.

 

Operation Wild Badger

Introducing a wee device for the creation of names for U.S. military operations.

After reading an article about the methods the U.S. military uses to generate names for overseas actions, I jealously created my own Ftrain Random Military Operation Names Generating Device. Click on the link and you'll see what I mean; 10 samples follow:

  1. Operation Unleashed Children
  2. Operation Durable Serpent
  3. Operation Iron Vulture
  4. Operation Green Troll
  5. Operation Unpredictable Badger
  6. Operation Perpetual Explosion
  7. Operation Gnashing Butterfly
  8. Operation Infuriated Vengeance
  9. Operation Unindulgent Cyclone
  10. Operation It's Best to Avoid Our Diplomacy

I hope you'll find this tool useful in planning your own foreign policy.

.  .  .  .  .  

Perhaps, in the small confines of my own life, I'll transform each initiative into an operation. My search for a job will be Operation Angry Badger - certainly a more movivating title than “look for a job.” My plan to restructure Ftrain.com will be Operation Delirious Judgement, and my plan to find a nice person to date steadily shall become Operation Outraged Lilac. If, with a friend, I visit Chicago next week, it will be under the aegis of Operation Furious Troll.

Writing this short essay falls under Operation Permanent Necktie, which will be finished within a few sentences; when it's done, I'll move on to Operation Midnight Venom, which will consist of getting dressed and going to meet someone for dinner.

.  .  .  .  .  

See also: Operation War Language at the Washington Post; Body of Language.


[Top]

Ftrain.com

PEEK

Ftrain.com is the website of Paul Ford and his pseudonyms. It is showing its age. I'm rewriting the code but it's taking some time.

FACEBOOK

There is a Facebook group.

TWITTER

You will regret following me on Twitter here.

EMAIL

Enter your email address:

A TinyLetter Email Newsletter

About the author: I've been running this website from 1997. For a living I write stories and essays, program computers, edit things, and help people launch online publications. (LinkedIn). I wrote a novel. I was an editor at Harper's Magazine for five years; then I was a Contributing Editor; now I am a free agent. I was also on NPR's All Things Considered for a while. I still write for The Morning News, and some other places.

If you have any questions for me, I am very accessible by email. You can email me at ford@ftrain.com and ask me things and I will try to answer. Especially if you want to clarify something or write something critical. I am glad to clarify things so that you can disagree more effectively.

POKE


Syndicate: RSS1.0, RSS2.0
Links: RSS1.0, RSS2.0

Contact

© 1974-2011 Paul Ford

Recent

@20, by Paul Ford. Not any kind of eulogy, thanks. And no header image, either. (October 15)

Recent Offsite Work: Code and Prose. As a hobby I write. (January 14)

Rotary Dial. (August 21)

10 Timeframes. (June 20)

Facebook and Instagram: When Your Favorite App Sells Out. (April 10)

Why I Am Leaving the People of the Red Valley. (April 7)

Welcome to the Company. (September 21)

“Facebook and the Epiphanator: An End to Endings?”. Forgot to tell you about this. (July 20)

“The Age of Mechanical Reproduction”. An essay for TheMorningNews.org. (July 11)

Woods+. People call me a lot and say: What is this new thing? You're a nerd. Explain it immediately. (July 10)

Reading Tonight. Reading! (May 25)

Recorded Entertainment #2, by Paul Ford. (May 18)

Recorded Entertainment #1, by Paul Ford. (May 17)

Nanolaw with Daughter. Why privacy mattered. (May 16)

0h30m w/Photoshop, by Paul Ford. It's immediately clear to me now that I'm writing again that I need to come up with some new forms in order to have fun here—so that I can get a rhythm and know what I'm doing. One thing that works for me are time limits; pencils up, pencils down. So: Fridays, write for 30 minutes; edit for 20 minutes max; and go whip up some images if necessary, like the big crappy hand below that's all meaningful and evocative because it's retro and zoomed-in. Post it, and leave it alone. Can I do that every Friday? Yes! Will I? Maybe! But I crave that simple continuity. For today, for absolutely no reason other than that it came unbidden into my brain, the subject will be Photoshop. (Do we have a process? We have a process. It is 11:39 and...) (May 13)

That Shaggy Feeling. Soon, orphans. (May 12)

Antilunchism, by Paul Ford. Snack trams. (May 11)

Tickler File Forever, by Paul Ford. I'll have no one to blame but future me. (May 10)

Time's Inverted Index, by Paul Ford. (1) When robots write history we can get in trouble with our past selves. (2) Search-generated, "false" chrestomathies and the historical fallacy. (May 9)

Bantha Tracks. (May 5)

More...
Tables of Contents