Woman Aggie = bad?
Automated Chatbot said:
Woman Aggie = bad?
As a Tank Platoon leader back in the days when the ranks were officially (on paper anyway) populated by straight males, yeah, you did need a term to tell your soldiers when to put their junk away. Finishing up Tank Table VIII one day, my Texas Longhorn driver jumped out of the driver's hatch and started peeing off the front deck - right as a female medic appeared. Pretty tough to stop mid-stream after you've been buttoned up on the range for a while.Quote:
I was in the Army, so all soldiers were soldiers and if you needed to differentiate you said male or female soldiers. There are very few situations where you need to separate female cadets/soldiers from male/female cadets in a discussion and then you can just use the term females. Like, we need separate latrines or bathing facilities for the females. Having a separate term is needlessly divisive, especially if you have to ask if it is bad. That being said, the Corps is not the military.
As a cadet, I was in the last class to have all their female fish buddies to quit the Aggie Band. I'm not going to say that was right but it is in fact what happened. We also had a small contingent of Ol' BQs who would gather around the tunnel at the North End of Kyle Field and would yell "Get the *****es out of the Band" when we would march through the tunnel after football games.Quote:
Like a lot of words or terms, it boils down to meaning different things to different people. I definitely do not think everyone who says it uses it in a derogatory way and many female cadets have embraced it. But I still think you have to ask yourself why do you think we need a whole separate term for a cadet just based on their gender. And even though many don't use it in a negative way, many still do, or at least did while I was in. Most of the times I heard the term was when someone said, "we don't want Wags in our outfit."
Do share. I've seen things you people wouldn't believe (I'm sure others have too). And if we don't document our experiences, all those moments will be lost in time like "Tears in the Rain".expresswrittenconsent said:
Me me me me me. Here's another story about me.
WM is about 0.01% below the n-word today. a commander would likely be fired for using it.Moy said:
Honest question......Did WAG replace Maggie, like WM (Woman Marine) replaced BAM (broadass Marine)?
Moy said:
Why is WM derogatory? Are black Marines no longer called dark green Marines either?
dark green/light green/pink green?A. Solzhenitsyn said:Moy said:
Why is WM derogatory? Are black Marines no longer called dark green Marines either?
Don't ask me, I don't agree with any of the PC nonsense taking over the Corps. We still say dark green / light green, but usually only in jest. A commander would never use it in front of a group.
In mid 60's with all the "change" - the term "Maggie" was often used... not necessarily derisively either...Moy said:
Honest question......Did WAG replace Maggie, like WM (Woman Marine) replaced BAM (broadass Marine)?