Calling all servicemen, past and present!

All -
I am most pleased with what has come up so far - and quite a lot of it looks to be useful for the project!

That being said, is there anyone else with anything to add? I know a lot of us here have been in uniform at some time or another, and the more data I can gather, the better the paper will be (which is coming due in a fortnight or so, by the by...)

So, who else has something to add? Besides, I'm sure there's a batch of young-uns reading this thread who are finding it mildly amusing...

5-90
 
How about the old stand-by, heard especially during Basic Training: "Police the area!"

Which, of course, means pick up all the litter and discard butts in the parking lot. Never did figure out how that came to fall within the purview of the government's police powers ...
 
The following was posted today on the Northeast On-Line Wheelers web site (www.neow.org). Most are not military in nature, but several address/illustrate the point I think 5-90 is aiming for:

some good ones in this article.. cheesy.gif cheesy.gif cheesy.gif

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/johnleo/jl20040223.shtml

Some medical euphemisms now appear in the fine print of your staggeringly large hospital bill. You may see charges for "disposable mucus recovery systems" (Kleenex), "thermal therapy" (a bag of ice) and an "oral administration fee" (the charge for handing you a pill in a paper cup). A dose of three pills, though delivered in a single paper cup, may require three separate oral administration fees.

How about these terms for firing workers: "facility and cost rationalizations," "dehiring," "normal involuntary attrition," and "negative employee retention." When a state agency lays off workers for some times, without pay, it calls this practice "furloughing."

In its science teaching standards, the state of Georgia changed the word "evolution" to "biological changes over time," then backtracked to "evolution" when protests arose.

The Bush administration contributed "temporary steel safeguard measures" (tariffs), "healthy forests" (more logging) plus "earned legalization," "regularization" and "normalization" (amnesty for illegal immigrants--sorry, undocumented workers). Did the Agriculture department announce frankly that it ordered the killing of 450 cattle because of mad cow disease? Of course not. The announcement said it had decided to depopulate the bull calf operation in Mabton, Washington. The department was just negatively retaining some cows. Or maybe placing them on permanent furlough.

Other political euphemisms include "managed" or "fair" trade (protectionism) and "sustainable utlization" a comforting term for despoiling the environment while claiming that there's really nothing to worry about. The term has been used to cover overzealous mining and foresting, as well as the trophy killing of big-game animals in Africa. On safari, you might call out, "Look dear, you sustainably utilized that rhino!"

Remember the under-the-table funds that went to members of the International Olympics Committee members when Salt Lake City was picked as an Olympic site? They weren't bribes, said long-time IOC member Dick Pound of Canada. They were "payments, I think, to encourage good feelings about Salt Lake."

Harvard academic Martin Feldstein told the economics conference in Davos last month that he doens't like the terms "weak dollar" and "strong dollar." Well, then how is the dollar doing? Next year it will be in a more competitive position, Feldman said, weakly.

At St. Mary's Catholic Church in South Brisbane, the priests are apparently no longer priests. Thye are "mass presiders," a term popping up here and there in other countries as well. "Body bags" (Vietnam war) and "human remains pouches" (the Gulf War) are now "transfer tubes" in Iraq, a term (like "choice" for abortion) that sucessfully eliminates any hint that death might be involved.

The British have a new word for military retreat, "exfiltration." This is not a great euphemism, but it sounds lots better than "running away."

China's economic expansion under stern one-party rule gave rise to several euphemisms, including "cloaked capitalism" and "soft Leninism." Why not "totalitarian freedom"?

Many gas stations have figured out that if you decide to charge more for credit card purchases, you can always describe the increase as a discount for those who pay cash. Several takeout restaurants in Australia now advertize a 10 percent discount if you pick up the food yourself. This means that a 10 percent change has been added for all deliveries.

Kansas City is establishing a "compassion zone" for homeless people just outside the downtown freeway loop. This is an upbeat way of announcing that the downtown area and most of the rest of the city are now compassion-free zones from which vagrants and homeless people will be expelled. Many universities use the same trick to control free speech on campus. They announce small "free-speech zones," thus establishing 99 percent of their campuses as places where speeches and protests are forbidden.

"War on terror" is a widely overlooked eupehemism. "Terror" isn't a party to the war, but militant Islam is. Reuters famously refuses to call terrorists "terrorists" because the news service thinks it's a subjective term. The BBC says its reporters may not call Saddam Hussein a former dictator. Staffers must refer to him as "the deposed former president." No word yet on whether Hitler can be called a dictator. Oops. That sounds way too subjective. Make that "the former legally selected leader of the Third Reich." Whatever.
 
