> If someone shot a person with your gun, you gonna say it wasn't you and expect them not to question you further
Running a red light is not remotely equivalent to shooting someone with a gun, get a grip
> If someone shot a person with your gun, you gonna say it wasn't you and expect them not to question you further
Running a red light is not remotely equivalent to shooting someone with a gun, get a grip
In oral arguments the supreme court uses hypothetical questions with extreme examples to explore the limits and constitutionality of law.
Why shouldn't we?
OK, so now write a law that makes a distinction here. What do you end up with? EU law.
The EU does not write traffic legislation, it leaves that up to the individual states.
Unlike the US, the EU is a collection of fully sovereign countries.
This was a mental shortcut, to exemplify EU vs US attitude in this case. I am from and live in one of EU countries, I am very well aware of that.
“fully” is optimistic - being a member of the EU means giving up some sovereignty.