1. Rhett! Rhett!
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2. Rhett…
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3. If you go, where shall I go?
What shall I do?
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4. Frankly, my dear, I don't give a whoop.
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5. Frankly, my dear, I don't give a hoot.
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6. Frankly, my dear, I don't give a straw.
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7. Frankly, my dear,
I don't give a continental.
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8. "I— I don't give a continental"?
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9. Ha— has anyone ever actually said that?
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10. Can you imagine you get to the end
of the most famous movie of all time,
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11. and you're waiting to hear Clark Gable
say the most famous line of all time,
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12. and instead, you get…
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13. "Frankly, my dear, it has become
of no concern to me."
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14. Horrible. However, it almost happened.
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15. See, back in 1939,
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16. there was something known as
the Motion Picture Production Code,
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17. or the Hays Code.
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18. A set of moral guidelines
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19. that determined what the studios
could put in their movies.
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20. And at that time,
the word "damn" was strictly prohibited.
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21. As were the words "Lord,"God,"Jesus,"
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22. "Jesus Christ,"Christ,"
"son of a bitch" and "hell."
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23. So the filmmakers had to come up with
a whole page full of alternate lines
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24. like the ones I just read.
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25. I know what you're thinking.
"Damn" is barely a swear word anymore.
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26. We see it so much,
we don't even notice it.
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27. Daaaaaamn!
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28. Damn!
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29. Goddamn it!
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30. It might be the mildest word
in our vulgarian,
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31. but it's the only swear word
specifically mentioned in the Bible.
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32. And it still has the ability
to offend millions.
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33. So, before we can finish the story
of how they got "damn"
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34. to stay in Gone With the Wind,
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35. first, we have to tell you
the story of the word itself.
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36. "Frankly, my dear, the whole thing's
a stench in my nostrils."
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37. Ah, damn! I mean, come on,
that's the worst one yet.
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38. "Damn" shouldn't even be on this list.
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39. "Damn" isn't— it's not offensive,
it's not a swear word.
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40. It's a actual word,
and beavers build 'em.
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41. Damn, girl.
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42. Yeah… kind of a lame swear.
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43. Just damn, or…
…daaaaamn?
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44. Neck and neck with "damn" could be "crap."
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45. Damn…
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46. "Damn" feels pretty, like, um… mild.
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47. I don't think "damn" is a curse word,
but also, my kid cannot say it.
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48. So I am a hypocrite.
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49. "Damn" is an interesting swear word
because it's a curse.
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50. It's not like "shit" or "fuck."
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51. And it means to send to hell,
like damnation.
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52. So, in the Middle Ages,
"damnation" was a real fear for people.
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53. It's an actual curse word. When you damn
someone, you are cursing them.
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54. So how did "damn" go
from being the most sacred curse
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55. to being so benign
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56. that most people no longer
even consider it a swear word?
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57. We believed,
and some people still do believe,
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58. that using religious terms outside
of their appropriate context
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59. is blasphemous.
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60. This is the source of our profanity.
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61. In fact, it's the source
of the word "profanity."
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62. "Profanus" means "outside of the temple,"
and "damn" is an example of this.
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63. If you're saying,
"May God damn so and so,"
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64. you're asking God to…
to, you know, do something to someone.
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65. And so this is not something
you would do lightly.
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66. So, in those times
when people really believed in that stuff
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67. and essentially,
your religion was your horror film,
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68. at the exact same time,
I can get why "damn" was scary.
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69. I guess "damn you to hell" has power…
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70. if you believe in hell, I guess.
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71. If there's hell…
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72. may God strike me dead right now.
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73. See?
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74. My grandma is, like,
the most churchiest churchy person.
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75. And she says "damn."
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76. Or does she?
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77. "Damn" shows us the complete life cycle
of a profane word.
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78. It starts off as just a word
that describes the act of damning.
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79. It becomes profanity.
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80. And then over time, because
society changes, it starts to peter out.
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81. It's where "shit" will probably be
in a few decades.
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82. And where "fuck" will certainly be
by the end of the century.
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83. You know,
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84. this is, excuse me,
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85. a damn fine cup of coffee.
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86. What are the earliest meanings
of "damn"?
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87. So the earliest meaning of "damn"
in English is twofold.
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88. There's both a religious meaning,
to condemn to hell,
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89. and this legal meaning, which means
to condemn someone as guilty.
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90. And those both come ultimately
from this Latin verb "damnare"
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91. which means to judge as guilty.
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92. And it's related to
the Latin noun that means "damage."
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93. "Damn" compares to other swears
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94. like your little brother that wants
to hang out with you
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95. and you don't want him to go.
