By Ryan “Dickie” Thompson | Disruptarian.com


The cultural war over language has reached a fever pitch in 2025, but let me take you back. Back to a time when words were just words, when intention mattered more than virtue-signaling, and when free speech was something people actually valued, not just something they put in their Twitter bios. Welcome back to Disruptarian Radio, where we rip off the muzzles and speak truth, no matter who gets offended.

We recently unearthed a piece from our 2011 archives, and holy hell does it hit harder today than it did 14 years ago. This episode of Disruptarian Radio dives into how words once common in daily conversation have been weaponized, banned, and are now making a rebellious comeback. Words like “retarded,” “transvestite,” and “tranny” have been yanked from our vocabularies by self-appointed cultural overlords. But like every authoritarian attempt at control, people are starting to push back.

Dave Rubin Drops a Bomb

On June 17, 2025, Dave Rubin casually reignited this cultural flashpoint on his podcast, “Trump Makes Unexpected Insulting Attack on Tucker Carlson at Press Conference.” Forget the Trump drama for a second. Rubin used the word “retarded.” No, he wasn't mocking the disabled. He was acknowledging what many of us already see—this word, once exiled to the forbidden zone, has crept back into casual conversation as shorthand for absurdity. The reaction? Outrage from the usual suspects, but a growing number of people nodded in agreement.

I grew up when kids used “retarded” as a catch-all for ridiculous things, not as a slur. We knew the difference. The adults in the room understood context. But today's hypersensitive culture can't grasp that nuance. It’s either pure or evil; there’s no in-between for these binary thinkers. This is not organic evolution of sensitivity—it’s orchestrated, manufactured by activist groups often fueled by government funding.

Manufactured Fragility

Let’s get one thing straight: hypersensitivity is not some natural byproduct of social progress. It’s manufactured fragility, funded by political actors and enforced by digital mobs. Obama and Biden-era grants funneled millions into LGBTQ nonprofits and activist organizations. Their mission? Shift culture by redefining what's offensive and who gets to speak. Once you control language, you control thought. And that, my friends, is the endgame.

We saw this play out years ago with shows like Shameless. Season 3, Episode 8 introduced viewers to a fictional support group called “Retardnation.” Sure, it was crude, but it aired on major networks without triggering a nuclear-level backlash. Imagine releasing that same episode today. The cancel mobs would have their pitchforks sharpened before the credits rolled.

The Trans Linguistic Minefield

Even the trans-related words are not safe. “Transvestite” and “tranny,” once embraced terms within the LGBTQ community, are now treated like verbal hand grenades. I first heard “transvestite” from The Rocky Horror Picture Show, where it was celebrated. Today, my kids tell me that using the word is practically a hate crime. “Tranny,” which I often used as a blanket term for simplicity amidst a sea of ever-evolving categories (transgender, transsexual, trans-racial, trans-abled, trans-species—it's exhausting), is now an absolute no-go.

Words evolve, yes. But this isn't organic evolution. This is language sterilization driven by ideological zealots who want to weaponize offense. When there are dozens of nuanced categories, people naturally look for shorthand. That’s human nature. Yet the social media mobs, with their pitchforks and hashtags, will crucify you for even attempting to simplify.

The Pendulum Swings Back

But here’s the good news: the backlash is growing. People are fed up with the eggshells, the endless apologies, the thought-policing that ruins careers over words that offend fragile sensibilities. Punk rock libertarians like myself have had enough. We're watching the pendulum finally swing back.

Even gay conservative voices like Dave Rubin recognize it. Tom MacDonald’s song “Buttholes” absolutely nails it: “Everything is offensive now, everything is sensitive, everyone is triggered and they’re so defenseless.” That's the world we live in—but it’s also the world we’re starting to reject. There’s a rebellion brewing against the linguistic tyranny that has held our culture hostage.

Speech Control Is Thought Control

The scariest part isn’t even losing the words. It’s losing the thoughts that accompany them. Control the language, and you control the mind. If we surrender our right to offend, we surrender the freedom to think critically, debate, and evolve as a society. True freedom demands discomfort. It demands a willingness to hear things that make us squirm. That’s what free speech was always about.

Language is messy. It's imperfect. It's ever-changing. And that's okay. But when unelected cultural gatekeepers tell you which words are allowed and which thoughts are permitted, you’re not living in a free society. You're living in a managed narrative, a curated existence controlled by those who pretend to be compassionate while holding the reins of power.

Disruptarian Radio: The Last Free Zone

Here at Disruptarian Radio, we say what needs to be said. We dissect this madness from a punk rock libertarian lens because we know that once speech falls, everything else follows. Our children are being indoctrinated in public schools, taught to fear words, to self-censor, and to surrender autonomy. This isn’t progress. This is submission.

The cultural revolution we’re witnessing is not one of liberation but one of domination. But we punk rock libertarians have always thrived in rebellion. We were built for this fight. The system can cancel us, deplatform us, label us problematic—but they can't silence the growing roar of the people who’ve had enough.

The Bottom Line

Words like “retarded,” “transvestite,” and “tranny” are not evil in themselves. Like all language, their meaning is shaped by context, intent, and usage. The real problem is when society loses the ability to differentiate between malicious intent and casual vernacular. When offense trumps intent, we become prisoners to a linguistic tyranny that polices thought.

The speech police want to shame you into compliance. They want to train you to self-censor until you’re incapable of saying anything meaningful at all. But the pushback has begun. The pendulum is swinging. People are waking up, and they’re refusing to live in fear of words.

As always, stay disruptive. Speak boldly. Offend when necessary. Because if we don't fight for our freedom to speak, who will?


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