Bilge pumps are like seatbelts; you don't need them till you need them... Is it worth $150 investment to save an outboard powerhead and electrical system? Boats get hung under docks during a rising tide all the time. Because our boats are "self bailing" the reverse occurs rather quickly when the scuppers are only a couple of inches above the waterline. So a five inch rise in tide puts the scuppers underwater and she starts going down as the tide comes up. Contrary to popular debate, once the process starts it won't stop. On our older open transom boats its all she wrote once the water clears the transom. Since Aquasport did such a fantastic job of keeping the bilge sealed from the upper deck; that huge "bubble" wants to rise to the top as the water fills the upper deck causing the boat to roll over. I've seen it twice with the same 22-2 years ago because the owner would neglect to make sure that the tilted up outboard lower unit didn't drift under an overhanging dock he had along his bulkhead wall. The first time we didnt figure it out; the second time we did.
Any body of arbitrary shape which is immersed, partly or fully, in a fluid will experience the action of a net positive vertical force originating from the depth-dependent liquid pressure. This vertical force is termed buoyancy or buoyant force and is equal in magnitude, but opposite in direction, to the weight of the displaced fluid.
http://www.classicaquasport.com/gallery/showphoto.php/photo/2876/sort/1/cat/575/page/1
I would be less concerned about what physics law has been endorced or violated. Archimedes didn't have scuppers in his theory....
... which is exactly why we installed a 2000 gph pump and float switch on the deck and made a pretty little box for it so you didn't have to look at it all the time.
but if you have any hull penatrations below the water line, I'd worry more about them than the scuppers.