• federal reverseM
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        2 months ago

        I think it’s fairly common to have some degree of anti-insult laws. However, “bastard” is a pretty mild insult and there’s additional context.

        In Germany, there’s Beamtenbeleidigung i.e. insult of a representative of state, like police. But that wouldn’t apply to Meloni as head of state anyway, afaik, it only applies to career officials rather than elected officials.

        • Localhorst86
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          2 months ago

          In Germany, there’s Beamtenbeleidigung i.e. insult of a representative of state, like police.

          “Beamtenbeleidigung” does actually not exist in Germany, that’s a misconception. It’s just as illegal insulting a police officer as it is insulting almost anybody else. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beamtenbeleidigung

          • federal reverseM
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            2 months ago

            TIL! Thanks.

            So prosecutors just treat cases of insulted officials differently than when someone from the hoi polloi is being insulted!?

            • Localhorst86
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              2 months ago

              It’s probably just more common for officials to take enough offense to actually file a report.
              Plus “Beamtenbeleidung” is such a common misconcpetion, that officials probably believe it actually is a real thing.