Pogue

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File:U.S. Army Sgt. Maj. Ricky Gaines, I Corps chief food operations management noncommissioned officer and competition judge, explains his evaluations of food service inside the 16th Combat Aviation Brigade 130525-A-XP915-001.jpg
U.S. military support personnel, like these Army culinary specialists, may be referred to by some combat personnel as pogues.

Pogue or POG (Template:IPAc-en Script error: No such module "Respell".) is American pejorative military slang for non-combat or non-infantry personnel.

History

"Pogue" may have entered the American military lexicon during the Civil War through "póg," the Irish language word for "kiss." In this telling, the word "pogue" was popularized by deployed Irish-American sailors who were envious of onshore personnel who still enjoyed the affections of their sweethearts.[1]

By World War I, "pogue" was used by U.S. Marines to refer to a male homosexual.Template:Sfn In World War II, its definition shifted to Marines thought to be soft or unfit for duty.Template:Sfn By the time of the Vietnam War, "pogue" referred to rear echelon support personnel.Template:Sfn Paul Dickson's War Slang humorously defined "pogue" during Operation Desert Storm as "anyone who arrived in the Gulf after you."Template:Sfn

In the modern Marine Corps and Army, the oft-used acronym "POG"—standing for "Person Other than Grunt," with "grunt" being slang for an infantryman—may have originated as a backronym for "pogue."[1]Template:Sfn Though the term is usually considered condescending and derisive, opinions vary about its level of offensiveness.[2]

In media

In Gustav Hasford's 1979 semi-autobiographical novel The Short-Timers, he illustrates the Marine infantryman's contempt for pogues: "Sergeant Gerheim is disgusted by the fact that I am to be a combat correspondent and not a grunt. He calls me a poge [sic], an office pinky. He says that shitbirds get all the slack."[3] In Stanley Kubrick's 1987 film Full Metal Jacket, an adaptation of Hasford's novel, Sergeant Joker is chastised for wearing a peace button by a character listed in the credits as "Poge Colonel."[4]

Related terms

A closely related U.S. Army term is "REMF," standing for "Rear Echelon Motherfucker,"Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn which gained popularity during the Vietnam War.[5] Another term is "fobbit," a mixture of "forward operating base" and "hobbit,"[6] originated during the Iraq War, lampooning support personnel who rarely leave the safety of the "Shire."[7]

See also

References

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External links