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96. Like, Shit was
the dangerous one in school,
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97. and Damn, he did all his work,
but he was a bit of a rebel.
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98. Damn and Fuck sit next to each other,
and you're like, "They know each other?"
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99. You go over and you're like,
"Can I talk to you?"
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100. Fuck is like, "Get the fuck away from me!"
And Damn is like, "Damn."
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101. If you survey young adults,
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102. they generally find it
as inoffensive as words like "condom"
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103. or "bupkis."
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104. Someone's like, "Fuck!"
You, like, "Shit, what's goin' on? We—
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105. We might not be able to help him."
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106. But, "Damn"? "What can we do to help?"
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107. "Damn," it also is used
as an emphasizer, an intensifier.
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108. It's pretty varied.
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109. You wanna either go high
or you wanna go low with it.
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110. You go, "Damn."
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111. Or you can go…
"Damn!"
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112. With the extra syllable, "Daaaaaamn!"
That's when somethin' really big happen.
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113. Usually that involves somebody
gettin' slapped with— with a thing.
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114. I used to call a girl a "damn, damn girl."
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115. Like, she's turned around,
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116. her body looks amazing, her butt
looks amazing.
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117. I'm like, "Daaaaamn."
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118. And she turn around, I see her face,
I'm like, "Damn." So, yeah.
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119. Damn!
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120. Remember, growing up, you didn't know how
to spell "damn"? Most people did not know.
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121. Most Black people did not know
"damn" had an N on the end.
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122. We were like, "dam,"
like at the river, the dam.
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123. Then when I see it had the N, I'm like,
"What does that mean? Dam-nuh."
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124. I love that there's
an M and N next to each other.
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125. Um… for some reason, you only say one.
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126. It's like a silent N, which is what
my nickname was in high school.
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127. That's why they added the N.
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128. "Damn" from "damnation," 'cause of the N.
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129. And they— somebody left the… the N on.
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130. And when they did that,
the person was like, "Damn!"
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131. Over the past half-century,
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132. church attendance in the U.S.
steadily declined.
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133. But religion comes baked into our society.
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134. It's on our money,
in our sports and on our cars.
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135. So "damn" still holds sway.
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136. And it's the only one of our swear words
that has only ever had one meaning.
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137. To condemn someone.
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138. Damn you!
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139. God damn you all to hell!
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140. In ancient Rome,
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141. the taboos in the swear words were
kind of like they are today
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142. in terms of sexual and excremental,
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143. a Latin equivalent of
"fuck,"shit," things like that.
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144. Then, in the Middle Ages, in English,
they became religious, invoking God.
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145. The worst thing you could say
in the Middle Ages
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146. was something like "By God's bones."
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147. God's bones?
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148. It's hard for contemporary people to
understand or imagine how this would work.
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149. So, in the Catholic tradition,
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150. Christ has a body,
and if you say, "By God's bones,"
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151. your words kind of reach up
to his body and pull out his bone.
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152. Daaaamn, that's hardcore.
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153. Wait. God don't even have bones, does he?
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154. And you know that whoever said that
never just said it, like, "God's bones."
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155. Whoever said that dropped to their knees.
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156. God's bones.
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157. Fun!
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158. Blaspheme.
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159. Religious swearing ultimately
gets its power from the Old Testament.
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160. And God, in the Bible,
spends a lot of time explaining
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161. how he wants people to swear by him.
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162. But not vainly.
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163. Of course,
the supercharged version of "damn,"
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164. the one that we still don't see
on network TV, or even basic cable…
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165. We don't hear it on the radio and
we rarely, if ever, read it in the news.
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166. The big one.
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167. Goddamn it!
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168. The "God" is an intensifier to the "damn"
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169. and also brings
the religious context back.
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170. I think the difference between
"damn" and "goddamn" is like…
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171. uh, "goddamn," like, supersizes it.
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172. "Damn" is…
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173. It can be like, uh…
you got a paper cut. "Ah, damn."
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174. I think "goddamn" carries more gravity
that takes you right into church.
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175. I don't say "goddamn" because
I am not a Black man from the South.
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176. Before the 1600s,
there was some speculation
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177. that, uh, the English were known
as "Les Goddamns" to the French
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178. uh, because they had a habit of swearing
so much by God and damn.
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179. I like this idea of referring to entire
cultures by their most unique swear words.
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180. It's like they say,
"You swear about what you care about."
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181. So, what do they care about
in other parts of the world?
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182. One of Russia's most used swear words is…
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183. перхоть подзалупная.
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184. That means "pee hole dandruff."
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185. Wow.
