Ah - in other words, yet again you've shown yourself to be talking nonsense. There is no such combined offence, not in the Public Order Act 1986 nor any other legislation.
But keep digging that hole - Australia can't be far off.
You are being extremely boring.Anyway ... section 4
She could be guilty (if proven in court) if it was found that she had used language that was insulting, or abusive
Anyway ... section 4
She could be guilty (if proven in court) if it was found that she had used language that was insulting, or abusive
Your selective quoting missed this bit!Nope. Taunting someone about infidelity is not being either insulting or abusive - the scope of those behaviours are very clearly define in both statute and case law - nor does it "..cause that person to believe that immediate unlawful violence will be used against him or another by any person, or to provoke the immediate use of unlawful violence by that person or another, or whereby that person is likely to believe that such violence will be used or it is likely that such violence will be provoked", which is an integral part of the offence.
If you believe otherwise, perhaps you'd care to link to some relevant case law? Over to you...
Using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, or disorderly behaviour intending to and causing harassment, alarm or distress
Your selective quoting missed this bit!
As you are claiming detailed knowledge of the incident with Deliahwhy was said, and that you are clearly informed that no insulting, abusive was used... Have you really confiden that nothing Delilah said would cause harassment o distress
Like I said - it's about the stories we tell ourselves.Delilah is about a woman betraying her partner by sleeping with another man.
He than cracks when taunted
It is about a crime of passion and mental health not a crime against women
It does suggest that it has stopped raining in Bergen, so it is now possible for a person to know that the sun is in fact over the yardarm.
OTIt does suggest that it has stopped raining in Bergen, so it is now possible for a person to know that the sun is in fact over the yardarm.
In the Spring, you can't trust a Norwegian weatherman.
OT
Left Bergen yesterday
Now in Trondheim on a bright sunny afternoon and sat in the cafe outside Nidaros Cathedral
We were lucky to catch a lunchtime schools lesson and recital on the organ and am at present enjoying an expresso and a nice open sandwich as the light changes for some sunset photos
Not selective quoting - I was pointing out the bit you had studiously ignored in your post #101... a bit that is an integral part of the offence you were claiming was being committed - and clearly wasn't.
It's not just me saying you're wrong but a number of others. Why do you insist on continuing to embarrass yourself?
An "open sandwich" is self-contradictory. The Norwegian smørbrød means "buttered bread".
HTH.