- Jul 7, 2003
- 47,639
You're missing the point about what Collar Feeler is saying.
I rarely swear in the presence of the public, clearly it would compromise my position if I told someone to stop f***ing swearing. That said, there are circumstances when the only way you can get through to someone is to do so in terms that they understand. Asking some pissed up tool for the fourteenth time if he wouldn't mind awfully moving along isn't likely to have any impact, on the other hand if I responded in his sort of manner it does sometimes have the desired effect. In some ways it shocks people into a response.
And spare me the "if we swore we'd be arrested" line: nobody gets arrested for one instance of saying "f***" in the middle of a sentence. To get nicked you'd have to be doing it loudly, repeatedly, in the presence of people who might actually find it offensive, or after already having been warned about your conduct.
We accept that people swear, we all do it, it's only a problem in the context of a particular situation, and if you've been acting like a twunt for half an hour, then yes, shouting f*** off might be the final straw that gets you an £80 fine. But that's all it is. It's hardly the same as a private conversation in which one person uses a profanity or two to another.
I rarely swear in the presence of the public, clearly it would compromise my position if I told someone to stop f***ing swearing. That said, there are circumstances when the only way you can get through to someone is to do so in terms that they understand. Asking some pissed up tool for the fourteenth time if he wouldn't mind awfully moving along isn't likely to have any impact, on the other hand if I responded in his sort of manner it does sometimes have the desired effect. In some ways it shocks people into a response.
And spare me the "if we swore we'd be arrested" line: nobody gets arrested for one instance of saying "f***" in the middle of a sentence. To get nicked you'd have to be doing it loudly, repeatedly, in the presence of people who might actually find it offensive, or after already having been warned about your conduct.
We accept that people swear, we all do it, it's only a problem in the context of a particular situation, and if you've been acting like a twunt for half an hour, then yes, shouting f*** off might be the final straw that gets you an £80 fine. But that's all it is. It's hardly the same as a private conversation in which one person uses a profanity or two to another.