well, i'm going to let him answer for himself, i don't know what i did to make him be racist towards me when all i've done is be nice to him
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well, i'm going to let him answer for himself, i don't know what i did to make him be racist towards me when all i've done is be nice to him
I hope you both can work it out
thank you
Quote Originally Posted by m0nde View Post
I'm not going through this semantic bullshit with you again, just stop, please.
Go do it on Lily's forum, where she wants the posts to bulk up post count.
No I wont stop,but you can PM one of the Admins here to have them delete my thread. If that happens I will not make another one !
so you're unwilling to work on your racism? what's wrong with you?!
you have a spade as your profile pic right now, kent
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=spade
https://www.bustle.com/articles/1202...gs-and-origins
"Call a spade a spade" has been in use for nearly half a millennium (and variations on it date at least as far back as A.D. 120). But it didn't start to take on the racist connotation it has now until the early 20th century. Evidently, in the 1920s, "spade" started being used as a slang term, and then a derogatory slur, for a black person. This racist shift in the phrase's meaning also lead to the equally offensive phrase "black as the ace of spades."
and now you're going to say you didn't know that it meant that
You better stop playing cards then, or your a racist if you do
You are wrong again ! !
Ace of Spades meaning
Ace of spades. The ace of spades (also known as the spadille) is traditionally the highest card in the deck of playing cards, at least in English-speaking countries. The actual value of the card varies from game to game. In legend and folklore, it is also known as the Death Card.
How the Ace of Spades Became the Death Card
As playing cards evolved, the depiction of the four suits and face cards evolved as well, often according to individual, regional, and cultural tastes. For instance, the Italians depicted the forerunner of the modern spade as a sword, while playing cards produced in Germanic countries used a leaf standing on its stem.
In order to simplify the design of playing-card suits, the French used the silhouette of the Germanic upturned leaf, which resembles the modern spade, but the symbol likely retained its association with war, killing, and death. In Latin, the word spatha, the root of the modern English word spade, refers to a "broad, flat weapon or tool." In addition, the French referred to this suit as piques, meaning pikes. A pike was a two-handed weapon composed of a long wooden shaft and a flat, pointed blade. It's not difficult to see the shape of a pike in our modern spade.
Just as linguistically significant, however, is the fact that a spade also refers to a type of shovel with a wide, flat, thin blade, often used to dig a grave. Even in today's era of mechanical excavators, spades are still used by cemetery workers to crisply cut the grave outline in sod and/or to finish the sides and floor of the grave.
What forever sealed the association of the ace of spades as the "death card," however, occurred during the Vietnam War. According to the United States Playing Card Company (USPCC), a pair of American lieutenants serving overseas wrote the company in February 1966 and asked USPCC to send them entire decks consisting of the ace of spades. The Viet Cong allegedly feared this card because of the superstitions surrounding it as a harbinger of death. In addition, the Bicycle brand uses Lady Liberty within its ace of spades symbol, which the enemy reportedly considered the "goddess of death."
The USPCC shipped thousands of these specialty decks overseas, where American troops used them as a form of psychological warfare against enemy forces in Vietnam. (The packaging of each deck was even labeled "Bicycle Secret Weapon.") Scattering these death cards in real or suspected hostile areas reportedly caused the Viet Cong to flee. In addition, some American troops would leave a single ace of spades card on the body of an enemy kill to indicate "We were here" or "We're coming for you."
kent, since you always have racist profile pics we have to assume you meant it in a racist way
anyway, why would you use it as the death card if you aren't a vietnam war vet? are you saying you are a vet and not a racist?
kent, please stop posting racist pictures in this thread, thx
How is Shemale pics,racist ? ? ?
fetishizing shemales is bigoted, stop doing it. they are people, not objects. stop being racist, kent