Of course we have answered that question, hundreds of times, you just don't listen. You can't violate somebody's person or property. Period. It's so simple, you are the one who tries to complicate things and create immoral laws.
Says who that a person or property is not to be violated, but copyright can be?
If a band produces 100,000 copies of an album, and I never steal any of them, then I never deprived them of their property.
There's more than one way to deprive a person of their property.
If I trespassed your home, did I deprive your property or cause any monetary loss?
If I copy my friend's that he bought, with my friend's permission, jack shit can be done. Literally. It's been happening since the advent of music production. You are actually under the impression that this can some how be enforced, but it can't.
You're under the impression that nobody gets away with murder, but some do.
Or fraud, counterfeit, ID theft.
I don't believe in laws that are impossible to enforce. Murder and stealing are possible to enforce because somebody or some THING goes MISSING or is injured.
so if I can't show what's missing or injured, I can't be punished?
When the supposed owner of the item can't even tell when their "property" has gone "missing" then it makes it completely impossible to enforce.
Good, so if I walk into your house without your knowledge, I can't be violating your property.
I'm the one taking the logical, simplistic approach. You are the one taking the tyrannical, complex and impossible approach. You have to show how that benefits society
No, I'm not interested in benefitting society, or else I'd be a socialist.
But even if I did, I don't see how anti-murder laws benefit the society I live in.
(yet you are happy to force people to abide by them)
, and from the OP we can see that there is no benefit to the tyranny you enjoy sustaining.
You can't see it.
Too bad some people don't need to care what you see/don't see.