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September 8, 2008 5:29:21 AM CDT



I Swear! And More and More, in Public

Posted Nov 27, 07 2:55 PM CST in Arts & Living 

(Newser) – Profanity seems to be more and more widespread, but linguists suggest people aren't actually swearing more—they're just swearing more publicly. The tide of athletes and musicians who pepper their language with choice four-letter words is meeting a surge of media avenues that aren't regulated by the government, resulting in a flood of profanity, reports the Baltimore Sun.

Swearing has a key role, said a psychology professor, as an alternative to physical aggression—a strategy Dick Cheney put to the test in 2004 on the Senate floor. TV networks, responsible for salty utterances they broadcast, are appealing to the Supreme Court to remove FCC sanctions in cases when verboten words slip past the censors.

Source Baltimore Sun

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Duane "Dog" Chapman, star of the reality series "Dog, the Bounty Hunter" is shown in this 2006 file photo. Chapman on Wednesday apologized for using the N-word repeatedly in a profanity-laced tirade during...   (Associated Press)
The Fox network cut off Sally Field when she swore during her Emmy Award acceptance speech in September. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)   (Associated Press)
Vice President Dick Cheney speaks at the World Affairs Council luncheon in Dallas in this Nov. 2, 2007 file photo. Cheney made headlines by shouting an obscenity at Sen. Patrick J. Leahy on the Senate...   (Associated Press)
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