Making_Splinters wrote:D/L wrote:Making_Splinters wrote:The issue has already been dealt with numerous times, D/L.
For the third or whatever number you want to assign to it the answer is pretty simple: When asked if something deviod of context could be offensive to another party then the answer will almost always be yes. It would be impossible to say anything else and admitting such an obvious idea would be hanging oneself in the circumstance.
Whether or not the comments were meant in an offensive manner was not actually the question asked despite it being the salient one.
If you ask a pointless question you will always get a pointless answer.
“Avoided” seems more apposite than “dealt with”, M_S.
It’s OK. Many will understand any failure to put forward a credible alternative theory for the reason for Pietersen’s denial.
Perhaps you can explain why that is not credible D/L, just to illustrate your own denial seeing as you seem to take such a strong position on the term.
If I understand correctly, we are being asked to believe that the reason for Pietersen’s non-denial was that he was worried that, even though he thought that the text he sent contained nothing offensive, others would not agree. I wonder why he thought others may not agree if he thought the text really contained no offence.
Surely, the denial should have been made and Pietersen should have been prepared to argue why the texts weren’t offensive.
It all seems very fanciful, especially considering that at this time, nobody knew whether the texts would be published verbatim. It also seems as much a defence of a long-entrenched position as it is of Pietersen.
Clearly, the far more likely reason would be a concern that the texts may be examined, their offensiveness apparent to anyone who read them and any denial shown to have been false.

