"Smug, greedy, well fed white people have invented a language to conceal their sins. Israeli murderers are called commandos. Arab commandos are called terrorists...In the age when torture as become 'enhanced interrogation techniques,' when the rich are 'job creators,' when murdered children are called 'collateral damage.'"
--George Carlin
"Now your Northern nigger's a Negro
You see, he's got his dignity
But down here we're too ignorant to realize
The north as set the nigger free.
Yes, he's free to be put in a cage in Harlem in New York City
--Randy Newman, "Rednecks"
One thing which triggers Mad Dog is euphemism.
As George Carlin noted, this "softening" of language allows us to live with the reality of murdered children, ethnic cleansing or racial hatred by calling it something less offensive.
We are such delicate hot house flowers, our society would just disintegrate if the newscaster reporter that some Congressman called someone a "Nigger," or that some Senator called a colleague a "dumb fuck."
Over fifty years ago, in 1972 Carlin's wonderful exegesis of the "seven deadly words" which could never be said on television, or in any public American setting titillated audiences and his album sold millions because saying these words in public was simply out of the question. As he examined the word "fuck" he pointed out that was a word which referred to the act which begins life, and as a sound it is actually not offensive, beginning with a soft sibilant and ending emphatically. What he was talking about was not really euphemism but crudity. It was crude to refer to sexual intercourse and the scatological "shit" instead of "excrement." There were acceptable substitutes--"fudge" or "frigging"--for "fuck" and "shoot" for shit. But it all came down to words which would be unacceptable in church or at the PTA or in a lecture hall or at a Thanksgiving dinner as painted by Norman Rockwell, where women and children (the hot house flowers of American society) were present.
Thirty years ago, Mad Dog was struck by a report from the public grade school his kids attended--an eight year old was sent to the principal's office because he had said, "Fuck, no!" to his teacher. The child was Black and he came from the one part of Bethesda, Carver Road, where an enclave of Black folks, present since just after the Civil War, lived. He likely heard his parents and siblings use "fuck" freely, but he had not learned that in polite, formal, White society you cannot say such words.
Of course, now turn on Youtube and watch any comedian from from Carlin to Robin Williams to Bill Burr and you hear a steady stream of "fuck's" used almost as punctuation marks. You may say, well, that's a different setting, and that is true, but it is still a public setting and women (if not children) are present.
When his adoring MAGA mob cultists talk about Trump, the first thing they always say is, "He talks like us." Meaning, he doesn't lie to us: He says "fuck."
Avoidance of crudity, of those seven deadly words is a conscious choice, a "lie" really, in that it is a self edited version of presentation where really inflammatory stuff is avoided.
There are a few comedians who can be really funny without ever using an off color word--Rita Rudner is the epitome of that "clean" humor. Her humor is sly, not without reference to sex, but it relies on the listener's own intelligence to see the joke. That takes a kind of intelligence very few possess.
Part of why people laugh at Richard Pryor or Dave Chappelle or Chris Rock is they use profanity freely in a public hall--often immense public spaces--filled with people who've paid to hear them, paid to be titillated. Of course, each of these men would be devastatingly funny without the profanity, but the rhythm and gestalt of their shtick requires the four lettered words.
Nobody would ever think of charging them with public lewdness. People are paying for that lewdness.
There was a famous Supreme Court case where the defendant, appealing his conviction to the Supreme Court, had written the words, "Fuck the Draft" on his jacket and he was arrested for Disturbing the Peace.
His attorney chose to use the word, "Fuck" in oral arguments before the Court, believing that by saying that word out loud in the hallowed halls of the Supreme Court of the United States, and demonstrating the walls of the Supreme Court building did not immediately collapse, he might win his case.
That case was Cohen v California, 1971, and the Court ruled that "fuck" was not enough to justify a conviction for disturbing the peace. (A wonderful phrase, when you think about it. Could anyone be charged with that today when Mr. Trump and his MAGA mob are all about disruption?)
Writing for the Court (in a 5-4 decision) Justice John Harlan noted the violation of local norms in the case of displaying the written word, "Fuck," was purely matter of speech--the words had been written on a jacket, but the man wearing it had not behaved in any way other than wearing that jacket to disturb the peace. Cohen had not done anything to endanger or threaten anyone.
