Message from @Deleted User

Discord ID: 446533889767243788


2018-05-17 04:43:23 UTC  

Yep

2018-05-17 04:43:37 UTC  

Except Laci Green was still fucking hot.

2018-05-17 04:43:41 UTC  

Nigh nigh @Antiboom

2018-05-17 04:43:44 UTC  

Cutie

2018-05-17 04:43:48 UTC  

Cutie pie

2018-05-17 04:43:56 UTC  

Sugar plum honey bun?

2018-05-17 04:44:01 UTC  

Ahem. Thicc.

2018-05-17 04:44:02 UTC  

Yeah laci green is retard hot

2018-05-17 04:44:02 UTC  

That where that’s going?

2018-05-17 04:44:19 UTC  

She showed me how to wash a vagina. I dont need that, but still interesting.

2018-05-17 04:44:27 UTC  

Here's the perfect one for you, it shows the Salvation Army

2018-05-17 04:44:45 UTC  

Big surprise, it's a huge contradiction to your own point.

2018-05-17 04:45:27 UTC  

@Deleted User you might need towash your retarded wife's vagina eventually

2018-05-17 04:45:30 UTC  

Have fun.

2018-05-17 04:45:33 UTC  

Can I use this as proof that anti-theists are self-destructive?

2018-05-17 04:46:03 UTC  

Lol

2018-05-17 04:46:10 UTC  

Hooty hates jews

2018-05-17 04:46:11 UTC  

There's about twice as many atheists in the US than reported

2018-05-17 04:46:15 UTC  

At least

2018-05-17 04:46:27 UTC  

People are just Christian on paper

2018-05-17 04:47:28 UTC  

"David King, director of the Institute on Faith & Giving at the school, said the 'Giving USA Special Report on Giving to Religion,' released on Oct. 26 by The Giving Institute, reaffirms what many researchers in the field have long known: that there is a 'substantial connection between religion and giving.'

'Religious affiliation really matters,' Mr. King said. 'Someone with a religious affiliation was more than two times more generous than someone without a religious affiliation. And among those with a religious affiliation, religious intensity really matters. Those who attend services were much more likely to give, whether it’s monthly or weekly. We really see the connection grow with continued involvement in a religious community.'"

2018-05-17 04:47:32 UTC  

I can't even see peak autism in the rearview anymore.

2018-05-17 04:47:40 UTC  

I mean that's not bad for the most religious country on earth

2018-05-17 04:48:03 UTC  

"While 62 percent of religious households give to charity, only 46 percent of nonreligious households do."

2018-05-17 04:48:19 UTC  

"On average, religiously affiliated households donate $1,590 to charity annually, while households with no religious affiliation contribute $695."

2018-05-17 04:48:20 UTC  

I still reckon religious people give more

2018-05-17 04:48:29 UTC  

The current most charitable individuals in the United States, based on “Estimated Lifetime Giving,” are:

1) Warren Buffett (atheist, donated $40.785 billion to “health, education, humanitarian causes”)

2) Bill & Melinda Gates (atheists, donated $27.602 billion to “global health and development, education”)

3) George Soros (atheist, donated $6.936 billion to “open and democratic societies”)

2018-05-17 04:48:31 UTC  

No matter the stats which are probably biased

2018-05-17 04:48:37 UTC  

"Religious giving accounts for 32 percent of all U.S. charitable giving, the study found, but that number may underestimate the influence that religious belief has on charity. The study used a narrow definition of “religious giving” that does not include donations to faith-based nonprofits that provide human services, such as Catholic hospitals or universities."

2018-05-17 04:48:40 UTC  

George Soros

2018-05-17 04:48:44 UTC  

Lol

2018-05-17 04:48:56 UTC  

@ me if I miss something please

2018-05-17 04:49:00 UTC  

I love how hooty is being so autistic

2018-05-17 04:49:03 UTC  

George Soros, the one who sold out his own family and friends to Nazis?

2018-05-17 04:49:20 UTC  

Well, I guess atheists really are the most charitable... to Nazis.

2018-05-17 04:49:32 UTC  

@MaikuPens hooty does hate the jews afterall

2018-05-17 04:49:32 UTC  

George “rat out your own” Soros

2018-05-17 04:49:50 UTC  

George soros also rapes kiddies

2018-05-17 04:49:54 UTC  

"Some studies, using a more expansive definition of “religious giving,” have estimated that faith motivates as much as 75 percent of all charity in the United States."