I know that some of this has been said in other answers, but I just wanted to add my input on the matter.
Thoughts on the Mod's actions
So, from what I gather, the user was issued a short ban (1 hour), and the room was frozen. These actions seem in line with the site's philosophy on banning: it's a big time-out. It allows both sides to cool off, and recover their ability to think rationally, without having emotions clouding their judgement.
Thoughts on "Culture"
I rarely visit chat, and I have never participated in the C# room (at all: not chatting, not starring, and not flagging). Despite that, I feel that I can explain things in a way that will be very clear.
While I respect the idea of each chat room having its own culture, that does not give permission to deviate from the expectations that are present on the normal SO site.
Chat rules are only broader in the sense that anything "too chatty" or "not constructive" on main has a home in chat. From that point, every room has a right to restrict the scope further as long as they are not violating SO's policies. There are of number of rooms that focus on programming in a certain (programming) language, while others focus on moderating SO.
Thoughts on language
The language is unnecessary at best, and actively hostile and insulting at worst. (Except for the word "cockroach", which I do not feel warrants censorship in TheLostMind's answer.)
But I don't think that cursing is not the biggest problem; it may actually only be a symptom that some other things are present.
My opinions are mostly irrelevant in this matter, so I have substantiated everything with factual evidence. My only interest is ensuring that all parts of Stack Overflow are "nice", which is one of the core philosophies of the network. (I have no interest in chat, personally.)
I found a research paper that I feel is particularly relevant. It presents evidence that slang language (including a number of words that seem to be used quite often in this room) are offensive to some people. But it also explored the connection between slang and sexism (its main focus), and found a number of connections.
Stack Overflow has already been the subject of several different papers that come to the conclusion that Stack Overflow has fewer female programmers, even when compared with the numbers in the industry (where there are few to begin with).
Those two papers only explored the main part of SO. As a female programmer myself, I haven't had any problems on regular SO, but I am getting very different feelings from this chat room. See:
here,
here,
and here.
I do not come to Stack Overflow looking for these problems; I come here for programming stuff. But I'm sure as hell not going to idly watch any part of Stack Overflow (or another SE site) devolve into a place where it is acceptable to marginalize the feelings and struggles of other people. And it's not just myself or my own groups that I care about.
It shouldn't be necessary to explain why things are offensive (indeed there are other reasons than the one I mentioned), nor should it be necessary to point out other examples of insensitive behaviors in this chat room that need to stop.
The defense for this behavior is:
No active chat users felt it was offensive, the present room owners argued that the language was normal for the culture of the room, no hostility was directed at another user.
If the profanity is not intended to hurt anyone's feelings, who cares?
I don't know what was intended, but I don't think it matters. It is very clear that the room has some hostile opinions, which could be considered bullying. Reference the Be Nice Policy:
Don't be a jerk. These are just a few examples. If you see them, flag them:
- Bigotry of any kind. Language likely to offend or alienate individuals or groups based on race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, etc. will not be tolerated. At all. (Those are just a few examples; when in doubt, just don't.)
- Inappropriate language or attention. Avoid vulgar terms and anything sexually suggestive. Also, this is not a dating site.
- Harassment and bullying. If you see a hostile interaction, flag it. If it keeps up, disengage — we'll handle it. If something needs staff attention, you can use the contact us link at the bottom of every page.
The three bullet points there all fall under one definition: taboo. While there is some degree of variance, (American culture frowns upon asking others about their salary, for example,) the concept of taboo words is understood and practiced by most, if not all, human cultures on earth. If you can write in English, you probably already know its taboos.
For good measures let me also quote parts of the moderation guide:
you should only be flagging things that [the mods are] going to see as offensive as well
Which includes:
Anything that shocks the conscience (yes, this is subjective — let your conscience be your guide.)
Note that this refers to the flagger's conscience, not the room's. And of course this applies to anything where you have the option to flag, no matter who posted it.
A good rule of thumb: if your message is something that would be flagged as "Rude or Offensive" if it was on the main site, it's inappropriate for a message in chat.
Just because there is a group of people willing to put up with the chat room's behavior does not mean that the rest of Stack Overflow should be willing to put up with it.