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Iraq's battlefield slang
LA Times ^
| Jan 28, 2007
| Austin Bay
Posted on 01/28/2007 2:16:49 PM PST by Pete from Shawnee Mission
PRIESTS, PROSTITUTES, psychologists, cops, jazz musicians, poker players. Every trade has its jargon and "insider lingo." ...
..."Embrace the suck" isn't merely a wisecrack; it's an encyclopedic experience rendered as an epigram, gritty shorthand for "Face it, soldier. I've been there. War ain't easy. Now deal with the difficulty and let's get on with the mission."...
...Dynamic truth: Basically means "this is the plan when my supervisor gave it to me, but change is already in the works."
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Political Humor/Cartoons; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: boxershorts; bumwad; catfish; colonel; congress; congresscolonel; embracethesuck; iraq; language; militaryslang; slang
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Noam Chomsky--Non grunt, non military echelons above reality...
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
Fun post. ... "Mortaritaville."
Ha ha.
Regards
2
posted on
01/28/2007 2:29:01 PM PST
by
ARE SOLE
(Agents Ramos and Campean are in prison at this very moment.)
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
Bum wad -- originally British slang for toilet paper, it has expanded to mean newspapers, particularly newspapers with a liberal editorial bias, like the LA Times.
Congress Colonel -- a pejorative term for someone who second-guesses the military strategy to gain political points. Sort of like a Monday-morning quarterback. Or John McCain.
Boxer shorts -- brief quotations from Sen. Barbara Boxer of California. Generally so ill-informed and hyperbolic as to be hilarious. Often used as jokes to break the stress of battle.
3
posted on
01/28/2007 2:32:36 PM PST
by
IronJack
(=)
To: BIGLOOK
Embrace the suck
4
posted on
01/28/2007 2:34:40 PM PST
by
george76
(Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
To: IronJack; Grampa Dave; Milhous; Liz
Bum wad -- originally British slang for toilet paper, it has expanded to mean newspapers, particularly newspapers with a liberal editorial bias...
5
posted on
01/28/2007 2:35:45 PM PST
by
george76
(Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
Catfish: The helicopter transport facility (actually a plywood shack) at Balad/Anaconda. If you've moved from one place to another inside Iraq, you've likely gone through Catfish at least once. It has cold bottles of water, a TV, unusable telephones, a whiteboard for flight tracking, and tents with cots for those who get stuck there with no available flights (frequent, and can last for days). It is unknown whether Catfish has any other "real" name.
6
posted on
01/28/2007 2:38:23 PM PST
by
angkor
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
O dark 30: Pronounced "oh dark thirty." A word play on military time. Means a very early hour during the night. ("We had to get up at oh-dark-thirty.")When I was in the Navy in the late '70's, it was "0 dark hundred", which meant early in the morning. "20 late 30" meant very late at night.
("We had to work from 0 dark hundred to 20 late 30")
7
posted on
01/28/2007 2:41:06 PM PST
by
magslinger
(I am NOT running for President, nor have I formed an exploratory committee)
To: angkor
185th Avn Bde, MS ARNG. I know the guy who coined the phrase "Catfish Air".
Catfish Air
8
posted on
01/28/2007 2:43:50 PM PST
by
TADSLOS
(Iran is in the IED exporting business. Time to shut them down.)
To: ARE SOLE
"Fun post. ... "Mortaritaville." "
I like Bombaconda more (and I was there).
Incoming 1 to 3 times a day, usually ineffective (John Q. Jihad launching one or two spare rockets on the way home from work), sometimes deadly.
My last week there they dropped 6 or 7 mortars in the KBR parking lot about 200 yards from my hooch, at 5:30 in the morning.
It was the first time ever that I crawled around the trailer on my knees looking for Kevlar, and made sure to crouch below the height of the sandbags outside (about 3 feet).
A real boneshaker.
One KBR guy was wounded but not seriously.
9
posted on
01/28/2007 2:48:13 PM PST
by
angkor
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
Hate to ruin it for him but some of those - Lifer juice, Bohica, one digit midget, Oh dark thirty - were around when I was a young ensign 30 years ago.
To: angkor
Thanks for it Bro.
Regards.
11
posted on
01/28/2007 2:52:08 PM PST
by
ARE SOLE
(Agents Ramos and Campean are in prison at this very moment.)
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
Nad pad. I'm dyin' here... BTT.
To: TADSLOS
Nifty. I remember space available flights on c-130s. Fly backward, bring something to cover your ears, and make certain you used the paper bags or clean it yourself.
To: magslinger
When I was in the Navy in the late '70's, it was "0 dark hundred", which meant early in the morning. "20 late 30" meant very late at night. And we all knew what O Beer Thirty meant, right?
To: Billthedrill
And since you aren't intending to retreat, you'd better keep it on and aligned!
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
16
posted on
01/28/2007 2:56:23 PM PST
by
Gritty
(Business as usual is not a winning strategy - LTC J.C. Meyers, ACSC, Maxwell AFB)
To: Non-Sequitur
Yup. Weekend Warrior is even older.
17
posted on
01/28/2007 2:57:18 PM PST
by
gcruse
(http://garycruse.blogspot.com/)
To: Non-Sequitur
Annapolis speak probably took a while to work its way up the Hudson.
You were probably "short" just before you left; good "Gouge" was good info, a reliable rumor; "skating" meant you caught some easy duty....
To: ARE SOLE
And in view of "General order #1" probaly about the only thing served.
To: Pete from Shawnee Mission
"skating" meant you caught some easy duty.... That, or you managed to get yourself out of something. That's one slang term I've never heard used that way in civilian life.
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