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Have black people ever invented anything useful?
Have black people ever invented anything useful? Or are they just as useless as most women?
Ok, a women invented the dishwasher, it's really useful. What about the blackies? |
There's rap...and there's also rap. Oh wait, rap sucks.
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Peanut Butter
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seriously , fuck off.. who cares what black people invented, turn your hate into something positive. Joking around with stereotypes is one thing, hatred of someone because they are black is just silly.
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A bit better but still not that great. |
there's an ad by the United Negro College Fund that has a bunch of African American inventions - cant remember them but they were pretty interesting.
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p.s.
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 |
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hmm cell phones were invented by a black guy, didn't know that tidbit.. guitars too.
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ha - in the UNCF ad they do mention the golf tee and the ice cream scoop.
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refrigerator, cell phone, typewriter, lock... some nice ones.
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Strange, I was wondering the same about Swedish people this morning and came up with the Swedish meatball.
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they created Hummus also
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smokey is right, they invented alot more shit then you would even dream of. white people came from black people you fuck tard racist |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Swedish_inventors |
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The Negro that invented blood plasma storage methods might rise from the dead and cut your shit off. :1orglaugh http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_R._Drew Black history month is not for "black people"; it's for ignorant people that need to educate themselves. |
Falafel also
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thread back fire
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none of you idiots knew that a black man invented the cotton gin?
any of you idiots even know what a cotton gin is? |
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They invented shooting stupid people asking racist questions on internet forums.
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ur gonna need this one
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Yeah this one did not require a crystal ball! :winkwink: |
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already? No. So thanks. I find it quite insane that Jesse Jackson who was in fact just as important as MLK in the organizing of peaceful marches to stand up against some of the nastiest bigotry in the modern world at that time; but now he's a bigot. :helpme He's only called a bigot by a bigger fucking bigot that's angry that a negro don't bow to his stupid ass. :1orglaugh |
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Alphabet blocks Adeline D. T. Whitney 1882 Apgar tests, which evaluate a baby?s health upon birth Virginia Apgar 1952 Chocolate-chip cookies Ruth Wakefield 1930 Circular saw Tabitha Babbitt 1812 Dishwasher Josephine Cochran 1872 Disposable diaper Marion Donovan 1950 Electric hot water heater Ida Forbes 1917 Elevated railway Mary Walton 1881 Engine muffler El Dorado Jones 1917 Fire escape Anna Connelly 1887 Globes Ellen Fitz 1875 Ironing board Sarah Boone 1892 Kevlar, a steel-like fiber used in radial tires, crash helmets, and bulletproof vests Stephanie Kwolek 1966 Life raft Maria Beaseley 1882 Liquid PaperŪ, a quick-drying liquid used to correct mistakes printed on paper Bessie Nesmith 1951 Locomotive chimney Mary Walton 1879 Medical syringe Letitia Geer 1899 Paper-bag-making machine Margaret Knight 1871 Rolling pin Catherine Deiner 1891 Rotary engine Margaret Knight 1904 Scotchgard? fabric protector Patsy O. Sherman 1956 SnugliŪ baby carrier Ann Moore 1965 Street-cleaning machine Florence Parpart 1900 Submarine lamp and telescope Sarah Mather 1845 Windshield wiper Mary Anderson 1903 seriously, the chocolate chip cookie is the single, most important part of this list. why you be hatin'? |
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and famed black astronomer Silky Johnson discovered the first Black Hole :thumbsup |
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car. :1orglaugh |
Nobody cares nobody cares nobody caressssss
Nobody cares nobody cares nobody careeeeeeeesssssssssss Nobody cares doo doo doo doo Nobody cares doo doo doo doo Nobody cares cares cares cares cares oh mama mia mama mia and so forth |
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besides the fact that your ass should be banned-
Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806) Mathematician, Inventor Born on November 9, 1731 near Elliott City, Maryland, Benjamin Banneker was one of America's greatest intellectuals and scientists. Benjamin Banneker was an essayist, inventor, mathematician, and astronomer. Because of his dark skin and great intellect he was called the "sable genius." Benjamin Banneker was a self-taught mathematician and astronomer. While still a youth he made a wooden clock which kept accurate time past the date that Banneker died. This clock is believed to be the first clock wholly made in America. In 1791, he served on a project to make a survey for the District of Columbia, helping to design the layout for our Nation's capital. Deeply interested in natural phenomena, Banneker started publishing an almanac in 1791 and continued its publication until 1802. He published a treatise on bees, did a mathematical study on the cycle of the seventeen-year locust, and became a pamphleteer for the anti-slavery movement. He was internationally known for his accomplishments and became an advisor to President Thomas Jefferson. He died on his farm on October 9, 1806. |
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Traffic Signal Invented by Garrett A. Morgan in 1923? No!
