Actions can be super-villainy, but in the minds of the robbers it is for the side of good. Even skitter had to justify her actions to herself (to use fictional evidence).
Why do politicians never seem to change their minds when criticized about their policies. In fact many argue more vehemently for their policies than before.
Criticism forces an unprepared receiver to justify that their actions are good. This is so deeply en-grained in human psychology that I'm betting you've done something similar.
How can criminals live with themselves? The thieves, rapists, and murderers?
some court cases will shed light on those.
The rapists say they were seduced. The murderers say that actually they were the victims not the person they killed. The thieves? They'll tell you that the store was charging too high or that they had no choice because of how destitute they were.
Do these justify their actions to everyone? heck no.
Do these justify their actions to themselves? most definitely yes. If it didn't do so they would reject it as a bad argument and try again until they found one that worked.
And if everyone thinks that supervillains must be evil, then you might have a point.
This is semantics. I will not argue semantics. Replace "super-villain" with "evil person" if you like.
That's ridiculous, and not at all equivalent. Why don't we, instead of replacing an objective classification word with a totally different
subjective values word, replace it with an unpowered equivalent objective classification- in this case, "mobsters" seems like the best fit.
"No-one wants to be a mobster, because no-one wants to be evil."
And yet, organised crime seems to disagree.