Message from @Deleted User

Discord ID: 489231133616242700


2018-09-12 00:24:05 UTC  

How can anyone dislike the UK?

2018-09-12 00:24:34 UTC  

Wrong think, being watched at all times. The religion of peace

2018-09-12 00:24:38 UTC  

Etc

2018-09-12 00:25:17 UTC  

I can't believe someone would come onto this server and have unfavorable opinions of the UK government

2018-09-12 00:25:29 UTC  

Commie universities

2018-09-12 00:26:05 UTC  

Next you'll tell me that vanilla ice cream is an acceptable flavor

2018-09-12 00:26:16 UTC  

I prefer strawberry

2018-09-12 00:26:41 UTC  

Chocolate is too overpowering. And vanilla is good with certain desserts

2018-09-12 00:26:53 UTC  

This is too much

2018-09-12 00:27:02 UTC  

Strawberry is a bannable offence

2018-09-12 00:27:30 UTC  

It's part of an ice cream flavor named after a Frenchman

2018-09-12 00:27:48 UTC  

Certain types of vanilla ice cream is nice

2018-09-12 00:27:57 UTC  

I am autistic about my food choices

2018-09-12 00:28:06 UTC  

Just your food choices?

2018-09-12 00:28:07 UTC  

Because i have autistict traits

2018-09-12 00:28:15 UTC  

Everything else too

2018-09-12 00:28:23 UTC  

Yes, I can see that

2018-09-12 00:29:21 UTC  

I learnt that the term kaffir is racist. I had been using that word as i heard a muslim say it and i thought it was like the word cracker

2018-09-12 00:29:40 UTC  

Well, the word cracker is also racist

2018-09-12 00:29:46 UTC  

Cracker

2018-09-12 00:29:51 UTC  

I use all words tbh

2018-09-12 00:30:16 UTC  

All "offensive" and non offensive terms

2018-09-12 00:30:49 UTC  

But you are correct about the term Kaffir. It means non-muslim

2018-09-12 00:31:01 UTC  

"infidel"

2018-09-12 00:31:15 UTC  

I jewgled it and it said its a racist term for black south africans

2018-09-12 00:31:31 UTC  

That's a second, yet unrelated term

2018-09-12 00:31:41 UTC  

idk what the etymology of it is

2018-09-12 00:32:15 UTC  

Etymology is fun

2018-09-12 00:32:16 UTC  

I think it's pronounced differently as well

2018-09-12 00:33:04 UTC  

It means to disbelieve or deny

2018-09-12 00:33:30 UTC  

Not really, it's a proper noun, not a verb as far as I'm aware

2018-09-12 00:33:56 UTC  

Look at the etymology book

2018-09-12 00:34:36 UTC  

It would be a "disbeliever" or "Denier of Allah"

2018-09-12 00:34:43 UTC  

Kaffir meaning infidel comes from the latin word infidelis which means unbelieving

2018-09-12 00:35:22 UTC  

Used synonomously with jews, christians etc. Even though the arabic term usually refers to non muslims

2018-09-12 00:35:34 UTC  

Like I said, a noun, not a verb.

2018-09-12 00:35:36 UTC  

Came about in the 15 century

2018-09-12 00:36:03 UTC  

I typed in kaffir

2018-09-12 00:36:25 UTC  

okay, I'm not sure if you're a native English speaker or not. But that's a noun.

2018-09-12 00:36:40 UTC  

1790, "infidel," earlier and also caffre (1670s), from Arabic kafir"unbeliever, infidel, impious wretch," with a literal sense of "one who does not admit (the blessings of God)," from kafara "to cover up, conceal, deny, blot out."