I suppose it's all a matter of degrees, you are of course right in that the individual with a small avoidance is no more moral than the large corporation, but I doubt the majority of people are really that moral. i supect if we all rummage around at home we'll find the odd pen permanently borrowed from our employers etc but does that make each of us as immoral as, say, a professional fraudster? Technically it does, but morally I suspect we would bend on that one. Dunno, What do you think?
I think my ability to the control the world ends at the end of my nose.
I'm reminded of a debate I once had about how proud and fortunate I am to be English. A person replied that we should abandon "tribalism". My response was, for that to be a logical moral point, the poster should consider giving to charity that portion of their income that was above the average world income. The person replied that to do so "would make no difference". If they had done that, and sponsored a child say, would it really make no difference?
I’m reminded of the story about the man who sees a beach full of starfish that had been washed ashore. He notices a little boy picking up starfish, one at a time, and throwing it back into the sea. The man looks at the boy, looks at the thousands of starfish and comments to the boy, “Compared to the amount of starfish dying on the beach, what you are doing isn’t making a difference.” The boy picks up a starfish, throws it back into the sea and says, "It made a difference to that one."
I think it was Ghandi who said "You must be the change you want to see in the world". My interpretation of that is perhaps different than many. I don't see that as meaning "lead, inspire, seek for others to follow", but rather "the only change anyone can actually make, is a change in themselves and their own behaviour".
To some extent it could be argued that the subject of this discussion tried to do that - but he also acknowledges that if everyone did it the system of care, benefit for the needy and poor would collapse.
That is not a change I want to see in the world, so I personally will not pursue it. Money and taxation exist to suppport what is still one of the best and most universally safe lifestyles that exists in the world and has existed throughout history. It is worth considering what a return to a simpler life actually involves. In most simple, low tech societies, especially our own in earlier times, the life of societies less fortunate was, "nasty, brutal and short".
Red