Again, why does it matter how hard an ethical action is to achieve?
It doesn't make it more ethical because it was achieved inefficiently, it's the same action.
Because the difficulty of something ethically or not implies a degree of credit or responsibility, and (for the second statement) it implies character, and ethics is pretty useless if it doesn't have this character-building component.
This is like saying that because it would take me a lot more work to achieve (something like) the Mona Lisa than it would Leonardo da Vinchi that I am a better artist or more artistic...
That's art, not ethics. But still, you're ethical in proportion to how, well, much you fit ethical expectations of things, so in that regard it isn't a matter of exertion. So what's the deal with exertion? Credit, responsibility, things like that.
Upvote
0