Thread: discrimination
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Old 05-27-2008, 09:08 PM
LisaSaprano LisaSaprano is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by frycat101 View Post
at least if they do take over the world!! i wont be a discriminatory bastard like yourself, and me and my black friends will go off and invent something cool and helpful to the world. XD XD XD


i thought i was awake, your the one living in the time of slavery
LOL....you just boasted about attending a "Top 500" school Ace.....you probably don't know enough to make your bed each morning, but you and your black friends are gonna invent something? Dreamer. You're a wigger arencha?...LOL Blacks don't invent or build - they destroy. Now pay attention.....I'll educate you better here and in far less time than the education you're paying for at that "Top 500" school......incidentally, the same education your ape friends are getting for free based on the color of their black skin.

Black Invention Myths
Perhaps you've heard the claims: Were it not for the genius and energy of African-American inventors, we might find ourselves in a world without traffic lights, peanut butter, blood banks, light bulb filaments, and a vast number of other things we now take for granted but could hardly imagine life without.

Such beliefs usually originate in books or articles about black history. Since many of the authors have little interest in the history of technology outside of advertising black contributions to it, their stories tend to be fraught with misunderstandings, wishful thinking, or fanciful embellishments with no historical basis. The lack of historical perspective leads to extravagant overestimations of originality and importance: sometimes a slightly modified version of a pre-existing piece of technology is mistaken for the first invention of its type; sometimes a patent or innovation with little or no lasting value is portrayed as a major advance, even if there's no real evidence it was ever used.

Unfortunately, some of the errors and exaggerations have acquired an illusion of credibility by repetition in mainstream outlets, especially during Black History Month (see examples for the traffic light and ironing board). When myths go unchallenged for too long, they begin to eclipse the truth. Thus I decided to put some records straight. Although this page does not cover every dubious invention claim floating around out there, it should at least serve as a warning never to take any such claim for granted.

Each item below is listed with its supposed black originator beneath it along with the year it was supposedly invented, followed by something about the real origin of the invention or at least an earlier instance of it.

Black Invention Myths
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