There's a difference between commonplace as in not-infrequent, and commonplace as in accepted. Murder, rape, and adultery are not acceptable no matter how often they occur, which is why they are still shocking. Elvis shaking his hips became accepted (after other entertainers came along that did worse) and thus became not only not shocking, but quite tame.
I'd like to draw attention to one section of this quote, namely
Elvis shaking his hips became accepted (after other entertainers came along that did worse) and thus became not only not shocking, but quite tame.
Notice the phrase "after other entertainers came along that did worse"? Now what words are worse than those infamous 7 dirty words? You can't get worse words then the C-word, The F-word or the S-word. These words aren't tame, they're shockeing, even after much repitition.
It's like what Bart Simpson said: "Friday the 13th 1 is tame by today's standards."
Show Friday the 13th part 1 to someone who's never seen a horror movie and watch their reaction. They'll be scared S-less
If you swear here and there, it's one thing, but if every other words is a swear, then people get tired and tune you out like they tune out the neighbor's noisy lawnmower.
You can try to tune it out, but it's still there. No one goes "F you F-er, What F-ing hell F you F-ing Been F-ing doing" because we don't want to abuse these words.
If everybody accepts swearing as unoffensive, then it becomes like "dick", not a big deal.
And thus you hand me the win. Somewhere in the world there will always be someone who is offended by the word F@CK and so (according to your logic) it remains a big deal
Sarcasm is like air, you know it's there, you just can't see it
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