A man ordering gin & tonic is a known turn off / red flag to women?

Anonymous
Snoop dogg has entered the chat.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:All it says to me is that he’s an Anglophile present. Sometimes that’s a good thing sometimes it’s a bad thing.


I've never met an American male Anglophile who wasn't gay or bi.


How odd. I know lots. Liking English architecture, art, literature, music, etc. isn't gay. It's typically just part of a good education.


For many insecure people having and valuing a good education is gay.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:





Shit gin pushed by a closeted homosexual.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Gin and tonic to me is a summer drink.


It’s good all the time,
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:All it says to me is that he’s an Anglophile present. Sometimes that’s a good thing sometimes it’s a bad thing.


I've never met an American male Anglophile who wasn't gay or bi.


How odd. I know lots. Liking English architecture, art, literature, music, etc. isn't gay. It's typically just part of a good education.


For many insecure people having and valuing a good education is gay.


Yes women like misandry.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:For this guy, a gin and tonic can be hard to top depending on the occasion. Pretty perfect if you’re in London, or somewhere tropical and hot, and enjoying a good time with good company. Whereas if you’re with those same friend but in some place cozy in the middle of winter, then you might like an old fashioned. Now you couldn’t pay me to drink a martini - but I’m happily married to someone who loves them, and the drier and dirtier the better. Regardless, I can’t see looking down my nose at anyone who’s enjoying a cocktail, especially one that’s been around since the 1800s and was invented to fight malaria. Find someone or something else to judge.


Gin originated as a medicinal liquor made by monks across Europe. Modern gin came from the Netherlands and became popular in England after French brandy was restricted in 1688. The gin crazy took off and by 1743 2.2 gallons of gin per person. It end up being a poor person’s drink and blamed for all the ills of society.

Gin and tonic was a 19th-century British colonial India thing. Soldiers added gin to quinine-based tonic water to prevent malaria.
Anonymous
The only different between alcohols is the fantasy each sells.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I had never heard this in my life but now twice in recent months in different social settings and in completely different regions of the U.S., among all college educated women, it’s been gossiped this is like a known thing. Gin and tonic has some effeminate and/or gaydar insinuations?



You have a TokTok addled social circle. “College educated” doesn’t mean anything good. Any brat with non poor parents can get a college degree. The fact that you ask this question shows that you are not very smart but can be saved.


😩
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of this, but I’m in my mid-40s.
+1 except I'm mid 50s and I love a gin & tonic.


same, and DH and I both love a good G&T, married 25+ years.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The only different between alcohols is the fantasy each sells.


They actually all taste different.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Gin and tonic to me is a summer drink.


Interesting. Do most men change their go-to drink depending on the season? That seems like a female trait.


Opposite, in fact. Burbon and whiskey in the winter, gin or rum in the summer. Most females just have wine or one go-to cocktail.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I had never heard this in my life but now twice in recent months in different social settings and in completely different regions of the U.S., among all college educated women, it’s been gossiped this is like a known thing. Gin and tonic has some effeminate and/or gaydar insinuations?


Gin is a harsh drink.

I've actually heard the opposite, from bartenders -- gin drinkers are the dangerous ones.


When I think of gin drinkers I think of men like my FIL - preppy boomer, smart, witty and gregarious. I guess it depends on your social circle and geography.

I doubt white trash dangerous drunks are buying $50 bottles of Hendrick’s.


LOL that you seem to think preppy boomers are incapable of being dangerous drunks
Anonymous
How are there 6 pages on this?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:How are there 6 pages on this?



Because it’s more interesting than hearing about cheaters
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I had never heard this in my life but now twice in recent months in different social settings and in completely different regions of the U.S., among all college educated women, it’s been gossiped this is like a known thing. Gin and tonic has some effeminate and/or gaydar insinuations?


In other words, G&Ts are ick?
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