European law imposes a great deal more obligations on a business than that. This claim is simplistic to the point of disingenuousness.

Since obviously there is no "European law" in the first place, I think it's pretty safe to assume you have no idea what you're talking about.

That would be rather surprising to the large number of law schools that teach European Law as a core subject, such as the Panthéon-Sorbonne (Droit européen), Bologna U (Diritto Europeo), and Humboldt U (Europarecht).

Equally surprised would be the authors of very many legal books and journals, e.g. https://www.cambridge.org/core/browse-subjects/law/european-...

Interpol would like a word.

> Interpol would like a word.

Also not a "European law" by any measure or understanding, that's a international organization that does police cooperation across the continent (and further), it isn't even a law enforcement agency... Not exactly sure how you could confuse that with laws, but here we are.