You should try to come up with some ideas on your own. Start by asking yourself questions, and then trying to think through the answers:
1. What would happen to the welfare system if everyone who used it engaged in fraud? (Kant's categorical imperative).
2. Why is fraud normally considered wrong?
3. What, if anything, about the condition of being poor would render the principles upon which fraud is generally considered wrong invalid?
4. As you found Simone's example so convincing, you might ask yourself what parallels exist between that example and the case of the woman who committed welfare fraud. What would the owner of the door likely think of it being broken down to save someone in the room behind it (especially if he was that person)? What would the "owner" of the welfare system think of its being defrauded?
The answers you come up with to these questions will be the raw ideas you need for your essay, and will tend to suggest other examples and analogies you can draw on to support your thesis.
Sean, EssayForum.com