law.
Now, let us get back to the OP. The only distinction between unlawfully getting money from people and lawfully getting ( as in taking money from your bank account without your consent or making you pay a fine ) money from people is the law. Which is why i asked if the legalization of this theft would make it acceptable to you. You said 'no', then how do you reconcile this position?
We are discussing what I think it is OK for me to do. I do not need to reconcile it with laws, like fines, that I may or may not agree with. I disagree with the overall validity of applying a legal distinction to a personal ethics matter, which is what we are discussing.
There is a major difference between what I recognize as an
ethical action for me to do and
what a governmental entity may legally do (even if I disagree with the politics, or the law itself as being right and beneficial.) I may wholeheartedly disagree with a particular fine that may be imposed, but that does not mean that I translate my allowance for that action -- through a recognition that I live in a community where a lot of other peoples' will also comes into play, through the forming of mutually applicable laws -- into some sort of personal authority to "fine" other people, and take their money without their consent.
If an action that I believe to be harmful to myself (or another) becomes suddenly legal for me to do, that does not
require me to do it.
While it is outside of the scope of this discussion, my reasons for not stealing include respect for the property of others, as well as the spiritual, mental and emotional ramifications of doing something I believe to be wrong. The place that I find reconcilation on this matter is not only within logic and "the law" but within my understanding of the total expected impact of the action, according to the situation as I understand it to be. In the scenario that was presented in the OP, the justication for stealing seems to be offered as ok, and possibly compelling, since it is stealing is from a bad a guy, and that one would not expect to be caught. That is not valid justification for me. To simply add, now let's say it's the same action, only legal, does not change it
for me.
(Additionally, I don't even know if Hitler had actually killed anyone (except during WW1) by 1933. I don't think so. So, I don't think I could use his murdering of huge numbers of innocents as logical justification, since it probably hadn't happened yet. If I bought the line of thinking that I was somehow obligated to take inconsequential and minute revenge, that wouldn't even apply for actions that had not happened yet. A lot of what Hitler did was
legal. He just changed the laws to make it "legal." It was still terribly, terribly WRONG.)