Carol Thatcher is back in the news. She was interviewed on BBC One's Andrew Marr Show over the weekend and said she has no regrets for referring to a black tennis player as a 'wolligog' (you know what I mean - don't want AB's censor to get me!).
She states "I used it in a context which wasn't actually appreciated at the time."
To a certain extent, she should be applauded for sticking to her guns, despite the obvious financial costs she has incurred (loss of earnings etc). And as she says, she's had thousands of letters of support, so she's not alone in thinking that her language shouldn't cause offence...
But what she says now raises an interesting question - exactly
what circumstances would it be appropriate to refer to a black person as a wolligog?
How and where would this epithet be appropriate?
Would it be okay when there are no black people to hear it?
Is it like a tree falling over in the woods? If no black person is around to hear something offensive, then it's not offensive?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/80068 38.stm