Harlan went on to say that "one man's vulgarity is another's lyric"
Four justices disagreed. Their dissenting opinion was written by Harry Blackmun who said wearing that jacket was not speech, but was "an absurd and immature antic." They would have preferred, presumably, a jacket which said, "F-word, The Draft."
(Intriguingly, this uptight justice, Harry Blackmun wrote the majority opinion allowing for abortion in Roe v Wade.)
Of course, Donald Trump uses the word "fuck" frequently and publicly, as he did at his New Hampshire rallies--before crowds--and nobody seems to mind.
In fact, the crowds seem to delight in it, just as if he were a comedian using his jester hat to titillate and illuminate. "He sounds like one of us," which is to say, he talks to us the way we talk to each other at the barbecue. He doesn't pretend to be better than us by using language you'd have to go to some Ivy League college to learn.
So maybe it's not the word per se, but who is using it and under what circumstances.
Speaking at meetings where only adults are present, like the Hampton Democrats meetings, Mad Dog would never said, "I just heard Trump say that if the United States pulled out of NATO, then Europe would be fucked." That word "fucked" would have to be replaced with, "You know, the 'F-word."
Even writers at the New York Times do not report that an ICE agent in Minneapolis called someone he arrested "a nigger." They say he "used a racial epithet," or used "the N-word."
And what is the benefit of saying "the N-word" or "the F-word," other than virtue signaling?
Oh, HE said that, not me. I would never be so crude.
But that's a lie, and every MAGA mother knows it. Of course, you would and do use the "F-word" word," in private conversations. But in public, you'd pretend that word never passes your lips.
"The N-word" is a little different because it signals an attitude of derision unto hate in the mind of the ICE agent, who considers Black people or Negroes (which is a word Martin Luther King used) to be subhuman. Anyone who says, "nigger" is a hater, by definition.
Not even Trump says "nigger," (at least in public) because he wants Black votes.
But, apart from "nigger" now, 50 years after the seven deadly words, and Cohen v California, almost anything goes on the American public stage. We are not living in Downton Abbey.
Of course, even today, we are told using words like "fuck" and "Shit" coarsen" our public discourse, sully our culture and grows hair on our palms.
Imagine American culture tolerating words like "fuck"!
| HOOTERS MIDDLE SCHOOL BASEBALL TEAM |
Mad Dog thinks we are long past all that, with the advent of Mr. Trump and those who sail with him.
And, Mad Dog asks quite unironically: How could we possibly "coarsen" public discourse or American culture any more than it already has been coarsened--in an America where a middle school baseball team goes out after the game to Hooters, as a reward for a hard won victory on the diamond, the pre pubescent players can oogle the waitresses?
The fact is, most people, like Mr. Trump who use "fuck" use it because they have limited working vocabulary, and they use this word as a sort of verbal exclamation point; for many it is a verbal tick, a sort of easy rhetorical finger in the eye, a simple way to disparage, like that nine year old Black kid from Carver Road.
They use these words because they have no better words.
For some, it is a way of saying, "There, I've said it. You want a piece of me? Let's step outside and settle this like men."
But, of course, these guys are not actually real men. They are children who have acquired years, but their brains have been arrested in development, mired forever in the dumpster of stunted display and degenerate neurons.
| Let Us not Coarsen Our Public Square |
There is a wonderful scene in the movie "Roxanne" where Steve Martin, playing Cyrano, accosts a man who has attempted to insult Cyrano's unwieldy nose. Cyrano spews out 20 superior nose insults. If you had any real wit, any smarts at all, you could have done way better, Cyrano is demonstrating. You could have said, for instance, as sexual innuendo, that my nose is so big, "some of the ladies have asked if you wouldn't mind putting that thing away," or you could have leaned toward the meteorological: "Watch out, she's going to blow!"
Of course, what he is saying is "you are so low grade you can't even come up with a good insult."
| Can We Tolerate Coarse Language? |
And that may be what is so dispiriting about Trump and his fellow travelers: they are simply not even bright enough to engage in imaginative deprecation. They can't even taunt with any panache.











