To: Maurice Winn who wrote (3020 ) 8/17/2019 1:50:48 PM From: GPS Info Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13801 Thanks for being a loyal fan club member GPS. Your delusions are popping up again. You must have missed my calling you deplorable, a racist and a liar.I admit that old habits are hard to break. We are so close! Just admit that that you are a virulent racist and we can all go home, so to speak.If you wish to discuss eugenics I might have the time. What's the point of a discussion when it will invariably involve delusions, lies and racist sentiments?Moslem is how it was spelled. Yes, but that's was not the point. The point was the usage is dated and sometimes offensive, which is why I thought you used it. Here are some headlines from the New Zealand Herald:Christchurch terror accused: Corrections confirms no letters sent to victims, Muslim community 16 August 2019Muslim leaders request clarification on swimwear policy at Auckland pools 24 July 2019Employers reaching out to Muslim community 8 July 2019I have assumed Muslim is American or something. No, you just don't read the New Zealand papers much, I assume. Many words are written differently in different languages. Trite, but true. This is what I have come to expect from you.Moslems deserve a lot of denigration because they have evil ideology that should be illegal. Your delusional sentiments are the basic foundation for the Christchurch shooting. If anyone needs denigration, it's you. You are the virus that PM Jacinda Ardern refers to:VIDEO 28 March 2019 'What words adequately express the pain and suffering of 50 men, women and children lost, and so many injured?' asked New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern during her address at a memorial service for the Christchurch victims. 'I thought there were none. And then I came here and was met with this simple greeting. As-salaam Alaikum. Peace be upon you.' She says those words 'have left us humbled, and they have left us united. Ardern was speaking at the National Remembrance Service in North Hagley Park in Christchurch, New Zealand to remember the 50 people killed in the Christchurch mosque shootings on 15 March