• @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    Not only those points, but there’s another obvious reason it couldn’t work, too.

    For any libel case to be successful, the key premise is clearly to show “This person described in writing is obviously meant to be me”

    Unless you are someone whose penis size is public knowledge, then describing it as big or small doesn’t contradict other identifying details because nobody knows how big it really is.

    So you can safely say “I actually have an enormous penis, your honour, but the defendant, the writer, was likely unaware of this”

    • @[email protected]
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      95 months ago

      However, you are opening yourself up to perjury if the prosecution gets creative and proves your dick is small/below average.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Oh, absolutely. My line to the court was rather dramatised for effect :)

        What you’d really argue is that since your penis size is not public knowledge, then no matter whether your actual penis is big or small, the writer’s description has no bearing on the ability of the public to recognise the person being defamed as clearly you. Therefore, the accuracy or inaccuracy of the size described in writing can be simply dismissed as immaterial, with no need to inspect your pants for the truth.