03-16-2020, 05:01 AM
In Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, there's a mention of "bogon" which happens to fit (as also mentioned by the site I linked to).
When Arthur Dent first hears of the Vogons who destroyed Earth after escaping the demolition with his non-Earthly friend Ford, he mishears and thinks they are called "Bogons".
The Vogons are described as heartless, small-minded, and bureaucratic. When space-time anomalies prevent the Earth from being destroyed in all timelines, in later books, the middling Vogon commander in charge of the demolition stops at nothing to be able to finally cross off an item on his personal to-do list with grim satisfaction.
Vogons like mindless destruction, stomping around in uniforms and shouting at others, and torturing people with their poetry. Slug-like in appearance, their success is described as miraculous in view of how evolution seems to have given up on them.
When Arthur Dent first hears of the Vogons who destroyed Earth after escaping the demolition with his non-Earthly friend Ford, he mishears and thinks they are called "Bogons".
The Vogons are described as heartless, small-minded, and bureaucratic. When space-time anomalies prevent the Earth from being destroyed in all timelines, in later books, the middling Vogon commander in charge of the demolition stops at nothing to be able to finally cross off an item on his personal to-do list with grim satisfaction.
Vogons like mindless destruction, stomping around in uniforms and shouting at others, and torturing people with their poetry. Slug-like in appearance, their success is described as miraculous in view of how evolution seems to have given up on them.