Difference between revisions of "Compulsive profanity"

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(See also: clean up & uniformity)
 
(17 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Compulsive profanity''' is a characteristic common to [[public school]] cultures, [[Hollywood values]], [[United States]]  
+
'''Compulsive profanity''' (not to be confused with [[Tourette syndrome]]) is a characteristic common to [[public school]] cultures, [[Hollywood values]], [[United States]] Hip Hop groups, and [[liberal]] [[internet]] users.  It consists of nonstop [[profanity]] and vulgarity. Dim-witted participants may find humor in it, and shows featured on the channel [[Comedy Central]] cater to this audience.  It is particularly common throughout contemporary youth culture.
Hip Hop groups, and [[liberal]] [[internet]] users.  It consists of nonstop [[profanity]] and vulgarity. {{fact}} Dim-witted participants may find humor in it, and shows featured on the channel [[Comedy Central]] cater to this audience.  It is particularly common throughout contemporary youth culture in the UK, who litter their speech with filthy language in the extreme.   One often wonders what they would say if they were ''really'' in pain or had something to be really angry about - like their native culture being destroyed by immigrants, for example?
+
  
 
Profanity is virtually non-existent in [[homeschooling]] cultures.
 
Profanity is virtually non-existent in [[homeschooling]] cultures.
 +
 +
==See also==
 +
* [[HBO]]
 +
* [[Hollywood values]]
 +
* [[South Park]]
 +
 +
[[Category:Hollywood Values]]
 +
[[Category:Liberal Traits]]

Latest revision as of 07:28, June 27, 2016

Compulsive profanity (not to be confused with Tourette syndrome) is a characteristic common to public school cultures, Hollywood values, United States Hip Hop groups, and liberal internet users. It consists of nonstop profanity and vulgarity. Dim-witted participants may find humor in it, and shows featured on the channel Comedy Central cater to this audience. It is particularly common throughout contemporary youth culture.

Profanity is virtually non-existent in homeschooling cultures.

See also