Why is douchebag an insult?

Probably the same reason being called a ‘dick’ is an insult.

And now I wil reprise my post from another recent thread:

A couple walk into a bar. The bartender says, “What’ll you have, folks?”

The man is grumpy and says, “Give me a bourbon on the rocks, and give this douchebag whatever she wants.”

“Sir, I have to ask you to show respect! This is not some low-class joint, this is a dignified establishment! Now, ma’am, what can I get you?”

“I’ll have a vinegar and water.”

:rolleyes: Sorry

Insults are funny things. They don’t always have to convey some literal comparison that delivers the insult. They often just use vulgar language to communicate contempt.

In the preceding posts, for example, you would sound ridiculous calling someone a vagina but the word “cunt” conveys a profound lack of respect. Same reason it’s OK to say one in public but not the other, same reason I let my kids say “poop” but not “shit .”

So it doesn’t matter so much what you’re saying, it’s how you say it. However, in this case, “douche” is a fancy French word for “shower” adopted as a euphemism so I’m not sure how “douche bag” came to be vulgar to begin with.

Well, that is what “scumbag” means:

from dictionary.com.

On one of George Carlin’s early albums (and unfortunately I haven’t yet unpacked enough of my CDs to locate my CD copy of it) he does a routine talking about growing up in his old neighborhood, in which he said they made a distinction between “douchebags” and “scumbags”. IIRC, it went something like

Tampon was used as an insult in “Can’t Hardly Wait (1998)”. Specifically, it’s revealed that Seth Green’s character, Kenny, had written “Denise Fleming is a tampon,” on Denise’s locker.

The literal definition is something you’re more likely to hear from 1950s-‘60s sources – for example, The Fugs’ second-most popular* ode to improvisational contraception using trademarked commodities (Saran Wrap) contains the lyric, “After the prom, and I ain’t got no scumbag - Saran Wrap.”
*Their first most popular ode to improvisational contraception using trademarked commodities is of course Coca-Cola Douche - which brings us back around again.

Interesting- I was just today pondering the exact implications of the word douchebag (which nowdays I think is almost exclusively used to refer to males.) It’s somewhere between “asshole” and “loser”. Kind of implying a guy whose a jerk, but also has some kind of naive stupidity. Anyway, I think it’s interesting how specific insults can be considering how random they can be.

“Douche bag” may be the exception, but there’s terms that refer to a lot of those, and similar things that are usable in polite company, and some that aren’t. For instance, you can say colostomy bag, but “shit bag” is an insult. You can say tampon, but you better not call someone a “cunt rag”.

IME, I think there’s two things that a word or phrase vulgar tend to have. First, it’s something that draws up unpleasant images or just generally not something mentioned in polite society. Obviously, you’re not going to be spending a lot of time talking about things you do in the privacy of your bathroom in polite company. Second, it’s generally a term associated with it that has harsh sounds in it like t’s, k’s, and short vowels.

I think “douche bag” definitely fits with the first part, but it doesn’t have as much of the harsh sound as many other words. Perhaps by adding “bag”, being a common ending for many other insults, or the fact that it’s a French word, help make up for that?

Didn’t bonnie Prince Charles call himself a tampon? No, that’s not right. Now I remember; he wanted to be a tampon!

Seriously

Comeback: The next time someone calls you a “douchebag” (which, if you are anything like me happens frequently) my suggested comeback is, “paper or plastic?”.

In a similar vein, I figured out in middle school that the best response to being called a pussy was, “You are what you eat, dickhead.”

That’s weird that douchebag apparently started out as a term for women, now it’s almost exclusively used for men (except from people that use all terms indiscriminately). In my experience, a good example of douchebag is a jerk stereotypical frat boy with trendy ugly clothes, hanging out with dumb chicks trying to get laid and he is stupid/not actually a cool person. Like I went to a bar in a big college town last weekend, and there were tons of guys that all looked the same with their Abercrombie clothes and perfectly spiked/messy hair pounding beers and being obnoxious - “Oh, what a bunch of douchebags.”

[QUOTE=Blaster Master]
You can say tampon, but you better not call someone a “cunt rag”.

An acquaintance had the nasty habit of calling people a “Twat Rag”

He didn’t have many friends

Right. A popped collar is the signature of the modern douchebag. Double points if it’s pink.

Like this guy.

Perhaps not, but I think I shall start.

We do say “shitbag,” though. At least some do. (About 1/4 million hits on Google for the term).

…and with that, I hit 10,000 posts.

edit: Shit, no I don’t. That’s 10,001. I missed my own milestone!

That one’s easy. “Cunt”, as used as an insult, is used almost exclusively for females. By calling a woman a cunt, you’re imlying that that’s all she is, and claiming that women have no worth behond sex.

I’m not sure, though, why it’s so much less offensive to call a man a “dick”, “prick”, or other slang for penis.

What is a popped collar? I can’t see enough of the collar in that picture to tell what you’re talking about. (However, I don’t need to see the collar to tell that guy is a douchebag).

I always thought of the word “asshole” as being applied strictly to men, and a female asshole is a “cunt”. Although “cunt” is probably the most vulgar word I can think of.

Men aren’t as offended by being called a “dick” because men are proud of their dicks.

And why would men named Richard want to use Dick for their name? I’ve never figured that one out.