Here's the thing: Piracy is not taking money out of our wallets. Getting rid of pirated comics won't cause readers to spend more money buying comics.
To illustrate why, let me talk about when I was a teen.
And I had a collection of ten times as many albums as I bought. Mostly on cassettes tapes, illegally recorded from my friend's albums.
About $15 a month.
Because my music budget wasn't very elastic.
My music budget was determined by how much I could afford to spend on music, not by how much music I listened to.
But that's wrong. People's comic budgets are determined by how much they can reasonably spend on comics.
Getting rid of piracy, even if that were possible, wouldn't change how much most people spend on entertainment.
How many Gen-Xers huffing about damn kids these days expecting media for free, honestly never had illegal tapes?
Or, for kids in this century, have never borrowed a friend's Netflix password?
First, when people's incomes grow, their entertainment budgets grow, and they buy more.
Second, if comics get cheaper, they can buy more comics with the same entertainment budget.
Because getting rid of piracy won't make people's comic-buying budgets any larger. It would only mean people would be reading fewer comics.
(And also, fewer kids will get addicted to reading comics in the first place. Yay!)
(That's why middle-aged people buy more non-pirated media than teens; we're not more moral, we just have more money.)
So kids pirating comics now, is good for cartoonists twenty years from now.
It's that they provide less bang for the buck than in the past (comic prices have gone up WAY faster than inflation). It's that the big 2's products are impenetrable to newbies. It's that the comics distribution system is amazingly badly designed.
You know why? It's not that we do better work. And it's not that we're not pirated.
It's that the book industry doesn't rely on the Marvel/DC mess, and has better distribution.
/END