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186. I feel like
if this one is comin' up a lot,
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187. Putin is actually
the least of they problems.
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188. The fine people in Germany like to say…
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189. Arschgeige.
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190. A swear that means "butt violin."
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191. That makes sense.
Even their swear words are classy.
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192. This one's outrageous.
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193. In South Africa,
there's an Afrikaans swear.
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194. Ek wens jou vingers verander
in vishoeke, en jou balle begin te jeuk.
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195. It means
"I hope your fingers turn to fish hooks
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196. and your balls start to itch."
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197. That one's a whole story line.
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198. In the 16th century,
"damn" is becoming a swear word,
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199. but it still appears in the Bible.
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200. The King James Bible prints "damn"
or a variation of "damn" 15 times.
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201. But then, when the King James Bible
is revised in the 19th century,
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202. they cut the "damns."
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203. In 1781, you get the first appearance
of "darn" in Pennsylvania Magazine.
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204. This is just one of the many minced oaths,
you know, that— that "damn" spawns.
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205. And what is a "minced oath"?
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206. A minced oath is a way to…
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207. say a profane word
without actually saying it.
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208. Instead of saying "goddamn it,"
you could say "gosh darn it."
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209. Or "doggone it," or "dang."
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210. Or "consarn it."
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211. "Minced oaths." Yeah, that sounds like
a horrible cereal that your mom got
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212. that is nowhere near
as good as the real shit.
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213. I mean, you got your Gosh Darn-O's,
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214. uh, Raisin Drats, Corn Sorn Its,
Honey Nut Tarnations.
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215. Those are actually pretty good.
Um, you can really taste the hell.
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216. It's a substitute for a word
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217. to mean that word.
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218. It's a— it's a, um…
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219. proxy.
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220. But if that's what gets you
through the day,
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221. fucking go for it.
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222. You get more and more uses
of the word "damn."
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223. You get Southerners calling
Northerners "Damn Yankees."
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224. You get, you know,
things "not worth a damn."
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225. And, in fact, until
the kind of turn of the 20th century,
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226. when someone talks about
"profane swearing,"
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227. that is what they're talking about.
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228. Which brings us back
to the story of Gone With the Wind.
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229. It was a big deal to use the word "damn"
in a Hollywood film in 1939.
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230. The rest of the public
may not have cared as much— at all.
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231. But the people behind the code
cared a lot.
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232. The Hays Code
was strictly enforced.
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233. It not only barred swear words,
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234. it also banned any mention of drug use,
as well as sympathy for criminals
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235. and excessive or lustful kissing.
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236. However, along came David O. Selznick,
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237. a film producer wanting to turn the
best-selling novel Gone With the Wind
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238. into a blockbuster movie.
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239. He argued they had to use the word "damn"
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240. because that's how
it was written in the book.
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241. And who was he to stray from
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242. author Margaret Mitchell's
artistic mission?
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243. However, the censors wouldn't budge,
so Selznick appealed to the main man,
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244. Hays himself.
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245. What happened next is
somewhere between fact and urban myth.
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246. Selznick won his appeal either
on the merits of his argument,
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247. or because he paid
a 5,000 dollar, quote, "fee."
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248. The board made allowances. They had a—
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249. They appended the code,
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250. and said that the words
"hell" and "damn" could be used
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251. as long as they were used
for historical accuracy
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252. or the artistic integrity
of the work on which they're based.
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253. So in December 1939,
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254. Gone With the Wind
comes out and the rest is history.
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255. Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn.
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256. From there, the dam broke wide open
and the word pops up everywhere.
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257. Village of the Damned.
Children of the Damned.
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258. To my personal favorite, Aaliyah
in Queen of the Damned.
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259. The hit musical Damn Yankees
lights up Broadway in 1955.
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260. And the super band Damn Yankees lights up
the Allentown Fairgrounds in 1990.
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261. I think I might have been
at that show, actually.
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262. In 1986, the makers
of Transformers: The Movie
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263. added a "damn" and a "shit"
to avoid the dreaded G rating.
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264. One of the biggest moments for "damn"
in Black culture
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265. was at the end of a episode of Good Times
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266. when, uh, Florida Evans,
I think she had just lost her husband,
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267. and she just, like,
lost her shit in the kitchen.
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268. Damn! Damn! Damn!
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269. It was so powerful because
the Evans family, we were dialed into.
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270. "Damn" in that context is specifically
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271. a word that, like, old Black women use.
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272. So her usin' that word is the word that
we've heard our grandmother use.
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273. We felt that, as viewers.
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274. We've felt a lot of that same sort
of grief and loss in our families.