I guess stalin could then be referred to as the most effective downsizer of a national population in world history thru state sponsored work programs....
 
RichP said:
I guess stalin could then be referred to as the most effective downsizer of a national population in world history thru state sponsored work programs....

Or the most effective in implementing negative population growth.
 
Most common ones covered by others, but heres a few.

Dirt Diver-or Dirt Dart: victim of a parachute malfunction.

Tracking: achieving controlled horiz. direction of travel while also in vertical free-fall. Also used as a measure of comprehention (Are we tracking?= You hear what I'm saying?)

(in the...) Sheepdip: A particulartly dicey or uncomfortable situation (taken from Brit SAS cantidate selection invoving manning a hide site in a pit full of manure/animal remains etc...)

SWC'd: (pronounced swicked, functional equiv of 'F--'d') used by students of the JFK Special Warfare Center to describe most every activity.

Slave Market: detail platoon at JFKSWC. Manned by students between classes, injured/out of training etc...some jobs were plum (like helping with the SERE course or Ops & Intel training) others involved routine GI drudgery. The Slave Market was generally a place to avoid, unless you had hookups in the courses needing help.

The Flagpole: Headquarters, officers etc..most all good training takes place far from the flagpole, and degrades/wussifies as one gets closer. Worst case was being billeted right under the flagpole...that was a 24/7 SWCing.

WetBulb: Mythical instrument used to measure heat index/relative humidity...WetBulb 3 was when pantcuffs get unbloused from boots, strip to t-shirts & a forced-hydration ritual + reduced work/rest schedule was enacted . Wetbulb 4 was when all training was supposed to cease...unless you were in the midst of a good SWCing at the time...

Sergeant Airplane: Black Hat instructors at the USA Parachute School who demanded to be addressed in terms like "Clear (or not clear) Sgt, Airborne!". One clown in my class called a Blackhat "Sgt Airplane" and we were all rewarded a sudden reintroduction to the joy of pushups.

Brainiac: Term for a particularly dim-witted trooper.

WhizWheel: Adaptation of Von Clausewitz' measure of leadership traits or potential. Picture a compass + with 'Smart' at N, 'Stupid' at S, 'Motivated' at E, and 'Lazy' at W... Smart & gung-ho is ideal, smart & lazy is second best, Stupid & lazy is a manegable risk, Stupid & motivated is a liability.
 
It's kind of like the evolution of the term for the old "battlefield stress" syndrome...

WWI - "Shell Shock" Descriptive and resonably accurate.

WWII - "Battle Fatigue" Sounds a little nicer, doesn't it?

Korean Conflict - "Operational Exhaustion" I'd expect this to happen to my truck...

Vietnam Conflict - "Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder" Squeezed just about all the personality out of this one, sounds like it doesn't even happen to people!

Notice how these just keep getting longer as well? Here's another example...

"Crippled"
"Handicapped"
"Differently-abled"
"Physically Challenged"

Or how about this...
"Fired"
"Riffed"
"Downsized"

I'm worried we won't be able to express simple concepts in another twenty years or so, due to the language being made more "politically correct" and the extinction of brevity...

Eschew obfuscation!

5-90
 
You fail. Go to the end of the line.

The PC term is not "physically challenged," it's "mobility impaired."

People too short to see over tall people at shows and sporting events are "altitudinally challenged."
 
Well, back when we had OD green uniforms and rigs.... Camo was still being introduced for the most part....

OD Green was the standard color. OD= Olive Drab.



HOWEVER..... as anybody that has ever been to such lovely places such as Graf.... Hohenfels, etc.... trying to get that dirt out of the paint of an M60, Abrams, Bradley's, M151's, M38s, M35A2C's, etc...... The dirt just don't come out. Well, that is one of the reasons we called OD Green "Over Dirt Green".
 
Eagle said:
You mean like those pesky "insurgents" that we hear about cropping up all over Iraq these days?

Those insurgents are hard to exterminate. I have a box full of medals from Viet Nam with verbiage telling the world what a great job I did in the "allied counter-insurgency effort" back in 1968. They gave out truckloads of ARCOMS in those days, so you might think there shouldn't be any "insurgents" left anywhere, but there seem to be plenty of them in Iraq.

Interesting. My dictionary defines an insurgent as "One who revolts against a civil authority." There isn't any civil authority in Iraq, just a military occupation force. How can there be insurgents if there's no government to revolt against?

Want another? What is it the spin doctors are calling our invasion of Iraq? Something about a "coalition" I believe. What coalition? Basically the invasion was carried out by two countries acting against the wishes of the United Nations and virtually every other country in the world. "Cabal" seems the more appropriate term ... except this plot wasn't any secret.

