Would blacks be better off without whites?

Status
Not open for further replies.
Why would I not have any of those things? in every field needed to produce this stuff there are Black engineers and workers. Stay off crack. How did you know you need baking soda to make it? I thought you poor whites were partial to meth?
All those things were invented by whitey. Pretty much everything you own and use was invented by non-blacks.

Even if that was true whats your point? We can continue building these things after all the whites leave. Face it. No one needs white people. You specifically are less than useless.


And you dont see the hypocrisy in your story line?

And Hell yeah I'm useless! Thats what being retired is all about. Taking it easy and enjoying life off the back of the black man.:lol:
 
The people in greenwood were not fooled. I said they let it go in pursuit of integration. Please keep up.


Really?

" Then they let it go when the US promised to treat Black people as equals and integrate. " Curses Fooled again!!! :lol:

It is odd....no, suspect that you take so much pride and pleasure in this.

Oh I dont. I just like fucking with asclepias and pointing out the error in his thought process.

Dudes pretty much militant when it comes to racism.
 
All those things were invented by whitey. Pretty much everything you own and use was invented by non-blacks.

Even if that was true whats your point? We can continue building these things after all the whites leave. Face it. No one needs white people. You specifically are less than useless.


And you dont see the hypocrisy in your story line?

And Hell yeah I'm useless! Thats what being retired is all about. Taking it easy and enjoying life off the back of the black man.:lol:

What hypocrisy? You cant do anything for me. I dont need you. I understand you are lazy and thats my whole point. White people are not needed. Thanks for admitting that you as a white person would suffer if you had to leave Black people and fend for yourself.
 
The people in greenwood were not fooled. I said they let it go in pursuit of integration. Please keep up.


Really?

" Then they let it go when the US promised to treat Black people as equals and integrate. " Curses Fooled again!!! :lol:

Really and truly. Lebron James by himself probably makes more than all the people in Greenwood did. Curses foiled again. :lol:

Basketball? Thats your response?
You're not really helping your case here.......
 
Really?

" Then they let it go when the US promised to treat Black people as equals and integrate. " Curses Fooled again!!! :lol:

It is odd....no, suspect that you take so much pride and pleasure in this.

Oh I dont. I just like fucking with asclepias and pointing out the error in his thought process.

Dudes pretty much militant when it comes to racism.

Except you seemed to have confused yourself and made my point for me. :lol:
 
Really?

" Then they let it go when the US promised to treat Black people as equals and integrate. " Curses Fooled again!!! :lol:

Really and truly. Lebron James by himself probably makes more than all the people in Greenwood did. Curses foiled again. :lol:

Basketball? Thats your response?
You're not really helping your case here.......

Youre not helping yours. You said they were fooled. How is it that integration has allowed Black people to make more income and somehow they were fooled? Your logic loop is starting to implode. :lol:
 
Really and truly. Lebron James by himself probably makes more than all the people in Greenwood did. Curses foiled again. :lol:

Basketball? Thats your response?
You're not really helping your case here.......

Youre not helping yours. You said they were fooled. How is it that integration has allowed Black people to make more income and somehow they were fooled? Your logic loop is starting to implode. :lol:

Well sure some of them moved up. But I think there could be some improvement....

Unemployment rate of workers age 16 and older by race and ethnicity, 1973-2014 | State of Working America
 
And you dont see the hypocrisy in your story line?

And Hell yeah I'm useless! Thats what being retired is all about. Taking it easy and enjoying life off the back of the black man.:lol:

What hypocrisy? You cant do anything for me. I dont need you. I understand you are lazy and thats my whole point. White people are not needed. Thanks for admitting that you as a white person would suffer if you had to leave Black people and fend for yourself.

:lol: Yeah ...I got a whole gaggle of slaves out in the garage.
Dude you're hilarious.:lol:

Youre actually more amusing. Nice deflection. You are the one that said you live off the back of Black people. Got caught trying to think too fast didnt you? :lol:
 
Last edited:
Basketball? Thats your response?
You're not really helping your case here.......

Youre not helping yours. You said they were fooled. How is it that integration has allowed Black people to make more income and somehow they were fooled? Your logic loop is starting to implode. :lol:

Well sure some of them moved up. But I think there could be some improvement....