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275. So in terms of, you know,
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276. people who really have led the charge
on the word "damn,"
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277. I'm gonna go with Kendrick Lamar,
who has a brilliant album called DAMN.
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278. "Damn" is not a swear word.
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279. DAMN. is a great Kendrick Lamar album,
is what "damn" is.
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280. For him to be able to…
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281. top the charts and win a Pulitzer
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282. with a rap album…
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283. It changed everything. It's mind-blowing.
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284. You've gone from havin' to fight
to say "damn" in Gone With the Wind,
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285. to Kendrick Lamar, a great rapper,
naming his album DAMN.
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286. and then the album winnin' a Pulitzer,
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287. which means "damn" is
actually really clever.
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288. "Damn" has gone a long way.
It's gone a long goddamn way.
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289. "Damn" has also taken
center stage in politics in recent years.
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290. Like the impeccably bearded
Jimmy McMillan,
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291. who founded
the Rent Is Too Damn High Party in 2005.
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292. I represent
the Rent Is Too Damn High Party.
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293. You need the "damn"
to give it that emphasis and that push.
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294. And you're not offending anybody.
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295. You're just sayin' rent's too damn high.
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296. But the "damn" is, uh,
doin' what you want it to do there.
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297. And it can still stir up controversy.
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298. Barack Obama faced backlash when
a pastor at his church, Jeremiah Wright,
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299. delivered a sermon called
"God damn America."
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300. This was a church
that Obama went to in Chicago,
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301. and this video
of Jeremiah Wright preaching
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302. in which he says "goddamn" a lot,
went viral.
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303. I understand a pastor saying,
"God damn America."
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304. Because of especially the way that,
you know, Black people have been treated
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305. in this country for a long time,
I understand.
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306. I do feel like putting it in those terms
might be taking it a little too far.
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307. Because now you're like,
cursin' in church, which is weird.
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308. Once you put God on there,
it does become very, very powerful.
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309. And if you're not using it in
the right way, which, usually, you're not…
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310. uh… I can see people getting pissed off.
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311. So what does the future hold for "damn"?
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312. Does it have any hope of surviving
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313. in this vulgar fast-paced world
of fuck shit?
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314. How can it compete
against "pussy" and "dick"?
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315. "Damn…" It's going to succumb
to the law of diminishing returns.
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316. Its efficacy will continue to be reduced
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317. until it just becomes,
perhaps, a normal adjective.
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318. I mean, there is a future for "damn"
because people continue to use it.
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319. But at this point, uh…
there's really no sense of "damn"
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320. that's so strongly offensive
that I think you could ever reclaim.
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321. Well, right now, if you ask young people,
the most offensive words are slurs.
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322. And remember that an 18-year-old today
is a 40-year-old in 2042.
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323. So those are the people
who are going to be making the laws
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324. and teaching children the words relating
to sex and bodily functions and religion.
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325. Those are… on their way out.
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326. Today, I think
it's okay for a four-year-old to say it.
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327. Um, so my question is, "Is there gonna be
a day a four-year-old says 'fuck'
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328. and no one blinks an eye?"
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329. The people who object to that word
are the people who are still the loudest.
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330. The people who make the most noise.
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331. The people who go out and vote.
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332. If they can be counted on
to show up for church,
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333. they can definitely be counted on
to show up for the polls.
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334. And because of that,
they are a… a force to be reckoned with.
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335. I think it's very rigid, borin' people
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336. that are uptight,
that are offended by swearing.
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337. I don't trust people who don't swear.
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338. I'm not offended by you using
a swear word in front of me.
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339. I kind of like it. It means
you're comfortable in front of me.
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340. So let your mouth loose.
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341. I think swearing is essential
for communication.
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342. Swearing is just one of the tools
in your toolbox, you know?
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343. I think it can relieve
some of the emotions.
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344. You know, if you're feeling negative
emotions, it can relieve them.
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345. If you're feeling positive emotions,
it broadcasts them and shares them.
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346. You know, it relieves pain. I think—
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347. Uh, I think, for many people,
it makes them feel good.
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348. The history of "damn"
is the history of all swear words.
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349. And, therefore,
it's the history of our culture as well.
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350. How our beliefs and our fears change
even as they stay the same.
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351. Swear words tell us what we value,
where our morals lie
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352. and how we navigate the tension between
public speech and our private lives.
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353. There's something
innately human about swearing.
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354. Right at the beautiful-ugly intersection
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355. between our conscious brains
and our animal bodies.
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356. In short,
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357. swear words will only be useful
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358. for as long as
we have hearts, minds,
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359. and assholes.
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360. I'm Nicolas Cage.
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361. Have a great fucking night.
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