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Omaha Steve

(99,609 posts)
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 12:36 PM Mar 2022

I need your opinion (trigger warning for language)


Most of you know I rarely swear on the DU. I received some feedback on our DU Ukraine page. I have a salute to the Ukrainians that told the Russians to F off. Should I replace that graphic on our "OFFICIAL" DU page?

Here is the page: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/duforukraine

OS
43 votes, 0 passes | Time left: Unlimited
Keep it as is
41 (95%)
We can do without the F word on a DU OFFICIAL page
2 (5%)
Other (please explain)
0 (0%)
No comment
0 (0%)
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Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll
19 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,425 posts)
1. I don't like the swearing at DU either. That said, you're trying to raise money.
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 12:38 PM
Mar 2022

If it means more money, do what the networks do, and hide the word with asterisks.

I'm voting to leave it out, but I have to say that it's a memorable rejoinder. I'm not adamant about my view.

left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
5. I don't usually swear
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 12:41 PM
Mar 2022

And in the past I took a lot of heat for complaining about the amount of cussing on DU.
But in this case I think it is appropriate, so leave it as is IMHO.

Walleye

(31,017 posts)
6. "Russian war ship, go fuck yourself", they made a postage stamp of it
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 12:42 PM
Mar 2022

It seems like it’s sort of their battle cry

dixiechiken1

(2,113 posts)
8. Anyone offended by the language...
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 12:47 PM
Mar 2022

Should ask themselves which is more offensive: the word "fuck" or the war itself?

Keep it.

LakeArenal

(28,817 posts)
11. Even tho I have used it (maybe not the full four letters) ...
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 12:50 PM
Mar 2022

I would like members to stop using it.
If it’s a quote or a protest sign I’m fine.
By using it so often everywhere, it’s really lost it’s punch.


To me, it’s a bully that shouts that at people. Oooo that hurts….not.

TheBlackAdder

(28,188 posts)
13. Whenever you mask a word with ***, there is a slight mental decoding process that loses its power.
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 01:04 PM
Mar 2022

.

The shock of the word is actually removed, which removes the writer's power when citing someone.


This is something that one of my African American Studies English professors taught. News articles cite people saying bad words, and those bad words are masked with *** and that causes a slight decoding process to occur and the display of how that word was used is diminished. People are not offended by it. This is similar to the Frank Luntz peer group forums that takes words and finds ways to either make them more palatable or more striking to audiences for the GOP to mainstream.


Racists are the ones who benefit most from this practice as it provides them cover.


He is a staunch believer that if someone says a racist term or hate speech, news agencies must cite those words verbatim to draw the full power of them to the readers. He does not condone casual use of those unfiltered words by anybody else but just by news agencies to call out the offender.

.

muriel_volestrangler

(101,311 posts)
19. Russian speakers say the original is even stronger, though "F off" is probably the best rendering
Mon Mar 14, 2022, 08:40 AM
Mar 2022

I think the graphic is OK. Warning for stronger language still:

But that’s not quite right, because the word being translated as ‘fuck’ here is khuy. Idi nakhuy (иди наxуй – ‘go to dick’ or, more loosely, ‘go sit on a dick’ – is what the Ukrainians (and the road signs) have been saying.

Translating swear words is never simple. In this video of a Ukrainian soldier warning and threatening Russian troops, the words blayd (‘slut’ or ‘whore’), pizdetz (‘a messed-up situation’, deriving from pizda, or ‘cunt’), and khuy – three of the four words that form the basis of mat – are all translated as ‘fuck’, while ebat (which really does mean ‘fuck’, and is the root of the word Boris Nemtsov once used to describe Putin’s mental state) is never used. If that matters, it’s because in Russian khuy is stronger, by far, than the word for ‘fuck’. Tell a Russian acquaintance to fuck off, and he’s likely to laugh it off. But even among old friends, khuy and pizda are no laughing matter. (Pizdetz, on the other hand, is rather mild.)

‘Иди наxуй is the worst thing you can say,’ my sister Mariana tells me. She lives in Europe, and my Russian’s OK but hers is still fluent. ‘You can’t say it in jest, unlike pizdets or ebat. You can play with those two words. You can’t play with idi nakhuy. It’s a really aggressive, serious swear word.’

In that sense, ‘go fuck yourself’ isn’t wrong. (Mariana: ‘Pick the worst thing you can say in English.’) ‘Go the fuck, you fucks’ gets us closer, but only a bit. The truth is, there’s nothing in English that goes quite so far. (In Spinal Tap terms, our curses go up to ten, but Russian words go to eleven.) There’s no elegant solution, just as there is no way to convey the historically specific sense of resignation – of weariness and resolve – that I hear in that ‘nu, vsyo’ from Snake Island. As a Soviet-born man with Ukrainian grandparents, it’s something I feel in my bones, but can’t capture in English, even though ‘that’s it, then’ is close on a literal level.

https://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2022/february/idi-haxuj
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