Unemployment rate of workers age 16 and older by race and ethnicity, 1973-2014 | State of Working America

I agree but what does that have to do with your "fooled" theory? Another deflection from your failed argument? Go practice on someone that is more your speed. Intellectually you cant seem to cut it and often you get confused. Run along now. Let me know when you feel ready.
 
Last edited:
Whenever blacks complain about whites, you should ask yourself two questions.







Would blacks in the United States be better off if all the whites left?







Would whites in the United States be better off if all the blacks left?





I don't know but what I do know is blacks would be better off today if whites left them alone from the get go.





•Pinky•

Right...because they are doing really well on their own in Detroit.


I do recall whites being in control of the city went under and "abandoning" it (if you will) leaving only blacks to take the blame for it's failure. So in other words. GFYS


•Pinky•
 
Blacks have been raped, robbed, and stomped on in the US. Most whites will never acknowledge that, but as the playing field is becoming more level...we will see a rise in racism and bitterness among the whites coupled with more threats of race war and revolution.



I am no fan of Obama, but this is why you see such personal vitriol and attacks on the man. This is why you see Teaperism and their obstructionism...blacks and a level playing field is something people like Rotigallia et al fear.



I've often wondered what particular pathology causes white racists to feel terror and savagery when faced with the simple truth. White people simple are not needed. I would miss some of them but need them? I cant think of one thing I would need them for.



Without white folks, you'd have no computer, no internet, no fridge, no tv, no radio, no electricity, no lights, no car, no bus, no plane... And especially no baking soda to make crack with.:D


The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839

auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899

automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899

bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875

blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971

chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880

fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878

fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872

folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899

folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889

fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890

furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878

gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899

guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886

hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883

horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885

ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897

improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846

insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899

ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894

lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884

lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893

lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887

mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891

mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939

peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896

pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819

refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864

shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898

spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839

stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt

stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876

straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905

street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890

phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884

thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960

traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923

tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886

typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885


http://themilwaukeedrum.com/2012/02/03/black-history-things-invented-by-african-americans/



•Pinky•
 
I don't know but what I do know is blacks would be better off today if whites left them alone from the get go.





•Pinky•

Right...because they are doing really well on their own in Detroit.


I do recall whites being in control of the city went under and "abandoning" it (if you will) leaving only blacks to take the blame for it's failure. So in other words. GFYS


•Pinky•

They had the wisdom to recognize a sinking ship. Can you blame them for leaving?
It's no different than the flood of yankees heading to Texas for work,they recognize a sinking ship as well.
 
I've often wondered what particular pathology causes white racists to feel terror and savagery when faced with the simple truth. White people simple are not needed. I would miss some of them but need them? I cant think of one thing I would need them for.



Without white folks, you'd have no computer, no internet, no fridge, no tv, no radio, no electricity, no lights, no car, no bus, no plane... And especially no baking soda to make crack with.:D


The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839

auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899

automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899

bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875

blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971

chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880

fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878

fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872

folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899

folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889

fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890

furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878

gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899

guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886

hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883

horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885

ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897

improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846

insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899

ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894

lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884

lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893

lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887

mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891

mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939

peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896

pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819

refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864

shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898

spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839

stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt

stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876

straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905

street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890

phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884

thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960

traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923

tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886

typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885


Black History: Things Invented By African-Americans | THE MILWAUKEE DRUM



•Pinky•

A Black history blog? Seriously?


PS. Although the concept was predicted by a White man, an Englishman called Arthur C. Clarke, it was the Japanese who developed the first functioning cell phone.

PPS. The first mechanical air conditioning unit was developed by a White man after advances in chemistry. You can keep the mop if you like (although I doubt you'll find any source crediting any particular race with its 'invention').
 
I've often wondered what particular pathology causes white racists to feel terror and savagery when faced with the simple truth. White people simple are not needed. I would miss some of them but need them? I cant think of one thing I would need them for.



