The Right to Not Be Offended?

I don't think it is.......both are unnecessarily abusive. You just think it is acceptable to pick on one group over another....I don't.

You are making the Jimmy Hill argument (He tried to claim calling a black man the N word was the same as calling him 'Chinny')... Let Stewart Lee explain the flaw in that logic

 
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You are making the Jimmy Hill argument... Let Stewart Lee explain the flaw in that



Actually why don't you explain it.....as I've said before, I don't watch YouTube videos in lieu of other peoples opinion.

In any case, comedy is not the same as attacking someone personally.....surely anyone with half a brain can see that.

I fail to see why being abusive to one group should be acceptable just because you want to abuse them.......Just because one may be deemed more abusive than another, doesn't make either acceptable. Discrimination is discrimination, the relative severity of the specific example doesn't make the lesser any more acceptable than the greater.

The only false logic being applied here is that you have the right to insult or discriminate against someone personally simply because they are different to you.......
 
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I fail to see why being abusive to one group should be acceptable just because you want to abuse them.......Just because one may be deemed more abusive than another, doesn't make either acceptable.

The only false logic being applied here is that you have the right to insult someone simply because they are different to you.......

It's not about having the 'right' to insult people. Just because something isn't illegal doesn't mean you should do it. It's about certain things being more offensive than others and where you draw the line.

OK, to paraphrase Lee's argument. Basically, words like 'Fatty' or 'Chinny' don't have the same weight of cultural and historical weight as something like n***** or ***n. He argues that you don't have political parties fighting elections of the basis that people with big chins should go 'home', you never hear of people being murdered for being fat or for having spots.

That is why racial and homophobic insults are more offensive (and should therefore be taken more seriously) than other insults.
 
i think some might find this an interesting read. i know i did.

for those that dont want to or cant be bothered here are some key factors :

Lessons to be learned
There are two lessons from the case. First, the context in which the words are used may be important. In many cases, the only victims of the offensive behaviour are police officers. In such circumstances, whether the words are or are not abusive may depend upon the manner of their use, the context in which such words are used, and perhaps even the cultural background of the person using them. Second, evidence will always be required that the hearers would be likely to be caused harassment, alarm or distress: this cannot be inferred. An obiter comment by Mr Justice Bean towards the end of the judgment, however, appears to leave the door open to an argument being made that some words are so offensive that it may be that no evidence as to their impact will be necessary.

Advice for practitioners on section 5 offences

1. Context is key. It may not be sufficient for evidence to be adduced that the words were said, but that in those circumstances, the words were abusive, threatening or insulting.

2. Both elements of the offence must be proved. It must always be shown that the words used were likely to cause a person within hearing to be caused harassment, alarm or distress.

3. Although it cannot be said that police officers will never be harassed, alarmed or distressed by the words they hear, the nature of their work means that they are less likely to be so caused.

4. Subject to 5 (below), evidence must always be adduced that the person who was within hearing of the words was likely to have been harassed, alarmed or distressed. It cannot be inferred.

5. It is suggested obiter in Harvey that there are certain words which are "far more offensive" than those used in Harvey (e.g. racial abuse) where evidence is not required and that it can be inferred that they would have caused harassment, alarm or distress. Until the point is clarified in future case law, it would be prudent to treat Rule 4 as applying to all words

so although you may be unclear on the law in its current form, the people enforcing it are trained to take context into account.
 
It's not about having the 'right' to insult people. Just because something isn't illegal doesn't mean you should do it. It's about certain things being more offensive than others and where you draw the line.

OK, to paraphrase Lee's argument. Basically, words like 'Fatty' or 'Chinny' don't have the same weight of cultural and historical weight as something like n***** or ***n. He argues that you don't have political parties fighting elections of the basis that people with big chins should go 'home', you never hear of people being murdered for being fat or for having spots.

That is why racial and homophobic insults are more offensive (and should therefore be taken more seriously) than other insults.

And no one is disputing that, what they are disputing is that it is acceptable to discriminate against the fat kid for his appearance and that he doesnt deserve any protection under the law just because he (arguably) has a choice.......equally with any individual, they should enjoy equal protections from abuse and discrimination under the law. That includes having a reasonable expectation to not be personally attacked verbally while out in public by another.

The respective seriousness of the offence should not negate the lesser offence.....it should simply inform the decision on how to apply the law.
 
You may doubt it, but it's still an offence. There. I admitted it, I'm a criminal - might as well lock me up and throw away the key!

