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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
No. The definition is the definition. You don’t need to be “absolved” if you did nothing wrong. |
Oh my. You *are* stupid. They can still charge the Toyota driver. But if you think they will, you are very, very stupid. And ignorant of the laws and the reasons behind the laws. |
That isn’t how the law works |
No, you're the messed up one. If your friend had been going the speed limit, this accident would not have happened. But go on, kid. |
And if the Toyota didn’t pull out in front of another car there wouldn’t have been an accident.
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I’m not familiar with the area—how far is the next closest stop sign or traffic light in the direction the bmw was driving? I guess he thought he had a wide open road, or just showing off his cars acceleration.
I just don’t get it. If he wanted to drag race, there are places in Prince George’s and Charles county he could have gone. |
Oh dear. You are still stupid if you think that is true. Or you are twelve. Are you twelve? |
No. The definition is the definition, but it's a definition that you obviously don't understand. If you absolve someone, then you are eliminating the possibility that they can be treated as being in the wrong. Indeed that could mean that someone did something wrong, and they're getting excused... but get this - it is also used to described people who were never in the wrong, but who's guilt is no longer being considered. Example 1: if a person is under investigation, but is discovered to have never been in the location where the crime took place, it absolves them of guilt. Example 2: if a person has permission from the owner of private property to be there, it absolves them of trespassing. Example 3: if a person was hit in a car accident, but the other party was going so recklessly fast that they would not have had reasonable time to react under the law, that absolves them of any fault in the accident. In all three of the examples, the person in question did nothing wrong, and all are perfectly conventional uses of the word "absolve." You've moved on from making up what happened in the crash to suit your fantasies, to making up the meanings of words to suit your fantasies. What's next? |
| I just saw a report that he was going 81 miles per hour. Think about that for a minute. That’s fast for a three lane highway let alone a road near a school that pedestrians walk along. I hope he gets the maximum penalty. Can his parents also be sued? I hope so. |
The BMW was driving fast. The Toyota pulled in front of him. If either driver hadn’t made a mistake those girls would be alive. |
If I'm not mistaken, they're a former student at a high school that's immediately around the corner from there. |
Given how fast the BMW was driving it was probably only a matter of time before he killed someone else. |
The Toyota was reasonable in turning as one does not expect a BMW to be traveling at 81 mph. Jackass BMW driver was going 81. That was not reasonable. Therefore and thus, BMW is the one going to prison. HTH! |
The BMW driver was criminally reckless. The Toyota driver was reasonable. You are an idiot. |
So I just looked it up and I see the accident did happen at an intersection with traffic light. And instead of slowing down, this maniac was going 80 mph? What if the light had been red? There is no defense possible since this occurred at an intersection. |