Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 328844237976240131
Reproduction is a sin
if that's your true path then there is nothing wrong with that
The vagina must become an empty vessal
that's gonna piss off lots of circles
Yes. Get used to my + energy infidels.
positive?
you going against christ
No wut
so that means you with female energy of ISIS
NO
but you have to sabotage yourself and your kind (females) and shortcircuit male enerrgy away from ground
Then i must be -, kill the non christ
and thus forever trapping christ in a box
like lucifer in his cage
No no no, I have to kill the satan. Is that Venus?
yes
you have to kill satan aka venus aka mary aka ishtar
WHAT, not mary.
she is ISIS
Mary is the virgin woman.
Mary is Venus
WHO THE FUCK AM I
REEEEEE defend VENUS
See how volatile I am
now you're turning into a product
are you sure you're not a product?
a reaction, a result
NO, I am pure energy ready to uncreate
I am so close to the source, I am dangerous to all formulations of feeling
hmm mmm
ready to sneeze
Jesus jizz is snot in my noze of God nostrals.
Just tell me, what Crusader represent.
Then I can fulfill.
crusader? lets see
crusade (n.) Look up crusade at Dictionary.com
1706, respelling of croisade (1570s), from Middle French croisade (16c.), Spanish cruzada, both from Medieval Latin cruciata, past participle of cruciare "to mark with a cross," from Latin crux (genitive crucis) "cross." Other Middle English forms were croiserie, creiserie. Figurative sense of "campaign against a public evil" is from 1786.
-er (1) Look up -er at Dictionary.com
English agent noun ending, corresponding to Latin -or. In native words it represents Old English -ere (Old Northumbrian also -are) "man who has to do with," from Proto-Germanic *-ari (cognates: German -er, Swedish -are, Danish -ere), from Proto-Germanic *-arjoz. Some believe this root is identical with, and perhaps a borrowing of, Latin -arius (see -ary).
-ary Look up -ary at Dictionary.com
adjective and noun word-forming element, in most cases from Latin -arius, -aria, -arium "connected with, pertaining to; the man engaged in," from PIE relational adjective suffix *-yo- "of or belonging to." The neuter of the adjectives in Latin also were often used as nouns (solarium "sundial," vivarium, honorarium, etc.). It appears in words borrowed from Latin in Middle English. In later borrowings from Latin to French, it became -aire and passed into Middle English as -arie, subsequently -ary.
"to mark with a cross," > "man who has to do with," > "of or belonging to."
now that you've been anoited it is your duty to go and spread the word of good