USGI stands for "United States Government Inspected," meaning that the meat has been inspected and approved by the U.S. government for consumption. So, if you see USGI on your meat packaging, you can rest assured that it's been given the thumbs up by the feds. Just make sure you cook it properly to avoid any unwanted surprises.
USDA indicates the beef was rated by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. USGI stands for U.S. Government Issue, and usually means the meat was originally sources for the US Armed Forces and is now being sold as surplus. Note: It is NOT necessarily the case that USGI beef has been inspected by the USDA.
It stands for US Government Issue beef, ie meat from the armed forces supply chains. That's silly. It means US Government Inspected. It means the meat passes USDA inspection without being given a specific grade such as "Select", "Choice" or "Prime". It's a store's way of selling you the cheapest grade of meat without telling you how tough it could be.
They have a specific floor plate for the P-Mag - the USGI floorplate does not fit on P-Mags.
Is this considered vandalism if the question is incoherent? Meat is mean, that's survival of the fittest. When meat is lean, it keeps you more fit. Meat is a lean, mean writing machine.
You are "Dead Meat"
Yes. Carnivore does mean meat-consumer in Latin.
94%
Yes they do eat raw meat. Eskimo mean "Raw Meat Eaters"
Hash
meat
smoked
I think you mean MEAT