I initially upvoted/delta’d/insightful’d this, but on looking into it further I don’t think that this concern can possibly be right. You mention “extraordinary sums of money”, but Puerto Rico only requires $3,000 dollars of liability insurance; the default liability insurance wouldn’t be relevant if “extraordinary sums of money” are involved. It’s possible that Nonlinear had better insurance for their car; but I feel like the concern here should be about them pressuring their employee to break the law, while your comment’s proposed harms would be almost equally bad if everything were legal but Nonlinear didn’t have good supplemental insurance. (In particular, your comment seems to imply that it’s significantly immortal/problematic for anybody to drive in Puerto Rico without additional insurance.)
(Regardless, I think it’s important to note that, even after receiving Nonlinear’s comments, the original post gives driving without a license as an example of something that “could have had severe personal downsides such as jail time in a foreign country”; that’s what they were presumably responding to.)
Just to clarify, from a quick Google, apparently it’s “common” for liability insurance in Puerto Rico to cover up to $300,000 for bodily injury. However, you rightfully point out it’s not legally required to have this much liability coverage.
Maybe this would be a good PSA: get good liability insurance with a lot of coverage in case you ever injure someone in a car crash!
I initially upvoted/delta’d/insightful’d this, but on looking into it further I don’t think that this concern can possibly be right. You mention “extraordinary sums of money”, but Puerto Rico only requires $3,000 dollars of liability insurance; the default liability insurance wouldn’t be relevant if “extraordinary sums of money” are involved. It’s possible that Nonlinear had better insurance for their car; but I feel like the concern here should be about them pressuring their employee to break the law, while your comment’s proposed harms would be almost equally bad if everything were legal but Nonlinear didn’t have good supplemental insurance. (In particular, your comment seems to imply that it’s significantly immortal/problematic for anybody to drive in Puerto Rico without additional insurance.)
(Regardless, I think it’s important to note that, even after receiving Nonlinear’s comments, the original post gives driving without a license as an example of something that “could have had severe personal downsides such as jail time in a foreign country”; that’s what they were presumably responding to.)
Just to clarify, from a quick Google, apparently it’s “common” for liability insurance in Puerto Rico to cover up to $300,000 for bodily injury. However, you rightfully point out it’s not legally required to have this much liability coverage.
Maybe this would be a good PSA: get good liability insurance with a lot of coverage in case you ever injure someone in a car crash!