I don't disagree with much there, but just one factual correction- I haven't heard of any audio tape of Lehmann's outburst.Well, either Tendulkar is lying, or the four Australians are lying. Proctor might have just gone for the numerical advantage. I don't know who is right, but I don't remember anyone being banned for three matches (Gibbs was banned for two, and Lehmann for some ODIs) for being a racist. It should be said that in the previous two cases, there was audio evidence of a racial slur, where in this case its just hearsay. That doesn't mean Harbhajan shouldn't be - and I'd be happy to have the penalties increased, but I would like to know the reasoning behind Proctor's decision.
The obvious question there would be that if he hadn't admitted being the one to have said it (and given that he said it inside the rooms, so it would only have been his teammates that would have actually seen him say it), would he been able to have been found guilty? Would the Australians have been able to close ranks around him to spare him punishment for what was a pretty egregious act?
Would have thrown up a few pretty good questions at the time, I suppose.
As for the penalties, I think that the range of possible penalties was 2-4 tests for the current case. Lehmann's penalty was 6 ODIs, with a possible range under the code of 4-8 matches. My understanding is that the penalty is served during whatever the next fixtures are on the calender, hence the test match ban for Harbhajan.
While the merit of weighting 2 ODIs against the value of one test match is certainly debatable, it would seem as though both Lehmann and Harbhajan were given the mid-range penalty for their offences.