The first known traffic signal appeared in London in 1868 near the Houses of Parliament. Designed by JP Knight, it featured two semaphore arms and two gas lamps. The earliest electric traffic lights include Lester Wire's two-color version set up in Salt Lake City circa 1912, James Hoge's system (US patent #1,251,666) installed in Cleveland by the American Traffic Signal Company in 1914, and William Potts' 4-way red-yellow-green lights introduced in Detroit beginning in 1920. New York City traffic towers began flashing three-color signals also in 1920. Garrett Morgan's cross-shaped, crank-operated semaphore was not among the first half-hundred patented traffic signals, nor was it "automatic" as is sometimes claimed, nor did it play any part in the evolution of the modern traffic light. Gas Mask Garrett Morgan in 1914? No! The invention of the gas mask predates Morgan's breathing device by several decades. Early versions were constructed by the Scottish chemist John Stenhouse in 1854 and the physicist John Tyndall in the 1870s, among many other inventors prior to World War I. Peanut Butter George Washington Carver (who began his peanut research in 1903)? No! Peanuts, which are native to the New World tropics, were mashed into paste by Aztecs hundreds of years ago. Evidence of modern peanut butter comes from US patent #306727 issued to Marcellus Gilmore Edson of Montreal, Quebec in 1884, for a process of milling roasted peanuts between heated surfaces until the peanuts reached "a fluid or semi-fluid state." As the product cooled, it set into what Edson described as "a consistency like that of butter, lard, or ointment." In 1890, George A. Bayle Jr., owner of a food business in St. Louis, manufactured peanut butter and sold it out of barrels. J.H. Kellogg, of cereal fame, secured US patent #580787 in 1897 for his "Process of Preparing Nutmeal," which produced a "pasty adhesive substance" that Kellogg called "nut-butter." George Washington Carver "Discovered" hundreds of new and important uses for the peanut? Fathered the peanut industry? Revolutionized southern US agriculture? No! Research by Barry Mackintosh, who served as bureau historian for the National Park Service (which manages the G.W. Carver National Monument), demonstrated the following: • Most of Carver's peanut and sweet potato creations were either unoriginal, impractical, or of uncertain effectiveness. No product born in his laboratory was widely adopted. • The boom years for Southern peanut production came prior to, and not as a result of, Carver's promotion of the crop. • Carver's work to improve regional farming practices was not of pioneering scientific importance and had little demonstrable impact. To see how Carver gained "a popular reputation far transcending the significance of his accomplishments," read Mackintosh's excellent article George Washington Carver: The Making of a Myth. Automatic Lubricator, "Real McCoy" Elijah McCoy revolutionized industry in 1872 by inventing the first device to automatically oil machinery? No! The phrase "Real McCoy" arose to distinguish Elijah's inventions from cheap imitations? No! The oil cup, which automatically delivers a steady trickle of lubricant to machine parts while the machine is running, predates McCoy's career; a description of one appears in the May 6, 1848 issue of Scientific American. The automatic "displacement lubricator" for steam engines was developed in 1860 by John Ramsbottom of England, and notably improved in 1862 by James Roscoe of the same country. The "hydrostatic" lubricator originated no later than 1871. Variants of the phrase Real McCoy appear in Scottish literature dating back to at least 1856 — well before Elijah McCoy could have been involved. |
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i recently visited the freedom center in cincinnati, and learned about Benjamin Bradley. this slave actually bought his freedom with his own invention. now how gangsta is that? |
Blood Bank Dr. Charles Drew in 1940? No!