Actually, may as well do the same to the whole population at birth. There are so many stupid laws it's impossible not to break at least one in your life. :rolleyes: (rolleyes directed at stupid laws rather than Castiel :p)

I don't think that it is against the law......I think you may be interpreting that way, but I doubt that is actually the case.

It is not illegal to call somebody stupid.

This is a key point. Any S5 prosecution must meet the reasonable person test. What ever was said or written must cause harassment, alarm or distress to someone of reasonable firmness. Saying someone is stupid or a numpty doesn't meet this requirement.
 
And no one is disputing that, what they are disputing is that it is acceptable to discriminate against the fat kid for his appearance and that he doesnt deserve any protection under the law just because he (arguably) has a choice.......equally with any individual, they should enjoy equal protections from abuse and discrimination under the law. That includes having a reasonable expectation to not be personally attacked verbally while out in public by another.

But the debate is where the line should be drawn, even you must admit that someone shouting "Hey you've got bad hair" shouldn't be illegal.

You think the line of tolerance should be drawn lower than I do that's all.
 
This is a key point. Any S5 prosecution must meet the reasonable person test. What ever was said or written must cause harassment, alarm or distress to someone of reasonable firmness. Saying someone is stupid or a numpty doesn't meet this requirement.

i think my last post refers to this point to. as long as the people enforcing the law understand that context is important, then there is no issue. just because certain people want to make extreme situations a possilbe illegal offence (like calling someone a numpty) does not make it so.

But the debate is where the line should be drawn, even you must admit that someone shouting "Hey you've got bad hair" shouldn't be illegal.

You think the line of tolerance should be drawn lower than I do that's all.

and this is where the link i added in my last post is relevent. it is about context and whether it was used to cause alarm or harassment. this statement clearly was not.
 
But the debate is where the line should be drawn, even you must admit that someone shouting "Hey you've got bad hair" shouldn't be illegal.

You think the line of tolerance should be drawn lower than I do that's all.

No of course saying someones got bad hair isn't illegal.....however abusing that person because they have bad hair should be.....

I simply think a level of reasonable tolerance should be informed by the specific incident.....the intent and the context of the incident, the nature of the incident and the relative harm to the individual(s) concerned should all be considered before applying the law. So calling the fat kid ****** should not necessarily be treated with the same level of severity as calling the Black kid a ******, but each should be entitled to their respective protections under the law.

There should be no arbitrary line whereby it is decided that call x such a name is acceptable, but call y such a name is not......once you start drawing lines in the sand people start moving the sand......
 
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No of course saying someones got bad hair isn't illegal.....however abusing that person because they have bad hair should be.....

I simply think a level of reasonable tolerance should be informed by the specific incident.....the intent and the context of the incident, the nature of the incident and the relative harm to the individual should all be considered before applying the law.

There should be no arbitrary line whereby it is decided that call x such a name is acceptable, but call y such a name is not......once you start drawing lines in the sand people start moving the sand......

i think you are going too far the other way. saying someone has bad hair should not be illegal, it is, by all accounts just an observation. screaming in someones face that their hair is bad, could be deemed abusive or insulting behaviour though. if you stopped anyone from being allowed to make an innocent comment then the world would not surrvive.
 
i think you are going too far the other way. saying someone has bad hair should not be illegal, it is, by all accounts just an observation. screaming in someones face that their hair is bad, could be deemed abusive or insulting behaviour though. if you stopped anyone from being allowed to make an innocent comment then the world would not surrvive.

You have just repeated what I have said.


'saying someone's got bad hair shouldn't be illegal...abusing someone because of their bad hair should be'.......

You have just said what I said, but with more words.:confused:
 
You have just repeated what I have said.


'saying someone's got bad hair shouldn't be illegal...abusing someone because of their bad hair should be'.......

You have just said what I said, but with more words.:confused:

sorry i miss read your first statement as 'saying someone has bad hair should be illegal'. i do appoligise for this after re-reading it you didnt, you were saying about abusing someone over it.
 
sorry i miss read your first statement as 'saying someone has bad hair should be illegal'. i do appoligise for this after re-reading it you didnt, you were saying about abusing someone over it.

No worries.

I think the more important statement was the second part of my post regards how a decision should be formed regarding individual incidents......


I have changed my mind on the removal of the word insulting however, only because that reading all the relevant legislation and protections, removing it would largely be a cosmetic exercise anyway and the current protections that people have would be largely unaffected.......equally leaving it there would similarly be of no import to the actual legislation overall.

I think the reform should be in clarifying the application of this and other legislation to avoid the miscarriages of justice that are being associated with it......
 