Without white folks, you'd have no computer, no internet, no fridge, no tv, no radio, no electricity, no lights, no car, no bus, no plane... And especially no baking soda to make crack with.:D


The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839

auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899

automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899

bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875

blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971

chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867

eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880

fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878

fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872

folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899

folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889

fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890

furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878

gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914

golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899

guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886

hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–

hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883

horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885

ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897

improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846

insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899

ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887

key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894

lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884

lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889

lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897

lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893

lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–

lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895

lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887

mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891

mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893

motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939

peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896

pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897

record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819

refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891

riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895

rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864

shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898

spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839

stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt

stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876

straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905

street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890

phone transmitter: Granville T.
Woods; December 2, 1884

thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960

traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923

tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886

typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885


Black History: Things Invented By African-Americans | THE MILWAUKEE DRUM



•Pinky•

These are the the three people who are credited with inventing the refrigerator.Carl Paul Gottfried von Linde from Munich Germany in 1903 or Owen Evans in 1805 or William Cullen at the University of Glasgow in 1748 but his wasn't what we know as the modern refrigerator it worked off of evaporation.

So from what I was able to find out Owen Evans invented the modern refrigeration unit.

Who did you have in mind?
 
Without white folks, you'd have no computer, no internet, no fridge, no tv, no radio, no electricity, no lights, no car, no bus, no plane... And especially no baking soda to make crack with.:D





The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....





air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949



almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791



auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839



auto fishing devise: G. Cook; May 30, 1899



automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932



baby buggy: W.H. Richardson; June 18, 1899



bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899



biscuit cutter: A.P. Ashbourne; November 30, 1875



blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945



cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971



chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897



clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862



curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889



curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896



door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878



door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878



dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897



egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884



electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882



elevator: Alexander Miles; October 11, 1867



eye protector: P. Johnson; November 2, 1880



fire escape ladder: J. W. Winters; May 7, 1878



fire extinguisher: T. Marshall; October 26, 1872



folding bed: L. C. Bailey; July 18, 1899



folding chair: Brody & Surgwar; June 11, 1889



fountain pen: W. B. Purvis; January 7, 1890



furniture caster: O. A. Fisher; 1878



gas mask: Garrett Morgan; October 13, 1914



golf tee: T. Grant; December 12, 1899



guitar: Robert F. Flemming, Jr. March 3, 1886



hair brush: Lydia O. Newman; November 15,18–



hand stamp: Walter B. Purvis; February 27, 1883



horse shoe: J. Ricks; March 30, 1885



ice cream scooper: A. L. Cralle; February 2, 1897



improv. sugar making: Norbet Rillieux; December 10, 1846



insect-destroyer gun: A. C. Richard; February 28, 1899



ironing board: Sarah Boone; December 30, 1887



key chain: F. J. Loudin; January 9, 1894



lantern: Michael C. Harvey; August 19, 1884



lawn mower: L. A. Burr; May 19, 1889



lawn sprinkler: J. W. Smith; May 4, 1897



lemon squeezer: J. Thomas White; December 8, 1893



lock: W. A. Martin; July 23, 18–



lubricating cup: Ellijah McCoy; November 15, 1895



lunch pail: James Robinson; 1887



mail box: Paul L. Downing; October 27, 1891



mop: Thomas W. Stewart; June 11, 1893



motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939



peanut butter: George Washington Carver; 1896



pencil sharpener: J. L. Love; November 23, 1897



record player arm: Joseph Hunger Dickenson January 8, 1819



refrigerator: J. Standard; June 14, 1891



riding saddles: W. D. Davis; October 6, 1895



rolling pin: John W. Reed; 1864



shampoo headrest: C. O. Bailiff; October 11, 1898



spark plug: Edmond Berger; February 2, 1839



stethoscope: Imhotep; Ancient Egypt



stove: T. A. Carrington; July 25, 1876



straightening comb: Madam C. J. Walker; Approx 1905



street sweeper: Charles B. Brooks; March 17, 1890



phone transmitter: Granville T.

Woods; December 2, 1884



thermostat control: Frederick M. Jones; February 23, 1960



traffic light: Garrett Morgan; November 20, 1923



tricycle: M. A. Cherry; May 6, 1886



typewriter: Burridge & Marshman; April 7, 1885





Black History: Things Invented By African-Americans | THE MILWAUKEE DRUM







•Pinky•



A Black history blog? Seriously?





