Does it make a difference if BP "cut corners" to "save cost" if they were still within the regulations outlined by the federal government/mms?
Government laws and regulations are degined to reduce SOME of the things people should not do, not all.
It's a little ironic how some 'tiny government ideologues' will attack government for not preventing any abuse - in effect arguing for less government by things that need more.
Does it make a difference if BP "cut corners" to "save cost" if they were still within the regulations outlined by the federal government/mms?
What would more government regulation have solved here?
Does it make a difference if BP "cut corners" to "save cost" if they were still within the regulations outlined by the federal government/mms?
I question your assumption that BP's actions were completely within the regulations, but that remains to be proven in court.
This is obviously not a stupid question, after the shit has hit the fan...
if they were still within the regulations outlined by the federal government/mms?
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/bps-dismal-safety-record/story?id=10763042In the last five years, investigators found, BP has admitted to breaking U.S. environmental and safety laws and committing outright fraud. BP paid $373 million in fines to avoid prosecution.
(...)
OSHA statistics show BP ran up 760 "egregious, willful" safety violations, while Sunoco and Conoco-Phillips each had eight, Citgo had two and Exxon had one comparable citation.
Does it make a difference if BP "cut corners" to "save cost" if they were still within the regulations outlined by the federal government/mms?
Does it make a difference if BP "cut corners" to "save cost" if they were still within the regulations outlined by the federal government/mms?
I think a better question would be: "How would self regulation be different?"Apparently, Yes, it does matter. There are approx 60k reasons per day. How would Self Regulation be better?
If they knew better, and did so simply to say in the event of disaster "hey, we were within regulations," yes. They were deliberately negligent.
They should care about being responsible first, and being within regulations second. The government is no expert on this stuff.
Government laws and regulations are degined to reduce SOME of the things people should not do, not all.
It's a little ironic how some 'tiny government ideologues' will attack government for not preventing any abuse - in effect arguing for less government by things that need more.
It's not that not breaking the regulations means BP did nothing wrong, it's more that if they DID break the regulations the case against them would be stronger.
