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#1
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I wish CBers would follow rules that exist concerning the use of foul
language. I like to hear and speak with CBers during my daily commute. I can't, however, have the CB on when the kids are in the car due to the prolific use of foul language. It's really sad how far the service has sunk. Oh for the heyday of the 70s when CBers were numerous and truckers were the best drivers on the road (and, yes, I remember those days personally)! |
#2
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![]() "an old friend" wrote in message ... On Aug 12, 12:03 pm, "The Dude!" wrote: I wish CBers would follow rules that exist concerning the use of foul language. I like to hear and speak with CBers during my daily commute. I can't, however, have the CB on when the kids are in the car due to the prolific use of foul language. It's really sad how far the service has sunk. Oh for the heyday of the 70s when CBers were numerous and truckers were the best drivers on the road (and, yes, I remember those days personally)! maybe you need to hang in a better part of the country I never hear bad lang here on CB that seem reseverved for 75m and occionanly 20 m ham ---------- On a recent trip, I heard foul language in Missouri, Kansas, and Colorado - especially Colorado, near Denver. I'm sure the offenders weren't locals. They were definitely truckers. I don't know what "part of the country" the truckers were from. |
#3
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On Aug 12, 12:03*pm, "The Dude!" wrote:
I wish CBers would follow rules that exist concerning the use of foul language. *I like to hear and speak with CBers during my daily commute. *I can't, however, have the CB on when the kids are in the car due to the prolific use of foul language. *It's really sad how far the service has sunk. Well for starters, while the above is true, there's also the fact that what is considered perfectly acceptable G rated okay sentences for kids to use in Appalachia, is considered by the rest of the country to be X-rated words that kids should never say and no one should ever use on the radio. And all because the words simply have a different meaning in the different parts of the country. And since most people think of cb, for some reason, as connected with Appalachia, of course you're going to hear sentences on CB such as "that freaking lady at the store didn't give my kids a poke" that you don't want your kids to hear because it's X rated "foul language". No, not there it isn't. It doesn't mean the same thing. It's not X- rated, but perfectly acceptable G rated. And complaining about store workers not doing that is a very valid complaint today. And then the "radio cops" wonder why people don't like them when the radio cops turn them in to the fcc for saying such innocent things over the air as "saying obscene things over the air that are prohibited by FCC rules" and filing severe criminal charges against them with other agencies that can land the person in jail for the rest of their lives for a crime they never ever committed, just because the radio cop decides the sentence means something other than it does. |
#4
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![]() "Bob Dobbs" wrote in message news:48a2dde2.1766830@chupacabra... The Dude! wrote: On a recent trip, I heard foul language in Missouri, Kansas, and Colorado - especially Colorado, near Denver. I'm sure the offenders weren't locals. They were definitely truckers. I don't know what "part of the country" the truckers were from. Recent conditions on eleven meters have brought signals from many parts of the country to and from those regions. Since you don't know what part of the country those 'offenders' were from, how do you even know they were truckers. Could have been some anal retentive repressed prude such as you seem to be, expressing themselves while mommy was away with her lover and dad was at work, leaving the radio available. -- Operator Bob Echo Charlie 42 LOL!!! They were not rolling in on skip. They were local truckers calling each other, "driver." I've used CB radios since the 70s and know what I'm talking about. BTW, how does not liking foul language on the air waves (which is illegal) make someone a prude. What a leap! |
#5
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![]() wrote in message ... On Aug 12, 12:03 pm, "The Dude!" wrote: I wish CBers would follow rules that exist concerning the use of foul language. I like to hear and speak with CBers during my daily commute. I can't, however, have the CB on when the kids are in the car due to the prolific use of foul language. It's really sad how far the service has sunk. Well for starters, while the above is true, there's also the fact that what is considered perfectly acceptable G rated okay sentences for kids to use in Appalachia, is considered by the rest of the country to be X-rated words that kids should never say and no one should ever use on the radio. And all because the words simply have a different meaning in the different parts of the country. And since most people think of cb, for some reason, as connected with Appalachia, of course you're going to hear sentences on CB such as "that freaking lady at the store didn't give my kids a poke" that you don't want your kids to hear because it's X rated "foul language". No, not there it isn't. It doesn't mean the same thing. It's not X- rated, but perfectly acceptable G rated. And complaining about store workers not doing that is a very valid complaint today. And then the "radio cops" wonder why people don't like them when the radio cops turn them in to the fcc for saying such innocent things over the air as "saying obscene things over the air that are prohibited by FCC rules" and filing severe criminal charges against them with other agencies that can land the person in jail for the rest of their lives for a crime they never ever committed, just because the radio cop decides the sentence means something other than it does. -------- All I'm really talking about is, "****, ****, ****, ****, cock-sucker, mother-****er, tits." And maybe a few other words thrown in. I don't have a problem with people using foul language in general, just not in PUBLIC (including the PUBLIC airwaves). Inuendo that masks the meaning of a sentence to children but is amusing to adults is fine as far as I'm concerned. |
