Mintrude wroterio wroteMintrude wroteThis is what happens when you put the collective before the individual. I'll leave you to argue amongst yourselves whether that's a good thing or not.
Surely it's a sign of ultra-individualistic behaviour, i.e. me getting somewhere on time is more important than someone else's life.
The phrase "Their action violates a lot of public interests" sounds like the work of a man believing he is acting in the interests of the public a a whole, no?
Not really, sounds like self-justification to me.
Perhaps he rationalised it that way, but in order to act like that he would have to be pretty pissed off. And people don't get pissed off "in the public interest", they get pissed off because they personally are being inconvenienced.