I for one think that the s word should become unfiltered. I can understand why the f bomb is filtered; even as a writer in the IOT section who would love to more accurately mirror how modern people talk (AKA liberal dropping of the f bomb), I understand the practical reasons to ban the f bomb (keeping the non story writing portion of the forum clean from low hanging insults). I'm 100% for keeping it civil.
However, banning the s word is stupid and needs to stop. The s word is very mild these days; its definitely vulgar but I can't really think of it as being offensive. I don't think anyone here would be offended if I called them a piece of s or a s-head. Might be angry because I insulted them, but its not the the insults themselves are especially egregious.
Meanwhile, me being able to say s word more freely would help accurately encapsulate how people speak. There's a lot of situations which calls for someone to yell "s word!", or perhaps they're trying to say something is s word, or perhaps I'm trying to describe literal feces. As Sone said, this would even help the regular part of the forums, allowing for easier communication if an idea or concept or event was truely terrible in a way that everyone would be able to understand.
Also children are going to eventually learn to swear somewhere on the internet why not here.
I don't think this is a particularly good tack to take - [poop]head especially piece of [poop] are still quite aggressive terms. However [poop] and [fornicate] do have certain uses that are no longer particularly offensive or even really vulgar, and in fact have developed special grammatical niches that have become difficult to disentangle from colloquial speech.
For example [fornicate] as a extreme intensifying adjective or adverb:
That guy was [fornicate]ing amazing! This was the best [fornicate]ing sandwich I've ever eaten!
There's also [fornicate] in certain idiomatic expressions that can't easily be replaced, at least not in the same visceral or expressive way that [fornicate] does it.
What the [fornicate] was that?! Which already gets skirted, for example with phrases like "dafuq". There's also "this game is [fornicated]" and "that's [fornicated] up dude". None of these are particularly aggressive or egregious, and satisfy useful needs in everyday colloquial contexts, which is why they have become so common, even in "formal" digital journalism environments.
[poop] is another good example of this, as [poop] has taken the role of a general replacement for words like "thing" or "Sache" (which is a German word for "thing" that refers to a more general context, event, or environment).
For example: "that's some good [poop] right there dude", "[poop]'s crazy yo", "what's this [poop], "that was some real messed up [poop] you did back there".
So yes these words do still exist in the technical "expletive" or "oath" sense, and those can be modified to form aggressive insults. "Aw [poop]" "[fornicate] off", "you [fornicate]-head". But they've also taken on far deeper meanings that have become more intrinsic to modern usage. The use of expletives qua expletives I see as secondary - the one rule of OT is don't be a dick and using expletives as expletives violates that rule: I am using a select set of words to put you down - but the absence of expletives doesn't translate to me being unable to put you down. There are hundreds of thousands of words in the English language; if I really want to make you feel bad about yourself I don't need [fornicate] and [feces] to do so.
I can understand the argument the administrators are making - moderating is work intensive, resources are stretched thin as it is, and removing auto-filters means more work. But the swear filter is, as I see it, redundant on the forum. The imperative to not be a dick supersedes any use of a swear that may have been done in bad faith.
That being said, I've made my peace with this dumb rule a long time ago. Moderation loosened the restrictions on linking/embedding "un-family friendly" content when that content can be demonstrated to be relevant to the topic at hand and that was the only thing that was truly irksome to me about the rule. I still think the rule is dumb, and if I were in charge the rule would be removed, but I know why the rule won't be changed, Bootstoots eloquent, thoughtful response was all I really think anybody should need and I'm sincerely grateful he took the time to make it.
I more just came in here to contest the really REALLY dumb arguments being put forward by pretentious dillweeds [practicing sexual self-satisfaction] over how eloquent and erudite their verbiage is because they don't debase themselves with such boorish language as those other vulgar youths.
Also I want to note that my argument applies more to "vulgarities" concerning sexual acts and biological by-products. I would say that over time - particularly the last few decades - the English language has shifted in their organizing of profanities away from taboo acts and towards words that denote or emphasize otherness. As words like [fornicate] and [poop] and [masturbate] and ass have abated in their severity, words like [homosexual], [female homosexual], [female dog], [woman's reproductive organ] (<- special case), [black person], [jewish person], [latino/a], [mental handicapped person] have risen to take their place. I want it to be clear that I'm not arguing for words like these. Unlike words like [poop] and [fornication] these words DO in of themselves indicate a breaking of cfc's prime directive. I can't think of a single use for any of these words that doesn't specifically and singularly entail belittling an individual or group of individuals.