Real models that Blacks should be looking up too

ScienceRocks

Democrat all the way!
Mar 16, 2010
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These are the Blacks that should be looked up too...These black children deserve to know what real blacks that helped push America forward. NOT TRAYTHUG MARTIN! Victim hood needs to end...

Becoming a thug and killing your own people is the wrong way. People like Obama and holder don't want what's best for you...The reality is 93% of 49% of all murders in this country are done against innocent blacks by other blacks. This is very sad and bad for our society.

Blacks this is what you can become instead. ;)

1. Granville Tailer Woods (April 23, 1856 – January 30, 1910) was an African-American inventor who held more than 50 patents
Granville Woods - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

One of his notable inventions was the Multiplex Telegraph, a device that sent messages between train stations and moving trains. His work assured a safer and better public transportation system for the cities of the United States.

Look at the invention section of this man. ;)


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2. Neil deGrasse Tyson (/ˈniːəl dəˈɡræs ˈtaɪsən/ born October 5, 1958) is an American astrophysicist and science communicator. He is currently the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Rose Center for Earth and Space and a research associate in the department of astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History. From 2006 to 2011 he hosted the educational science television show NOVA ScienceNow on PBS and has been a frequent guest on The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, Real Time with Bill Maher, and Jeopardy!. It was announced on August 5, 2011, that Tyson will be hosting a new sequel to Carl Sagan's Cosmos: A Personal Voyage television series.[2] Neil deGrasse Tyson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

3. Arlie O. Petters, MBE (born February 8, 1964) is a Belizean American mathematical physicist, who is the Benjamin Powell Professor and Professor of Mathematics, Physics, and Business Administration at Duke University.[1] Petters is a founder of mathematical astronomy, focusing on problems connected to the interplay of gravity and light and employing tools from astrophysics, cosmology, general relativity, high energy physics, differential geometry, singularities, and probability theory.[2] His monograph "Singularity Theory and Gravitational Lensing" is the first to develop a mathematical theory of gravitational lensing. He was Chairman of the Council of Science Advisers to the Prime Minister of Belize (2010-2013).[3][4] Arlie Petters - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

4. Benjamin Solomon "Ben" Carson, Sr. (born September 18, 1951) is a retired American neurosurgeon. Among other surgical innovations, Carson did pioneering work on the successful separation of conjoined twins joined at the head. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award in the United States, by President George W. Bush in 2008. After delivering a widely publicized speech at the February 2013 National Prayer Breakfast, he became a popular figure in conservative media for his views on social issues and the government's role in the health care industry.

5. Dr. Samuel L. Kountz (October 30, 1930 – December 23, 1981) was an African American kidney transplantation surgeon from Lexa, Arkansas. He was most distinguished for his pioneering work in the field of kidney transplantations, and in research, discoveries, and inventions in Renal Science. In 1961, while working with Dr. Roy Cohn at the Stanford University Medical Center, he performed the first successful Kidney transplant between humans who were not identical twins. Six years later, he and a team of researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, developed the prototype for the Belzer kidney perfusion machine, a device that can preserve kidneys for up to 50 hours from the time they are taken from a donor's body. It is now standard equipment in hospitals and research laboratories around the world.[1][2][3] Samuel L. Kountz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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6. David Harold Blackwell (April 24, 1919 – July 8, 2010) was Professor Emeritus of Statistics at the University of California, Berkeley, and is one of the eponyms of the Rao–Blackwell theorem.[2] Born in Centralia, Illinois, he was the first African American inducted into the National Academy of Sciences, and the first black tenured faculty member at UC Berkeley.[1][3] David Blackwell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

7. Otis Frank Boykin (August 29, 1920, Dallas, Texas – March 13, 1982, Chicago, Illinois) was an African-American inventor and engineer.[1]

Boykin's most famous invention was likely a control unit for the artificial heart pacemaker. The device essentially uses electrical impulses to maintain a regular heartbeat. Boykin himself died of a heart failure in Chicago in 1982.[2]
Otis Boykin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

8. Sylvester James Gates, Jr. (born December 15, 1950), known as S. James Gates, Jr, or Jim Gates, is an American theoretical physicist, known for work on supersymmetry, supergravity, and superstring theory. He is currently the Professor of Physics at the University of Maryland, College Park, a University of Maryland Regents Professor and serves on President Barack Obama's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.[2] Sylvester James Gates - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

9. Frederick McKinley Jones (May 17, 1893 – February 21, 1961) was an African American inventor, entrepreneur, winner of the National Medal of Technology, and inductee of the National Inventors Hall of Fame.[1] His innovations in refrigeration brought great improvement to the long-haul transportation of perishable goods.[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_McKinley_Jones

10. Lloyd A. Quarterman (May 31, 1918 – August 1982) was an African American chemist working mainly with fluorine. During the Second World War he worked on the Manhattan Project.[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lloyd_Quarterman

Become another!
 
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And other blacks who've risen to the highest levels of society who don't lean left are routinely called all sorts of non-brotherly names, characterizations, etc. by other blacks.
 
Ben Carson is decent. He started out as a punk but changed. Not so sure about the rest.
 
Mathew, shootspeeders, and Lonestar Logic should look up to Thomas Jefferson, Adam Smith, and Lincoln - you know, that whole man was created equal thing.

There are some black people that racist posters on this form should emulate as well like MLK Jr., Jefferson Douglas, just to name a couple.
 
Why doesn't the media write more about guys like this? How are blacks supposed to know about these people when no one talks about them? And don't give me that BET shit either BET is about $$$ that's it. That are not owned by blacks and is in my opinion one of the worst things to happen to young blacks in a while.
Bottom line people only learn what they are taught. These people didn't just pop into your brain. I am sure you had to fine them. Buried on the back of some obscure site.
 
Mathew, shootspeeders, and Lonestar Logic should look up to Thomas Jefferson, Adam Smith, and Lincoln - you know, that whole man was created equal thing.

There are some black people that racist posters on this form should emulate as well like MLK Jr., Jefferson Douglas, just to name a couple.

Jefferson was a slave owner at the time, do you think he meant them when he said we were all created equal? And what about women?

The fact is when he wrote that he really meant that "all free, property-owning males are created equal".

Equality is hard to define because its meaning keeps changing. Jefferson's restrictive definition, that "people are of equal moral worth, and as such deserve equal treatment under the law", made distinctions for free men vs. slaves, men vs. women, property owners vs. debtors, etc....
 
Well, at least we can use this thread for when one of those douchebags ask "What did blacks event?"

Why would anyone ask that?

We all know they at least helped invent community organizing, stealing elections, race-baiting, and shaking down businesses.

All of the above were a part of American culture dating back to the heyday of the Mafia and Murder Incorporated.

They bought elections, manipulated crooked politicians, extorted, bullied and took protection money from honest business people who were just trying to make a living.

So no, blacks did not invent those "concepts".
 
Why doesn't the media write more about guys like this? How are blacks supposed to know about these people when no one talks about them? And don't give me that BET shit either BET is about $$$ that's it. That are not owned by blacks and is in my opinion one of the worst things to happen to young blacks in a while.
Bottom line people only learn what they are taught. These people didn't just pop into your brain. I am sure you had to fine them. Buried on the back of some obscure site.

First they have to open a history book.

That's pretty much how people learn something. They must seek out knowledge, not wait for knowledge to seek them. In this day and age of the internet learning history is as simple as tweeting, face-booking, texting or emailing etc.... But I guess that would be asking too much from them.
 

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