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." See highlights of transfusion history from the American Association of Blood Banks. Blood Plasma 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? No! 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. (See historical notes on plasma use.) 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. Washington DC city plan Benjamin Banneker? No! Pierre-Charles L'Enfant created the layout of Washington DC. Banneker assisted Andrew Ellicott in the survey of the federal territory, but played no direct role in the actual planning of the city. The story of Banneker reconstructing the city design from memory after L'Enfant ran away with the plans (with the implication that the project would have failed if not for Banneker) has been debunked by historians. Filament for Light Bulb Lewis Latimer invented the carbon filament in 1881 or 1882? No! 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 the most important innovations, 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. Heart Surgery (first successful) Dr. Daniel Hale Williams in 1893? No! Dr. Williams repaired a wound not in the heart muscle itself, but in the sac surrounding it, the pericardium. This operation was not the first of its type: Henry Dalton of St. Louis performed a nearly identical operation two years earlier, with the patient fully recovering. Decades before that, the Spaniard Francisco Romero carried out the first successful pericardial surgery of any type, incising the pericardium to drain fluid compressing the heart. Surgery on the actual human heart muscle, and not just the pericardium, was first successfully accomplished by Ludwig Rehn of Germany when he repaired a wounded right ventricle in 1896. More than 50 years later came surgery on the open heart, pioneered by John Lewis, C. Walton Lillehei (often called the "father of open heart surgery") and John Gibbon (who invented the heart-lung machine). "Third Rail" Granville Woods in 1901? No! Werner von Siemens pioneered the use of an electrified third rail as a means for powering railway vehicles when he demonstrated an experimental electric train at the 1879 Berlin Industrial Exhibition. In the US, English-born Leo Daft used a third-rail system to electrify the Baltimore & Hampden lines in 1885. The first electrically powered subway trains, which debuted in London in the autumn of 1890, likewise drew power from a third rail. Details... Railway Telegraph Granville Woods prevented railway accidents and saved countless lives by inventing the train telegraph (patented in 1887), which allowed communication to and from moving trains? No! The earliest patents for train telegraphs go back to at least 1873. Lucius Phelps was the first inventor in the field to attract widespread notice, and the telegrams he exchanged on the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad in January 1885 were hailed in the Feb. 21, 1885 issue of Scientific American as "perhaps the first ever sent to and from a moving train." Phelps remained at the forefront in developing the technology and by the end of 1887 already held 14 US patents on his system. He joined a team led by Thomas Edison, who had been working on his "grasshopper telegraph" for trains, and together they constructed on the Lehigh Valley Railroad one of the only induction telegraph systems ever put to commercial use. Although this telegraph was a technical success, it fulfilled no public need, and the market for on-board train telegraphy never took off. There is no evidence that any commercial railway telegraph based on Granville Woods's patents was ever built. About the patent interference case Refrigerated Truck Frederick Jones (with Joseph Numero) in 1938? No! Did Jones change America's eating habits by making possible the long-distance shipment of perishable foods? No! Refrigerated ships and railcars had been moving perishables across oceans and continents even before Jones was born (see refrigerated transport timeline). Trucks with mechanically refrigerated cargo spaces appeared on the roads at least as early as the late 1920s (see the proof). Further development of truck refrigeration was more a process of gradual evolution than radical change. Air Brake / Automatic Air Brake 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). 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. |
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I could keep posting more, but if you wanna see the rest of the this list, go HERE
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That's all great but lets keep things in perspective... so someone came up with a list of 2 dozen items that were invented by black people? That's great, *thumbs up*... all while everyone else invented 1000s, probably even millions of things, you could write whole books about all the inventions in the world...
I'm not intending to sound racist, I'm not, I could care less who invented what, just pointing it out the facts... |
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