Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Was Paul Gascoigne Racial Abusive, Or Just Stating The Fact That He Could Not See The Bouncer?
38 Answers
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-37 96198/P aul-Gas coigne- pleads- guilty- raciall y-abusi ng-blac k-bounc er.html
Has regards the penalty, this reader's view about says it all.
/// invade an airport and disrupt hundreds of planes and thousands of people causing hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of delays, get £95 bill. make a stupid comment and get done for over 2.5k, something is not right here. Ok Gascoigne should not have said it, but was the guy really so upset? Of course not,; however if I needed a body guard, I would want one that didn't crumble over a tasteless joke that's for sure!///
Has regards the penalty, this reader's view about says it all.
/// invade an airport and disrupt hundreds of planes and thousands of people causing hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of delays, get £95 bill. make a stupid comment and get done for over 2.5k, something is not right here. Ok Gascoigne should not have said it, but was the guy really so upset? Of course not,; however if I needed a body guard, I would want one that didn't crumble over a tasteless joke that's for sure!///
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Was Paul Gascoigne consciously racially abusive? Highly doubtful.
As his defence pointed out, Gascoigne is a somewhat unreconstructed individual, I doubt if he would understand the term 'insidiously racist' as the judge put it to him.
But - just because offence is not intended, that is not an excuse for it - by that measure, no-one who ran over a stranger would ever be prosecuted again because no harm was meant.
So Gascoigne has been charged, tried and convicted. There will be those who think is sentence, and indeed even the charge, were overly harsh, there will be others who think justice for the greater good of society has been served. And there will be those, and I seriously suspect Gascoigne is one of them, who will be rather baffled by the whole thing.
Comparing penalties is utterly futile - laws are based on circumstances, charges, evidence, mitigation, and a judge's experienced opinion. There is no 'this was worse than that' - it is a debate cul-de-sac, and best avoided.
As his defence pointed out, Gascoigne is a somewhat unreconstructed individual, I doubt if he would understand the term 'insidiously racist' as the judge put it to him.
But - just because offence is not intended, that is not an excuse for it - by that measure, no-one who ran over a stranger would ever be prosecuted again because no harm was meant.
So Gascoigne has been charged, tried and convicted. There will be those who think is sentence, and indeed even the charge, were overly harsh, there will be others who think justice for the greater good of society has been served. And there will be those, and I seriously suspect Gascoigne is one of them, who will be rather baffled by the whole thing.
Comparing penalties is utterly futile - laws are based on circumstances, charges, evidence, mitigation, and a judge's experienced opinion. There is no 'this was worse than that' - it is a debate cul-de-sac, and best avoided.
Yes he accepted the charge. It was an unwise thing to say- it was the sort of line black and white comedians got away with regularly in the 1970s but it sounds less funny now. Gazza is not a professional comedian though and I can see how under the spotlight someone who isn't always thinking straight could make such a comment (if it was unscripted) without realising it could offend. I am sure he regretted it the moment it hit the press
A £2,500 is surprisingly large, especially for a joke which is at least 45 years old.
AOG - you asked whether Gascoigne was being racially abusive or just stating that he could not see the bouncer.
There's a third (more likely) possibility - he thought he was being funny, and on safe ground. In the grand scheme of things, he's certainly no Michael Richards (Seinfeld actor).
AOG - you asked whether Gascoigne was being racially abusive or just stating that he could not see the bouncer.
There's a third (more likely) possibility - he thought he was being funny, and on safe ground. In the grand scheme of things, he's certainly no Michael Richards (Seinfeld actor).
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.