Originally posted by jean
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Plebs 0 Toffs 1?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut to what extent, if any, can one necessarily ascribe with certainty Mitchell's undeniable rudeness wholly to a belief on his part that he was, as he saw it, addressing his social inferiors?...
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Originally posted by jean View PostHis expression of his rudeness in those terms is entirely due to his sense of superiority.
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Once again we see a public figure blaming his bad behaviour on the effects of alcohol, or at least using his downing of the champagne at the Palace as an excuse.
The sad truth is that drunken behaviour simply brings out character traits that are already there, nicer people make happier drunks.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...If he had merely been rude to them without using such a term when so doing, mightn't that simply be regarded as rudeness per se (inexcusable though it remains) without the added frisson of the notion of his having addressed those whom he might have regarded as his social inferiors?
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Originally posted by jean View PostYes. That's the whole point.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post...whether or not he did use the "p" word...
(That's the only reason we're talking about it again now.)
“For the reasons given, I’m satisfied, at least on the balance of probabilities, that Mr Mitchell did speak the words attributed to him, or so close to them as to amount to the same, the politically toxic word pleb.”
Mind you, the judge did reveal his own brand of unthinking superiority when he went on to say of the police officer:
"He is not the sort of man who had the wit, the imagination or the inclination” to “invent in the spur of the moment what a senior cabinet minister would have said to him...”Last edited by jean; 01-12-14, 14:59.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThe judge says he did.
(That's the only reason we're talking about it again now.)
“For the reasons given, I’m satisfied, at least on the balance of probabilities, that Mr Mitchell did speak the words attributed to him, or so close to them as to amount to the same, the politically toxic word pleb.”
Mind you, the judge did reveal his own brand of unthinking superiority when he went on to say of the police officer:
"He is not the sort of man who had the wit, the imagination or the inclination” to “invent in the spur of the moment what a senior cabinet minister would have said to him...”I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThe judge says he did.
(That's the only reason we're talking about it again now.)
“For the reasons given, I’m satisfied, at least on the balance of probabilities, that Mr Mitchell did speak the words attributed to him, or so close to them as to amount to the same, the politically toxic word pleb.”
Mind you, the judge did reveal his own brand of unthinking superiority when he went on to say of the police officer:
"He is not the sort of man who had the wit, the imagination or the inclination” to “invent in the spur of the moment what a senior cabinet minister would have said to him...”
All that said, I still wonder if Mitchell will appeal...
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Originally posted by jean View PostDo you think he wanted to invite the inevitable comparisons with Mitchell?
Or perhaps it was a coded message expressing his sympathies with him, despite the judgment he had been forced to give?
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Originally posted by jean View PostI am struggling to understand what would qualify as pragmatic in this context.
Originally posted by jean View Post(And why do we need to be prudent?)
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