@grey @VaxxersPostingTheirLs. Your Fake smart-guy persona is so embarrassing, I can feel it.
You take yourself too seriously and are trying to posture, to gaslight me into taking you seriously.
You are painfully self absorbed.
@shortstories I've not heard of that account. Nevertheless, people urinate and deficate in public all the time. It sounds like a thing that people use to mock the Indians for. A shame, really.
I see they have made remarkable strides. I understand India is a recovering economy not a developing one.
@grey you sound like you got a vaccine so you could keep your job.
On construction sites, there is a job called Core Drilling and Repair of... https://youtube.com/shorts/p3RDO2Vq1Hg?si=z5pjv4u_Aa7YF8iT
Stealthy Chinese Nuclear Submarine Sinks In Secret | World News | WION https://youtube.com/watch?v=14GvSyU9Svs&si=fUfXwgW8O1uYoeI7
@calicocrack Well, I'm not looking to purchase but on a serious note, I would not go around flaunting that, in your daily life. Looks like they will mandate vaccinations again, soon enough...
@pepsi_man "Boomer"? Whatever millennial loser. How does it feel to know you will NEVER get ahead, Never own a home, and be the ONLY men whos females are getting ALL the better paying jobs. Keep serving my coffee, loser. Your blood is clotting as you read this, lmfao!
@pepsi_man Definitely vaccinated. Hope your day job was worth it. lmao!
Although the OP may have used the term loosely. He is not wrong.
BTW, I am intimately familiar with the jargon and have used it frequently, at one point.
Don't try give some *Ackshually* quip on correct terms and usage.
Rigidly adhering to military regulations
GI can also be used as an adjective to describe someone who is rigidly adhering to military regulations and practices.
Of a standardized style or type
GI can also be used to describe a standardized style or type issued by the U.S. armed forces, such as GI shoes or GI blankets.
Of or pertaining to a U.S. enlisted person
GI can also be used to describe something that is of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a U.S. enlisted person.
@pepsi_man The term GI has multiple meanings in the military, including:
Galvanized Iron
The original meaning of GI was galvanized iron, the primary material used to make military items like buckets. The earliest known written instance of GI is from either 1906 or 1907.
Slang for enlisted soldiers
GI is also used as slang for enlisted soldiers of the United States armed forces.
@shortstories Well, isn't it because they are a minority...? Minorities tend to behave like this until they subvert the Culture.
I spent all this time trying to be one of you and now I realize... I'm not.