Spyke

I always thought it was General Infantry but I don't see that term referenced anywhere in the article. Gee, I...guess I was wrong.

15
lemmy.world

Gee, I…guess I was wrong.

Sir, this is the internet. You're not allowed to admit you were wrong. You're supposed to get arguementitive and beligerant.

19

I think the author of the article is so terribly wrong. They clearly didn't serve in WWI or the sequel.

7

So according to my understanding, all of those alternate interpretations are just that, (mis)interpretations of the original galvanized iron applied to people. So I'd say your specific interpretation is not more wrong than any of those mentioned.

5
sopuli.xyz

It's two letters. It will have been used for countless things with those initials.

8
Zessreply
lemmy.world

No I'm pretty sure your intestines are your "galvanized iron" tract.

8
Telexreply
sopuli.xyz

Might explain the noise they make.

I do know a guy with government issue ones, though. Since the operation.

3

You fools.

It's the general intelligence tract! Don't you know anything about anatomy?

1

That comic is almost as surprising as the term. Humor has changed so much. You'd never get away with that much dialog in a comic these days.

2
bia
lemmy.world

Someone else has been listening to Dungeon Crawler Carl. :)

1

Haha, OK. Funny confidence with a recently released book that mentions this. :)

2

You reached the end

TIL that "G.I." originally referred to galvanized iron | Spyke