#6
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![]() "Bob Dobbs" wrote in message news:48a2528b.3474105@chupacabra... The Dude! wrote: BTW, how does not liking foul language on the air waves (which is illegal) make someone a prude. Prudishness is an overly expressed concern for some infraction of modesty, especially spoken language. Right. So I suppose that expecting people to not say "****" and "****" on PUBLIC airwaves that kids can be listening to is an "overly expressed concern??" Damn, Bob! I suppose you would defend kiddy porn, too. |
#7
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![]() "Bob Dobbs" wrote in message news:48a354bf.4038467@chupacabra... The Dude! wrote: All I'm really talking about is, "****, ****, ****, ****, cock-sucker, mother-****er, tits." And maybe a few other words thrown in. I don't have a problem with people using foul language in general, just not in PUBLIC (including the PUBLIC airwaves). Inuendo that masks the meaning of a sentence to children but is amusing to adults is fine as far as I'm concerned. Maybe CB shouldn't be considered as an acceptable entertainment source for your kids? Why should the free access nature of CB make it more subject to moral considerations than something like Howard Stern that you have to pay for? Because it is a PUBLIC service. The airwaves are public. It's not a moral concern, just one of common courtesy and decent behavior. Mostly, it's because the free access nature of CB has restricted communications. By using a CB radio, you are agreeing to abide by the rules. Title 47 Part 95, section 95.413 states that "to transmit obscence, indecent or profane words, language or meaning" is prohibited. If you are using a CB and agreeing to the rules and then violate those rules, you are showing your lack of character (not to mention violating federal regulations). |
#8
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![]() "Bob Dobbs" wrote in message news:48a3a44a.1711260@chupacabra... Fred wrote: On Tue, 12 Aug 2008 12:00:06 -0700, Bob Dobbs wrote: although quite a bargain by today's blundering Bush standards, Try Nancy Pelosi and the Dumbocrat Congress and Senate, you ****tard! Look no further if you want to find the answer to the energy crisis. Now we want to elect the next Jimmy Carter ie: Obumba, to really drive us into a recession. You really have that anger meter in the red, Fred. It is amazing how ignorant some people can be, yet they preach their stupidity at any given chance. I don't quite find you as amazing as you think yourself to be, maybe you could see if it's possible to take your own advice and... Go **** yourself! -- Operator Bob Echo Charlie 42 I think that the terminology of the quote "Go fu*k yourself!, comes from the following: a father and his son were having a discussion of when the father would procure a vehicle for the son on at a given time; whereas the son turns 16 and the father says "does your schmekel reach your tuchas"? and the son replies "NO" and the father tells him to come back when it does. Awhile later - a year or so - the son again approaches the father with the same question and the father again asks the same of his son, again the answer is "NO"! Then the son turns 18 years old and again comes to the father and asks the same stupid question again & if the father is going to procure a vehicle for him? Again the father ask the same stupid question and to his surprise the son answers "YES"! And that is where the terminology comes from, as the father says ""good then" - "GO FU*K YOURSELF""! |
#9
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All I'm really talking about is, " *And maybe a few other words thrown in. *
I know. It's just that the self-appointed radio cops really irrritate me since they're usually guilty of far worse crimes theirselves than what they claim the people they turn in have committed. And the people they turn in are usually completely innocent people caught inbetween catch-22 situations that the self-appointed radio cops manufactures for them in the first place. Since the self-appointed radio cops are obsessed with knowing every single little obscure law there is, they KNOW the laws are purposely written contradictory to each other so that the law can charge anyone for anything anytime they feel like it, no matter which course of the only possible actions to take the unfortunate person decides to take. And yet the self-appointed radio cops who have done such, usually get away scott free from the very serious very illeal crimes they commit. |
#10
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![]() "The Dude!" wrote in message ... -------- All I'm really talking about is, "sh#t, ****, f*ck, c@nt, c%ck-sucker, mother-f!cker, tits." And maybe a few other words thrown in. I don't have a problem with people using foul language in general, just not in PUBLIC (including the PUBLIC airwaves). Inuendo that masks the meaning of a sentence to children but is amusing to adults is fine as far as I'm concerned. If you were so concerned about the language, why did you repeat it here, where children could read it? I fixed it for you.................... KA6SCO Rolf |
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