| > The US has thousands of treaties with other countries, covering everything from human rights to nuclear weapons to tax. The European Union is entirely based on such agreements, as is the United Nations. If such treaties didn't exist, neither would the world as we know it today. Of course. Now: how many countries have a special arrangement with European banks to have their citizens prominently marked as "special cases", an arrangement that is beneficial to only one side? And a gigantic pain in the ass for people who are American citizens but have no links to the US, just the fact that they happened to be born there? > You wrote that laws "need to be enforceable" and then complained about "[resorting] to bully actions". Guess what, that's a big part of how laws are enforced, everywhere in the world. It's why police forces and armies exist. You seem to be looking at individual pieces of the picture without understanding how they connect. Thank you for pointing out the fact that I do not understand this. If I am a US citizen outside of the US, whatever the US request from me, I can just let go. If I never step foot in the US. Additionally, if you are in Europe, this is hardly doable because of how we are vassals. On the larger scale the US do force extraterritoriality via the use of economic threats. I am fully aware that treaties work until they don't, and international law works until it doesn't and the UN works until it doe snot (for the latter it does not work in the first place for for the sake of the explanation let's say it does) Have you ever opened an account in a bank in Europe? |