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Nonsense, as is being pointed out time and again, expressing an opinion is not in itself insulting......Section 5 deals with the Use of Insulting Words and Behaviour, not the expression of a legitimate opinion......I was not insulting to anyone, I was giving a legitimate opinion on what I consider the motivation of some people.

Just because you say you cannot insult someone without insulting words of behaviour, doesn't make it so. "Personally, I think black people are intellectually inferior to white men" is still an insulting sentance without any profanity, and you calling people underhanded racists is typically more insulting that me calling you a "big fat moron".

The latter insult there has been posted somewhere I can reasonably believe you're going to read it, it s fairly insulting, and if you happen to need an extreme amount of mollycoddling I suppose it could cause distress. That I can be fined £2000 for an off-the-cuff remark based on whether or not you can handle a little banter is ridiculous.

OK, sure, today I might not get prosecuted for such a thing, but that doesn't mean it won't be applied somewhere as equally ridiculous at another point in time, or as just yet another tool that can be easily used to abuse citizens when they can't get them for what they wanted to get them for.

If you are not within those groups or your motivations are otherwise, then you have no reason to be insulted, and if you are one of those groups then you shouldn't be insulted either as I have no used any insulting words or behaviour in expressing my opinion.....all the racist has to so is counter my opinion for example.

Actually I think if I were a racist, I wouldn't particularly be insulted by the term. I'm pretty sure branding an ordinary person a racist is pretty insulting, and you'd probably be the only person to disagree with that. The fact you can have a different opinion to what is normal, suggests that people applying the law can also have differing opinions, which is why we don't need laws such as this.

Thus the need for such laws.

Proving the necessity of laws, doesn't prove the need for laws, or a Government to control all aspects of our lives. Ideally what is and is not illegal should be explainable in a short pamphlet, otherwise ignorance of the law is a valid defence regardless of whether we accept it as one or not.

The point I was making is that you logic is entirely based on the reasonable demeanour of all involved to respect each others personal rights.....that is not based in reality...thus we have laws, such as S5.

Logic may vary from person to person, but that doesn't mean our current system has been planned from any logical perspective. Regardless, laws shouldn't rely on logic to interpret, they should be clear & concise, and there should be a lack of arguments on what can and can not be considered unacceptable, and if you can't write it that way, you need to stop writing laws.


Again you are making out I said something I did not.......I merely stated that a Governments job is to Govern....which includes maintaining law and order.....I made no reference to any specific type of Governance or the benefits or disadvantages thereof.

Then I fail to see why you even brought it up. You pulled that I didn't believe Governments should govern out of no where. How can I be faulted by reading more into that?

You appear to be creating an argument that no one is actually having.

Not really. What you feel the Government should and should not be doing is at the core of this debate. You seem to support a nanny state, and agree with the law in all but possibly the way it has been worded. I disagree with the law in favour of personal freedoms.

I have seen and experienced societies where effective Governance and the rule of law has broken down....unfortunately what invariably happens is that people quickly revert to their baser instincts.....some will try to band together and create smaller protective communities, create their own set of boundaries and laws, however some will simply ignore that and do whatever they wish, to whomever they want. These people are not swayed by public acceptance, they are motivated by their greed and lust for power and the ability to persecute whoever they like and take whatever they like.

Well thats sad for them, but I fail to see what direct correlation it has to my opinion that laws should be minimal as opposed to non-existent. There is a greater chances of our society crumbling because we do too much and can no longer afford to keep going the way that we do, than for everyone to go mad, because the police are going to mind their own business except when it's warranted.

You are being idealistic if you think that a fair and equal society comes without the need for imposing at least some rules on that society.

At no point did I say that, you're constantly twisting my argument to seem silly rather than come back at what I actually said. I know constant strawmans are your debating style, but why don't you try a different tactic for once?

Unfortunately we don't live in your idealistic, utopian world where everyone is reasonable and no one feels superior to another simply because of an inherent trait such as skin colour. I too would like to see the idea of minorities sweat away, and people see everyone as simply being one race, one people.

We don't no, but I do believe we live in a world, or at least a country, where the majority of people are inherently good, and I feel that legislation discrimination breeds the very contempt that we are afraid of.

We simply do not live in such a world.

I guess you have less faith in our country than I do.

Yet is it harassment if each time he is vilified by someone different.....what if 100 people call him "fatty" only once....by your logic, none of those people are doing anything illegal and thus it is ok for them to so so....yet is the child subject to any less harm?

