Naah. The people will then die of incurable or untreatable/superbug/etc strains of STDs. Carlin sure made it sound like the real thing, though! Or a funny thing!
"Stop me before I fuck again!"
"Better watch that clutch, or you're gonna fuck the engine!"
*****
20 minutes later, after actually watching the video at the beginning of this thread:
<Spock> Verbose, isn't he? </Spock>
He could have made his point in 5 minutes, rather than 18.
I think part of the effectiveness of both Tilly and Clancy is that Tilly had, up to (and really,
including) that point, was presented as a nervous ingenue (and Hell, when she's with Saru in DSC:"Far From Home," hiking to the settlement, she's back to being the nervous ingenue), and Admiral Clancy looks like (and probably
is) somebody's sweet (and very refined) grandmother.
Thus, the vocabulary is shockingly unexpected. Not because of gender. Not because of age. But because the one character presents an aura of innocence and the other presents one of refinement.
On the other hand, Dr. T'Ana's swearing fits perfectly. And the selective (and seemingly random) bleeping in LD bears out Shives' assertion that bleeping is inherently funny.
And I would disagree with the idea that people living in the sort of milieu portrayed on ST -- that is, the best of the best of the best, in a civilization either approaching or in a post-scarcity economy -- would swear as much as we do. Just as I disagree with the notion that a spore drive is no less plausible a way to get around Special Relativity than ST warp drive, SW hyperdrive, B5 jump gates (and jump engines), or the KK (posigravity) drive from ADF's HC.
Neither was it gender (and by implication, sexism) that propelled my shock at what "KMFB" stands for, some time ago, and that it was apparently a self-chosen moniker: it was the fact that an educated professional writer whose works aren't generally written in "Army Creole" would choose a moniker in that dialect. I honestly believe that I'd have been just as shocked if CLB or GC had done something similar.