Home / The Canary / Joey Barton’s ‘banter’ ends in conviction: a courtroom reality check

Joey Barton’s ‘banter’ ends in conviction: a courtroom reality check

Joey Barton’s ‘banter’ ends in conviction: a courtroom reality check


The courts have thrown the book at ex-footballer Joey Barton after he suggested Jeremy Vine was a paedophile. While some are describing this as a ‘free speech‘ issue, we imagine that most of them probably wouldn’t want a guy with millions of followers telling the world that they might be a danger to children:

Joey Barton and free speech

When it comes to freedom of speech, the spectrum has two extremes:

  • Anyone can say anything.
  • No one can say nothing.

Neither extreme exists in the modern-day, with every country sitting somewhere between (America styles itself as the exception, but even they have ‘unprotected speech‘ which can land a person in trouble).

While the extreme ends are just that — extreme — they are unarguably clear. When you live in a country with some ambition to protect freedom of speech and freedom to safety, there will always be debate over when speech should be allowed and when it risks harm.

In the Barton case, there didn’t end up being that much to debate, with jurors finding he had clearly:

crossed the line between free speech and a crime

Barton himself claimed his posts were “crude banter”, and that they were “dark and stupid humour”. If he’d simply called Vine a “bike nonce”, this likely wouldn’t have been an issue, but he went further — as the BBC reported:

He was also convicted over posts suggesting Vine had visited “Epstein island” – a reference to the paedophile billionaire Jeffrey Epstein – and one saying: “If you see this fella by a primary school call 999.”

Barton has 2.6 million followers on X/Twitter; would you think it was okay for him to be saying this if he was saying it about you or your family?

Barton was also convicted for suggesting Eni Aluko was “only there to tick boxes”. This statement is generally now understood to be racist, because the intent is to suggest that non-white people can only rise to positions of authority or influence when the system is rigged.

If you want to suggest a commentator is bad at their job, you can just say ‘this commentator is bad at their job‘; you don’t bring their ethnicity into it unless you’re absolutely seething at the thought of non-white people working in your industry.

People had a lot to say about Barton’s conviction anyway:

X

There are people arguing that Barton shouldn’t have been convicted for ‘posts online’ and that this is a dark sign of things to come. We report on state and police overreach all the time; Barton’s big problem was that he’s a uniquely stupid individual who couldn’t see where the line was.

We’ve said this already, but you can’t be going around telling your millions of followers that someone is a paedophile. If you disagree with this statement, please feel free to contact us with your legal name and address, and we’ll add you to our highly publicised ‘List of British Paedophiles’.

Featured image via Youtube





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