By my logic, it shouldn't actually happen unless it's a conceited effot to actually bully. If a bunch of kids get together and decide to pick on someone, it's harassment. If a kid eats too many burgers and manages to invoke the same reaction in 100 seperate incidents, then he should consider a diet. Either way, you're not going to hunt down 100 seperate people no matter which way you spin it.

And Section 5 is quite clear that any insult must also fit into certain criteria as has been mentioned plenty of times, this included it being harassing or causing distress etc....

"(1)A person is guilty of an offence if he—

(a)uses threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, or disorderly behaviour, or


Opinion based.

(b)displays any writing, sign or other visible representation which is threatening, abusive or insulting,

Opinion based. Also, by extension should include online forums.

within the hearing or sight of a person likely to be caused harassment, alarm or distress thereby.

Opinion based.


(2)An offence under this section may be committed in a public or a private place, except that no offence is committed where the words or behaviour are used, or the writing, sign or other visible
representation is displayed, by a person inside a dwelling and the other person is also inside that or another dwelling.

OK. So I can insult you in my own house?

(3)It is a defence for the accused to prove—

(a)that he had no reason to believe that there was any person within hearing or sight who was likely to be caused harassment, alarm or distress, or

Opinion based.

(b)that he was inside a dwelling and had no reason to believe that the words or behaviour used, or the writing, sign or other visible representation displayed, would be heard or seen by a person outside that or any other dwelling, or

Fair enough, in my own house I can be racist.

(c)that his conduct was reasonable."

Opinion based.

Because it isn't just about the individual, it is also about the wider society.....just because an individual cannot effectively be insulted, doesn't mean that society should allow such behaviour......the law should apply equally to everyone and the issue here is not the law itself, but the way it has been applied in very certain circumstances. The compromise would be to clarify the way in which the law is to be applied, not remove it or weaken it.

The law is **** in onto itself. Other laws should be able to deal with the real issue surroding the problem of harrasment. I don't believe clarifying how a law should be applied is a defence, it certainly won't be helpful when the next guys in power decide it should be applied differently.

I am not ignoring anything....I simply know that the world is not as reasonable as you suggest. Ask a homosexual how they feel about the casual insult or how often it occurs? I grew up in a community where it was acceptable behaviour to insult and demean me because of my mothers heritage...and again in another community where that heritage was the norm, but it was socially ok to demean my Father's heritage instead, there was little I could do about it simply because the protections did not exist in the laws of that society.....I was generally told to "take it on the chin, you'll get used to it, its just the way it is"......what may seem as trivial casual insults to some are not so trivial and casual to those that are subjected to them regularly, even if not by the same person.

And because you took it in the chin, you can actually take it. Not that I find that behaviour acceptable, I just don't feel it's done you enough damange to warrent the abusive nature of the law.

Everyone has a basic right to go about their business without being unreasonably insulted or subjected to unreasonable insulting behaviour, and society should enforce that right...that doesn't mean that all insults are illegal and the legislation doesn't say that they are either........which is something people cannot seem to grasp for some reason.

Because everyone besides you has a grasp of the idea that the interpretation of laws depends on a) whos reading it and b) the agendas of those enforcing it. For some reason, despite you mass of experince, you don't seem to have a healthy fear of Government. :p
 
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sorry i miss read your first statement as 'saying someone has bad hair should be illegal'. i do appoligise for this after re-reading it you didnt, you were saying about abusing someone over it.

I disagree with the both of you.

Let me word this correctly before Castiel twists what I'm saying, it's not that I think people 'should have a right to' shout "You've got horrible hair" in someone's face, I just don't think it should be a criminal offence to.

I feel there has to be a point where people are left to fend for themselves and not expect the state to intervene. My solution to being told you've got a bad haircut in an negative tone would be for you to say back "Well at least I'm not a tw*t". I would much rather people had that attitude than one where people say "Right I'm calling the police on you for that". As I've explained above there are limits to that mentality, they are just higher than you are suggesting (racial slurs, homophobia etc).

I fear if we don't draw the line, we'll start moving towards an American culture of sueing people for trivial things all the time and that's not a society I want to live in.

I think we can all agree we'd like a more cohesive society and whilst people insulting each other in the street isn't a sign of that, trying to legislate against it with over zealous laws can ultimately lead to a paranoid society who are afraid to say anything for fear of being sued and arrested meaning you got create an even more diversive society.

It's easy to think of a chav sitting on a wall abusing people as they go by and not care for his 'rights' but you also have to think, what if I was in a super market one day and someone through incompetance ran their trolley into you hard, causing a lot of pain and the almost involunatry reaction of you shouting "You ****** tw*t" and then having to face possible criminal charges for it.
 
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