It makes it all the more sickening when you know that at grass roots level, the club game wouldn't even have dreamed to behave remotely in this way.
Where I lived when I played club cricket there was (and to my knowledge still is) a healthy number of black and Asian players. There was certainly sledging, but it would be about a player's ability. Occasionally I'd get the 'fat bastard' insult and that was as far as personal abuse went.
The banter in the changing room would be about the usual lad stuff, who couldn't hold their drink last night, who tried and failed to chat someone up, etc. It sometimes stretched to how pisspoor England were, or how annoying good the Aussies were.
It never occurred to anyone to make fun of someone's skin colour, or make a sweeping statement about a ethnic minority's culture. It just wasn't like that. We were players, teammates, and all looked out for each other on and off the pitch.
All these years later, and after all the work gone into the grassroots game, we find out that the rotten core is at the very top. It feels almost sordid, playing and promoting a sport which at the upper echelons had been taking the piss out of all of us, by allowing racism to not only survive but prosper.
Watching Harrison refusing to give a straight answer to a yes or no question on institutional racism, I wanted to punch his face into a pulp. That's what he and his colleagues have done to our game. Unforgivable.
If they had a shred of decency, the ECB would stand down, the counties would put life bans in place for any person proven guilty of any allegation, and the game could reflect, rebuild, and take the game back into comprehensive schools in every town and village, regardless of any levels of urban social deprivation - that's where the beating heart of cricket is, not with the privileged few who until now could get away with treating the game with such disdain.