Yudster wrote:And I never said you did - the phrase I used was "If you are insinuating". I think your post was genuinely interesting and useful, as I said, in that it demonstrated that "being offensive" is not just about using inflammatory language. And now you are saying that perhaps it is not always about intent, either.
My friend, the reporter, whose name is Rowena, worked for the local paper I spoke about in the mid nineties. Her experience of their editorial policy was by no means unusual, so she tells me (I phoned her yesterday to check I had got this right, after all, it was a long time ago). She tells me that when she left in July of 1998 the policy had shifted slightly to something a little more realistic, and that all this was in line with local reporting standards at the time. She got married, had babies, and is now the proud owner of a bookshop in Southampton. She's also black, which, in the context of her earlier concerns, you may or may not find significant.
You know we can, still use words, and then we can genuinely laugh at these words. ie. Shabaz BB7 describinging HIMSELF as a Whacky Packy Poof.
A self description, and he had a Scot's accent, and I am a scotswoman, I think he had the bravery to turn the whole gay/racist persona round in such a way, that he put it solely descriptive of himself. . But, we all know, if this description was said,or printed by another person, then it would be given a completely different angle,and would have caused an outrage.
How one person treats, and acts towards another's nationality, will always be brought to attention. Let us put this subject into prospective. This week a man has been charged with murdering his own children, this was outrageous, horrific and no words could possibly describe a man who could do such a terrible thing to his own. The word half-cast has caused emotion, yes, but words and actions are world's apart.
When I first took my husband to Scotland, him being English. We were chatting away with friends at a pub. A local drunk heard my husband's English accent, and immediately slated him and accused him of murdering and slaughtering the Scots at the Battle of Culloden. I immediately jumped to the defence of my shocked husband, and told the drunk, no, my husband wasn't there at the time.... then... I tore into him verbaly, and told him, he was a disgrace to his Scot's nationality, and I was embarassed to have a fellow Scot behave in such a manner to an Englishman, and he should be ashamed of himself, for making such an immature stupid remark like that. ........." words"...Now actions are different, I then gave him a hard right hook to the side of his face, and it knocked him unconscious to the floor........ "lies".