PS. Although the concept was predicted by a White man, an Englishman called Arthur C. Clarke, it was the Japanese who developed the first functioning cell phone.



PPS. The first mechanical air conditioning unit was developed by a White man after advances in chemistry. You can keep the mop if you like (although I doubt you'll find any source crediting any particular race with its 'invention').


Bahahahaha my bad. That was a horrible source. I'm brave enough to admit that. Henry t Sampson had a patent on a gamma-electric CELL (not the CELL phone). My apologies


•Pinky•
 
J standard. (Correction) he had patents on an improved model of the refrigerator. Still blacks have achieved and invented allot of things we still use today and anyone willing to undermine those accomplishments are just ..... Well.... Haters.

John Standard - Refrigerator Design


•Pinky•


We all know blacks have contributed to society. Although the guy who invented the red light kind of pisses me off.:D

If you'll notice there is a common denominator in all these type threads. Aslepias and his militant view.
I have a couple of black friends in an area that is pretty much devoid of blacks. I also was engaged to a pretty little Hispanic girl in my younger days.
This isnt about me being a racist,it's about me making fun of one.......

You seem pretty sharp for being 21....but you still have some truths to learn.
 
Just an example from your list, I don't have time to debunk everything on the list, and I'll even give you the hair straightener to make your 'fro like a white person's nice straight hair.

"motor: Frederick M. Jones; June 27, 1939"

When in actuallity: The first automobiles were powered by steam. This technique, although suitable for large vehicles like boats and trains, was not practical for smaller individual automobiles. So, a century after it was invented, in 1770, the automobile was still considered a toy.

However, in 1862, the French engineer Alphonse Beau de Rochas invented the principle of the 4-step combustion engine. In this engine, a fuel-air mix is introduced in the engine and the explosion of this mixture pushes directly on the piston. There is no need for an intermediate step like boiling water. A few years later, in 1876, the German Nikolaus August Otto built the first engine based on Beau de Rochas' principle.

This engine was very heavy and could only be used by industry and electrical power companies. Imagining how such an engine could effectively replace the steam powered engines of automobiles, the mechanic Gottlieb Daimler tried to build a much lighter engine working on the same principle. In 1885, he came up with a very light 2-step combustion engine that was used for boats, velocipeds and even tram ways. A few years later, in 1889, he invented a 4-step combustion engine that is the direct ancestor of the engine we find in our cars today. This invention opened the door to the automobile revolution in which the state of Michigan played such a prominent role.
 
Last edited:
We actually did better in other cities like Black wall street. Of course envious whites had to destroy it. Not enough they had the deck stacked in their favor.

So why not build another Greenwood Oklahoma? You'd think that after 90 plus years blacks would have rebuilt it. Perhaps they didn't build it in the first place.

They did rebuild it. Almost immediately. Then they let it go when the US promised to treat Black people as equals and integrate. Dont you know anything? Now we dont advertise but build quietly. There are little Greenwoods all over the US. Only a dunce like you would pretend Black people didnt build Black Wall Street.

Name some of these so-called "black Wall Street's".
 
I'll educate you to some reality [MENTION=50008]BriannaMichele[/MENTION];



The refrigerator was invented by a black man you dumbass. Without blacks whites wouldn't have.....


air conditioning unit: Frederick M. Jones; July 12, 1949

That's a lie, Brianna; Here's the truth;
first of all, your source is screwy. Most afro centrist sites allege that Jones invented a refrigerator unit for trucks and trains and Thomas Elkins or John Stanard allegedly invented the refrigerator...either way those are both lies and I'll debunk them here.

Thomas Elkins in 1879? John Stanard in 1891? No!

Oliver Evans proposed a mechanical refrigerator based on a vapor-compression cycle in 1805 and Jacob Perkins had a working machine built in 1834. Dr. John Gorrie created an air-cycle refrigeration system in about 1844, which he installed in a Florida hospital. In the 1850s Alexander Twining in the USA and James Harrison in Australia used mechanical refrigeration to produce ice on a commercial scale. Around the same time, the Carré brothers of France led the development of absorption refrigeration systems. A more detailed timeline

Stanard's patent describes not a refrigeration machine, but an old-fashioned icebox — an insulated cabinet into which ice is placed to cool the interior. As such, it was a "refrigerator" only in the old sense of the term, which included non-mechanical coolers. Elkins created a similarly low-tech cooler, acknowledging in his patent #221222 that "I am aware that chilling substances inclosed within a porous box or jar by wetting its outer surface is an old and well-known process."

