spamoli
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I am happy to say that I have accepted a job offer as a crewman and will be attending BMQ in September. During my interview with a recruiting officer I was asked if I knew the nickname given to armoured soldiers. I said "No Sir" and was told it was "zipperhead". My eyebrows hit the ceiling and I asked "Oh?". I was nearly as shocked as if he had said "porchmonkey". He then explained crewmen frequently hit their heads due to the tight quarters inside of a tank, and therefore have a lot of scars on their scalps possibly resembling a zipper. That certainly makes sense but I immediately thought of the nickname being a derogatory term for people of Asian persuasion. Mostly due to it's frequent use by Clint Eastwood in "Gran Torino".
Urbandictionary.com defines zipperhead as
Zipperhead
A racial slur coined by US soldiers during Korean War because if Asians were shot in the head with high-powered weapons, their heads would split as if you unzipped them.
"Hey Louie, hand me that gun, I just saw me a zipperhead"
I am curious if this term is as widely used as the recruiting officer told me it was, since he made it very clear that racism isn't tolerated in today's military. I wont take offense to being called a zipperhead in my career but I can imagine that this could cause a bit of tension if someone wasn't aware of it's armour oriented definition.
Urbandictionary.com defines zipperhead as
Zipperhead
A racial slur coined by US soldiers during Korean War because if Asians were shot in the head with high-powered weapons, their heads would split as if you unzipped them.
"Hey Louie, hand me that gun, I just saw me a zipperhead"
I am curious if this term is as widely used as the recruiting officer told me it was, since he made it very clear that racism isn't tolerated in today's military. I wont take offense to being called a zipperhead in my career but I can imagine that this could cause a bit of tension if someone wasn't aware of it's armour oriented definition.