In a controversial conversation platformed by the New York Times and recently discussed in The Atlantic, streamer Hasan Piker implied that he might steal a car if it carried no consequences. In the interview, author Jia Tolentino also casually admits to shoplifting lemons from Whole Foods. Although petty theft is common, the interview clip spread quickly because the justification for looting felt oddly assertive.
Piker referred to the iconic anti-piracy campaign that sought to use moral vibes (rather than rational arguments) against taking physical property to convince people to further control their impulses and not copy music without paying. The anti-piracy clip “You Wouldn’t Steal a Car” indicates an implicit assumption from 2004 that American society was broadly agreed on the stability of physical property. In other words, most Americans do not think “property is theft.”
In The Property Species, Professor Bart Wilson argues that property is not merely a legal construct but a deeply embedded social practice. Humans develop shared understandings of “mine” and “yours,” and these norms allow cooperation to scale beyond small groups. Property is not just about ownership. It is also about coordination.
From that perspective, the casual dismissal of theft as “not a big deal” is not morally or economically neutral. It chips away at the shared expectations that make exchange possible.
Markets rely on more than prices; they rely on trust that boundaries will be respected. This insight echoes a long tradition. Adam Smith, often invoked for his theory of the invisible hand of markets, also emphasized the importance of justice. Before markets can allocate resources efficiently, people must refrain from taking what is not theirs.
In my recent paper with Bart Wilson, “You Wouldn’t Steal a Car: Moral Intuition for Intellectual Property,” we test how people think about taking different types of goods. As I discussed in “Everyone Take Copies,” laboratory human subjects were quick to label the taking of physical property as “stealing.” The players all considered it unacceptable within their small group. No one wants their stuff taken, and every human has a concept of “mine.”
Much rule-following is done out of a sense of obligation, which might prove hard to recover if lost. Russ Roberts made a similar point years ago in his EconLog column on Napster-aided downloading as theft. He wrote:
“We know that the threat of being caught and punished isn’t the only reason that people pay legally for something rather than stealing it. There are costs of theft other than monetary costs. Some people feel guilty taking something for nothing. Culture and norms can be used to encourage socially beneficial behavior. After all, people leave tips even in restaurants and in taxis where repeat visits cannot explain such generosity. People choose not to litter even on a deserted mountain trail.”
Much of rule-following is voluntary. It is sustained by internalized norms, not external enforcement. That is why casual erosion of those norms should concern us.
What would Piker think of a world where the “microlooting” he claims to approve happens at scale? Ambiguity over property rights has real implications, such as stores raising prices to cover shrinkage or closing in high-crime neighborhoods. These costs are often borne disproportionately by already disadvantaged populations.
Once norms deteriorate, rebuilding them is hard, both at neighborhood scale and the national level. This is easily visible in countries without strong property systems. Countries with weaker property rights struggle to attract investment and sustain economic growth. The difficulty of reversing that decline is not merely theoretical. It can be seen in the decades-long work of nations actively trying to repair their institutions. Colombia offers one such example. As Omar Hernandez notes in his discussion of the country’s reforms, building reliable property institutions is a long and difficult process.
Hernandez wrote, “Although Colombia has implemented reforms to improve the investment environment and strengthen respect for property, the path to more robust and reliable protection remains long.”
Hernandez, and many development economists, express the desire to move an entire group of people to an equilibrium of stronger property rights and less tolerance for theft.
READER COMMENTS
Fazal Majid
May 26 2026 at 8:43am
You are talking about the normalization of deviance. When shoplifting is effectively legalized in places like San Francisco (though that is changing), ordinary law-abiding people feel like chumps and may be tempted to disregard the rules as well.
This normalization also happens from the top. When billionaires or corporations don’t pay their fair share of taxes, or successfully lobby to have favorable legislative treatment, that is equally if not more so corrosive due to the larger publicity and influence they wield.
David Henderson
May 26 2026 at 10:30am
Fazal,
What is their fair share of taxes, and how would you know?
Jon Murphy
May 26 2026 at 10:33am
Whether or not one pays a “fair share” of taxes, that’s not the same as theft. If one is defrauding government, fine. But there’s relatively little fraud going on here. They’re mainly using legal loopholes.
Dick King
Jun 1 2026 at 4:48pm
The main thing that people who claim billionaires aren’t paying their fair share are upset about is that there is no wealth tax. They pay income tax on realized capital gains and sales of appreciated stock, like the rest of us, but the progressives that proffer this line bemoan the fact that their income taxes paid are a smaller percentage of their immense wealth than the income taxes paid by a middle class person as a percentage of their net worth.
True, but irrelevant.
-dk
Dave Lindbergh
Jun 11 2026 at 4:16pm
Inheritance taxes are wealth taxes. We just don’t collect them until people die.
Because people who are good at capital accumulation do more for society by doing more of it (it’s a rare talent) than the collected taxes would do.
T Boyle
May 26 2026 at 8:13pm
I think people have a slightly more sophisticated perspective than you’re giving them credit for. They distinguish between rivalrous goods – if I have it, you don’t – and non-rivalrous ones goods that can be reproduced at a much lower cost than the price being demanded by the owner.
It’s pretty much universally accepted that taking a rivalrous good you don’t own is theft. But there’s also a sense – by no means universal but widely felt – that it’s okay to illicitly reproduce (or buy an illicitly reproduced) good if the legal owner charges “too much” for it.
Now, those of us on the “rule of law” side will say, it took resources to create the original “master copy” of that thing – a book, music, a drug even – and the creator has to be compensated not only for the creation efforts that succeeded but for the ones that failed. If we allow theft of intellectual property, soon we’ll wonder “why we can’t have nice things”.
But there’s an argument on the other side, too. “Intellectual property” is not a free-market concept; it’s a government policy. In a free market, the cost to replicate the thing is its marginal cost. The ability to charge more is a non-free-market policy imposed by governments. There’s a policy reason for it, but when that policy has results that strike a large percentage of the population as “wrong”, there isn’t actually an economic proof that it’s not wrong. It may well be wrong. It may be that the simple “intellectual property is property” concept does not capture a degree of refinement that human intuition does.
As for stealing cars if there were no consequences, that one strikes me as an attitude that would have led to a short, lonely life out on the savannah.
Jon Murphy
May 26 2026 at 8:30pm
I don’t know. People have pretty strong feelings about stealing non-rival goods too.