Now the air conditioner;
Frederick Jones in 1949? No!

Dr. Willis Carrier built the first machine to control both the temperature and humidity of indoor air. He received the first of many patents in 1906 (US patent #808897, for the "Apparatus for Treating Air"). In 1911 he published the formulae that became the scientific basis for air conditioning design, and four years later formed the Carrier Engineering Corporation to develop and manufacture AC systems.


Now the refrigerated truck and train car;

Frederick Jones (with Joseph Numero) in 1938? Nope.

Refrigerated ships and railcars had been moving perishables across oceans and continents even before Jones was born. Trucks with mechanically refrigerated cargo spaces appeared on the roads at least as early as the late 1920s.

almanac: Benjamin Banneker; Approx 1791

Come on..every middle school child knows better than that..Well, they USED to know better...Now afro centrists claim negroes invented everything.

Poor Richard's Almanack (sometimes Almanac) was a yearly almanac published by Benjamin Franklin, who adopted the pseudonym of "Poor Richard" or "Richard Saunders" for this purpose. The publication appeared continually from 1732 to 1758. It was a best seller for a pamphlet published in the American colonies; print runs reached 10,000 per year.[1][2]

Your source is screwy;

auto cut-off switch: Granville T. Woods; January 1,1839
Granville Woods in 1904? No!

In 1869, a 22-year-old George Westinghouse received US patent #88929 for a brake device operated by compressed air, and in the same year organized the Westinghouse Air Brake Company. Many of the 361 patents he accumulated during his career were for air brake variations and improvements, including his first "automatic" version in 1872 (US #124404).



automatic gear shift: Richard Spikes; February 28, 1932

Richard Spikes in 1932? Nope.

The first automatic-transmission automobile to enter the market was designed by the Sturtevant brothers of Massachusetts in 1904. US Patent #766551 was the first of several patents on their gearshift mechanism. Automatic transmission technology continued to develop, spawning hundreds of patents and numerous experimental units; but because of cost, reliability issues and an initial lack of demand, several decades passed before vehicles with automatic transmission became common on the roads.



bicycle frame: L.R. Johnson; Octber 10, 1899

Isaac R. Johnson in 1899? Nope.

Comte Mede de Sivrac and Karl von Sauerbronn built primitive versions of the bicycle in 1791 and 1816 respectively. The frame of John Starley's 1885 "safety bicycle" resembled that of a modern bicycle.



blood plasma bag: Charles Drew; Approx. 1945

Dr. Charles Drew in 1940? Nope.

During World War I, Dr. Oswald H. Robertson of the US army preserved blood in a citrate-glucose solution and stored it in cooled containers for later transfusion. This was the first use of "banked" blood. By the mid-1930s the Russians had set up a national network of facilities for the collection, typing, and storage of blood. Bernard Fantus, influenced by the Russian program, established the first hospital blood bank in the United States at Chicago's Cook County Hospital in 1937. It was Fantus who coined the term "blood bank."

Did Charles Drew "discover" (in about 1940) that plasma could be separated and stored apart from the rest of the blood, thereby revolutionizing transfusion medicine? Nope.

The possibility of using blood plasma for transfusion purposes was known at least since 1918, when English physician Gordon R. Ward suggested it in a medical journal. In the mid-1930s, John Elliott advanced the idea, emphasizing plasma's advantages in shelf life and donor-recipient compatibility, and in 1939 he and two colleagues reported having used stored plasma in 191 transfusions. Charles Drew was not responsible for any breakthrough scientific or medical discovery; his main career achievement lay in supervising or co-supervising major programs for the collection and shipment of blood and plasma.




cellular phone: Henry T. Sampson; July 6, 1971
Come on Brianna...ReallY? Did you finish high school?
Here's the truth about cellular phones;
Henry T. Sampson in 1971? Nope.

