I thought 86 was when a restaurant was out of a food item?
86 Means “get rid of”
47 Means “Nazi Orangutan”
Such an efficient encoding algorithm.
Comey had his chance
“I couldn’t do my job. Can someone else?”
Aww he took it down
Real quick, too.
HF DG
…
?
Oh…
https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/15/politics/james-comey-instagram-post-donald-trump-uproar
It’s not letters
“Just James Comey causally calling for my dad to be murdered. This is who the Dem-Media worships. Demented!!!” Donald Trump Jr. posted on social media.
No Dems worships James Comedy.
As always, it’s just projection.
James Comedy! 🤣 Damn, I’m hearing that one seven years too late.
And that’s coming from a family that has never incided violence!
God that article was gross to read. Those lying disingenuous fucks. They make me wish I believed in hell because there’s no way they’d be headed anywhere else
I guess at the restaurant when we’d put 86 tomatoes, we actually wanted to kill the tomatoes
I mean, 86 is a real expression outside the Internet and was a popular slang at some point. Wikipedia says it exists in hospitality sectors, meaning simply to eject something or someone, but it specifically refers to putting someone 6 feet under, which is explicitly murder.
Wikipedia says it exists in hospitality sectors, meaning simply to eject something or someone, but it specifically refers to putting someone 6 feet under, which is explicitly murder.
Wikipedia says some slang dictionaries make the claim it refers to a grave but that is not the primary use or agreed upon origin:
Eighty-six or 86 is American English slang used primarily in the hospitality industry and sometimes in the military.
In the hospitality industry, it is used to indicate that an item is no longer available, traditionally from a food or drinks establishment, or referring to a person or people who are not welcome on the premises. Its etymology is unknown, but the term seems to have been coined in the 1920s or 1930s.
Military personnel might use “86” informally to refer to scrapping equipment (e.g., “That old radio got 86’d”) or ending a plan or mission (e.g., “The op was 86’d due to bad weather”). It’s not an official term in military doctrine or manuals, but it’s part of the informal jargon that soldiers, sailors, or airmen might pick up and use, influenced by broader civilian language.
It does not and has never explicitly referred to murder. That’s just not true.
Lmao ok
I mean the POS device literally had the button and the numbers appeared on the ticket at the chain restaurant where I worked