Can't believe that no one else has responded to your comments, but here it goes:

What coalition you ask? Well let me ask you this. Have you been over there to see for yourself or are you just one of those suckers that only believes what they see on CNN? Well I have been over there and have seen more than a few soldiers from different countries.

Hard to believe that someone such as yourself, who was in the Viet Nam War and experienced all the negativity of that war would now be on the opposite side of the fence talking negative about this war. Throw somemore gas on the fire and maybe our troops will come home to the same welcome home party you came home to. Sure you can say you support our troops, but not the war, but lets get real. It doesn't work like that. Just my .02. Flame away....
 
Eagle said:
I can't recall if there was any particular "official" term used for native residents, but I do recall that the US military seemed to go out of its way to avoid ever referring to the Vietnamese people in any way that might encourage us sojurs to think of them as (gasp) people. Company grade officers and non-coms alike used terms like "gooks," "slants," "slopes," and "Charlies" to refer to the Vietnamese (strictly speaking, "Charlies" were Vietcong, but the other terms were applied equally to both enemy and ally). The term "people" was never used. Never. I can't prove it, but I have always believed that this was a conscious effort by the military to ensure that we didn't accidently think of the Vietnamese as human beings, because if we did we might have been hesitant to shoot them.

Very true. A couple of shrinks have said that studies showed in order for the military to do their job correctly there must be some hate and the easiest way to do this is by dehumanizing the enemy.

Sarge
 
I think Eagle was just being cynical. People who have been there and done that, are authorized to be a little cynical. Usually a pretty large credibility gap, between what the Officers, the News and the Politicians are telling you, and what is actually happening on the ground.
"Crispy critter" is a body burnt beyond all recognition.

Chuck, SGT. 11D, Nam 69, 180 days TDY, WIA.
 
MRE's (meals ready to eat, we called Meals Rejected by Ethiopia)
When a nosy Lt. asked where we came up with previously missing parts, we'd tell 'em we got 'em thru ARP from Bravo Company. ARP, Army Relocation Program...(stolen).
Oddly enough, here in the DoD, when we use the radio to thank someone, we say Tango..Tango being 'T' in the phonetic alphabet..T standing for thanks..why we just don't say thanks, I dunno.
FNG..Fuc..ah, Fantastic New Guy...
Actually, the entire 10-code (radio shorthand) is a way to communicate quickly, without the general public knowing what's going on. 10-58 sounds better than 'airplane fall down and go boom' I guess.
A lot of things reflect macabe humor. Strawberry Pop-Tart..a GI in a sleeping bag run over by armor. Buying the farm..from LONG ago, when survivors of vets were given money/land, used to purchase family farms, at the time of the vet's death.
After a 13 hour shift, all I can think of offhand.
1984-1988 11-H (TOW anti armor Infantry)
1988-1991 Remf (rear echelon mother-fu..ah, fantastic'er) Did dogtags and lost people's paperwork for a living, don' even remember the MOS.
2000-Present Law-Enforcement/Security Dept of the Army
Oh yeah...doin' the kickin' chicken: victim of nerve agent exposure... :shhh:
 
I'm not military, but a buddy of mine, who is, sent this to me.

Useful Military Warnings :

"Aim towards the Enemy." -- Instruction printed on U.S. Rocket Launcher

"When the pin is pulled, Mr. Grenade is not our friend." -- U.S. Army

"Cluster bombing from B-52s is very, very accurate. The bombs are guaranteed to always hit the ground." - U.S.A.F. Ammo Troop

"If the enemy is in range, so are you." - Infantry Journal

"A slipping gear could let your M203 grenade launcher fire when youleast expect it. That would make you quite unpopular in what's left of your unit." -- Army's magazine of preventive maintenance

"It is generally inadvisable to eject directly over the area you just bombed." -- U.S. Air Force Manual

"Try to look unimportant; they may be low on ammo." -- Infantry Journal

"Tracers work both ways." -- U.S. Army Ordnance

"Five-second fuses only last three seconds." -- Infantry Journal

"Bravery is being the only one who knows you're afraid." -- Col. David Hackworth

"If your attack is going too well, you're probably walking into an ambush." -- Infantry Journal

"No combat-ready unit has ever passed inspection." -- Joe Gay

"Any ship can be a minesweeper ... once." -- Anonymous

"Never tell the Platoon Sergeant you have nothing to do." -- Unknown Army Recruit

"Don't draw fire; it irritates the people around you." -- Your Buddies

(And lastly)

"If you see a bomb technician running, try to keep up with him." -- U.S. Ammo Troop
 
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