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4 answers

Happy Holidays!

2006-12-03 13:19:34 · answer #1 · answered by Pretty_Trini_Rican 5 · 0 0

No.

There are many times when a law is broken, in cases of emergency for example.

In a forest fire, you don't get a permit to pull water out of a lake, you get the water and put out the fire even if its against the law to take water from the lake without an impacted study, or permits, etc.

So the some cases the law isn't applied

2006-12-03 21:33:59 · answer #2 · answered by Richard 7 · 0 0

Privacy Laws should not be so revered that it denies another persons legal rights. If the law sees a married couple as ONE entity and enforces interspousal tort immunity, then the law should also see a married couple as having ONE credit & banking privacy issue. WE as the couple should be able to legally SEE the other half's TRUE info.

The law wants to hold BOTH parties accountable to financial crimes but has strict laws to prevent invasion of privacy so ONE can not know the other's true picture.

See if that's not crazy and unfair.

2006-12-03 21:34:23 · answer #3 · answered by upside down 4 · 0 0

Apparently there are some people who have been able to figure out what you're trying to say but I'm not one of them.

Don't you bother to read what you write before you submit your question?

2006-12-03 23:03:23 · answer #4 · answered by Judith 6 · 1 0

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