On July 6, 1971, Sampson and co-inventor George Miley received a patent on a "gamma electric cell" that converted a gamma ray input into an electrical output (Among the first to do that was Bernhard Gross, US patent #3122640, 1964). What, you ask, does gamma radiation have to do with cellular communications technology? The answer: nothing. Some multiculturalist pseudo-historian must have seen the words "electric" and "cell" and thought "cell phone."

The father of the cell phone is Martin Cooper who first demonstrated the technology in 1973.


chamber commode: T. Elkins; January 3, 1897

Too stupid to even consider; You think people pissed on the floor before this negro "invented" something to piss in?

clothes dryer: G. T. Sampson; June 6, 1862

George T. Sampson in 1892? Nope.

The "clothes-drier" described in Sampson's patent was actually a rack for holding clothes near a stove, and was intended as an "improvement" on similar contraptions:

My invention relates to improvements in clothes-driers.... The object of my invention is to suspend clothing in close relation to a stove by means of frames so constructed that they can be readily placed in proper position and put aside when not required for use.

US patent #476416, 1892

Nineteen years earlier, there were already over 300 US patents for such "clothes-driers" (Subject-Matter Index of Patents...1790 to 1873).

A Frenchman named Pochon in 1799 built the first known tumble dryer — a crank-driven, rotating metal drum pierced with ventilation holes and held over heat. Electric tumble dryers appeared in the first half of the 20th century.



curtain rod: S. R. Scratton; November 30, 1889
Another one too stupid to even consider.
You think no curtains were ever hung in any window until this negro "invented" a stick to hold them up? LMAO..You didn't graduate from high school, did you?

curtain rod support: William S. Grant; August 4, 1896
Too stupid to consider..so you allege that the negro above "invented" a "curtain rod" in 1889...but it couldn't be used until THIS negro "invented" a "curtain rod support" in 1896?
LMFAO...so the curtains had rods through them but no way to hang them and they lay on the floor until 1896..LMAO..really, girl..get serious

door knob: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878
Too stupid to consider;


door stop: O. Dorsey; December 10, 1878

LMAO..really?. No one ever propped a door open until this negro allegedly "invented" a "door stop"?
Look..I'm not going to go one by one and debunk these..some of these lies are just too stupid to address...


dust pan: Lawrence P. Ray; August 3, 1897

LMAO..dust and dirt just lay on the floor for centuries until this negro "invented a "dust pan"?...silly little girl;
Lloyd P. Ray in 1897? Nope.
While the ultimate origin of the dustpan is lost in the mists (dusts?) of time, at least we know that US patent #20811 for "Dust-pan" was granted to T.E. McNeill in 1858. That was the first of about 164 US dustpan patents predating Lloyd Ray's.


egg beater: Willie Johnson; February 5, 1884

Willie Johnson in 1884? Nope.

The hand-cranked egg beater with two intermeshed, counter-rotating whisks was invented by Turner Williams of Providence, Rhode Island in 1870 (US Patent #103811). It was an improvement on earlier rotary egg beaters that had only one whisk.


electric lampbulb: Lewis Latimer; March 21, 1882

A heinous lie!


jesus h. christ! Everyone knows edison invented that but your "source" is ridiculously flawed. Most afro centrist liars claim latimer "invented" a filament for the bulb...and that is ALSO a heinous lie;
Lewis Latimer invented the carbon filament in 1881 or 1882? Nope.

English chemist/physicist Joseph Swan experimented with a carbon-filament incandescent light all the way back in 1860, and by 1878 had developed a better design which he patented in Britain. On the other side of the Atlantic, Thomas Edison developed a successful carbon-filament bulb, receiving a patent for it (#223898) in January 1880, before Lewis Latimer did any work in electric lighting. From 1880 onward, countless patents were issued for innovations in filament design and manufacture (Edison had over 50 of them). Neither of Latimer's two filament-related patents in 1881 and 1882 were among them, nor did they make the light bulb last longer, nor is there reason to believe they were adopted outside Hiram Maxim's company where Latimer worked at the time. (He was not hired by Edison's company until 1884, primarily as a draftsman and an expert witness in patent litigations).

Latimer also did not come up with the first screw socket for the light bulb or the first book on electric lighting.


I'm going to continue in another post because I've done this before with afro revisionists and I always run out of room in one post.

...continued;
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.

Forum List

Back
Top