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( kidd rune )
Executive
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MORE NEGRO TECHNOLOGICAL INVENTIONS!!!
------- "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for White children" -David Lane
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nigeltheoutlaw
Connoisseur
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Hey!!! You are a bigot!! You may not directly come out and admit it by saying " 'Dem niggers are stoopid." But you are trying to rally up a nice base with your stupid, biased, LYING posts.
------- I made it rain on my hoes.Then god smote me for trying to play god.
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( kidd rune )
Executive
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Quote: from nigeltheoutlaw at 9:42 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Hey!!! You are a bigot!! You may not directly come out and admit it by saying " 'Dem niggers are stoopid." But you are trying to rally up a nice base with your stupid, biased, LYING posts. 
Which ones did I lie in?
------- "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for White children" -David Lane
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( kidd rune )
Executive
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NOTE: I'm taking the dates from your ritesofpassage site.
Mechanical Seed Planter (1834) 
Congrats! You found one!
Automatic Car Coupling Device (1897) 
The Janney coupler is named for US Civil War veteran Eli H. Janney, who in 1873 invented a device (US patent #138405) which automatically linked together two railroad cars upon their being brought into contact. Also known as the "knuckle coupler," Janney's invention superseded the dangerous link-and-pin coupler and became the basis for standard coupler design through the remainder of the millennium. Andrew Beard's modified knuckle coupler was just one of approximately eight thousand coupler variations patented by 1900.
Refrigeration for transport trucks (1938) 
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. Further development of truck refrigeration was more a process of gradual evolution than radical change.
Refrigeration for railroad cars (1945) 
Carl von Linde equipped a Russian train with a mobile mechanical refrigeration plant to distribute cooling to the cars carrying the goods. Similar systems continued to be used in Russia through at least 1975.
Elevator (1888) 
Steam-powered hoisting devices were used in England by 1800. Elisha Graves Otis' 1853 "safety elevator" prevented the car from falling if the cable broke, and thus paved the way for the first commercial passenger elevator, installed in New York City's Haughwout Department Store in 1857. The first electric elevator appeared in Mannheim, Germany in 1880, built by the German firm of Siemens and Halske. A self-closing shaft door was invented by J.W. Meaker in 1874 ("Improvement in Self-closing Hatchways," US Patent No. 147,853).
Gas Mask(1914) 
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. http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/gasmask/page.html
Railway Air Brakes (1903) 
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).
Steam-boiler/radiator (1884) 
The steam engine boiler is of course as old as the steam engine itself. The Subject Matter Index of Patents Issued from the United States Patent Office from 1790 to 1873 Inclusive lists several hundred variations and improvements to the steam boiler, including the revolutionary water-tube boiler patented in 1867 by American inventors George Herman Babcock and Stephen Wilcox. Well, you got one :)
------- "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for White children" -David Lane
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nigeltheoutlaw
Connoisseur
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Quote: from kidd rune at 10:11 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
NOTE: I'm taking the dates from your ritesofpassage site.
Mechanical Seed Planter (1834) 
Congrats! You found one!
Automatic Car Coupling Device (1897) 
The Janney coupler is named for US Civil War veteran Eli H. Janney, who in 1873 invented a device (US patent #138405) which automatically linked together two railroad cars upon their being brought into contact. Also known as the "knuckle coupler," Janney's invention superseded the dangerous link-and-pin coupler and became the basis for standard coupler design through the remainder of the millennium. Andrew Beard's modified knuckle coupler was just one of approximately eight thousand coupler variations patented by 1900.
Refrigeration for transport trucks (1938) 
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. Further development of truck refrigeration was more a process of gradual evolution than radical change.
Refrigeration for railroad cars (1945) 
Carl von Linde equipped a Russian train with a mobile mechanical refrigeration plant to distribute cooling to the cars carrying the goods. Similar systems continued to be used in Russia through at least 1975.
Elevator (1888) 
Steam-powered hoisting devices were used in England by 1800. Elisha Graves Otis' 1853 "safety elevator" prevented the car from falling if the cable broke, and thus paved the way for the first commercial passenger elevator, installed in New York City's Haughwout Department Store in 1857. The first electric elevator appeared in Mannheim, Germany in 1880, built by the German firm of Siemens and Halske. A self-closing shaft door was invented by J.W. Meaker in 1874 ("Improvement in Self-closing Hatchways," US Patent No. 147,853).
Gas Mask(1914) 
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. http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/gasmask/page.html
Railway Air Brakes (1903) 
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).
Steam-boiler/radiator (1884) 
The steam engine boiler is of course as old as the steam engine itself. The Subject Matter Index of Patents Issued from the United States Patent Office from 1790 to 1873 Inclusive lists several hundred variations and improvements to the steam boiler, including the revolutionary water-tube boiler patented in 1867 by American inventors George Herman Babcock and Stephen Wilcox. Well, you got one :) 
Just because I don't trust you, something to back you up, even from wiki, would be appreciated.
------- I made it rain on my hoes.Then god smote me for trying to play god.
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( kidd rune )
Executive
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Quote: from nigeltheoutlaw at 9:59 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Quote: from kidd rune at 9:46 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Quote: from nigeltheoutlaw at 9:42 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Hey!!! You are a bigot!! You may not directly come out and admit it by saying " 'Dem niggers are stoopid." But you are trying to rally up a nice base with your stupid, biased, LYING posts. 
Which ones did I lie in? 
http://www.golivewire.com/forums/peer-yassyen-support-a.html I thoroughly disproved just about every one of those claims. Either you had very faulty sources, or just lied and ignored counter evidence. 
Let's review that.
What's funny about this is that you ignore the millions of counterexamples and lie in the face of overwhelming, damning evidence to the contrary. Why don't you do this on your real profile like a man? Just to dispell this, paper was invented in Egypt 
In Egypt bound reeds - papyrus - was made into parchment. Paper was never created in Egypt. In Europe, the process to make a textile thin enough to be comfortably used, meant a laborious process of pulping thicker scraps of textiles by hand. This process was revolutionized in 1798 by the French scientist Nicholas Louis Robert, who invented the first mechanical paper pulping machine. The raw material was still crude textile. Robert's machine was improved by the British stationers and brothers Henry Fourdrinier and Sealy Fourdrinier, who in 1803, produced the first of the machines that bear their name. Only in 1840, was the process of producing paper from ground wood developed in Europe, and the idea of adding chemicals only took place in 1850, creating the modern paper making process which has lasted to this day. In 1850, the German Friedrich Gottlob Keller devised the first method of making paper from wood pulp. In 1852, the Englishman Hugh Burgess, improved upon the process by mixing the wood pulp with chemicals, and in 1867, the American chemist C.B. Tilghman, started adding sulfites during the pulping process. Finally, as late as 1879, the Swede C.F. Dahl, perfected the use of wood by adding yet another chemical.
the printing press in China 
This is also untrue: in China a simple system of pattern inking had been developed in which a strip of material was lain against a water based painted picture. This only worked for very basic patterns and was consequently was not widespread. There is also no evidence that this technique was ever exported anywhere as it had virtually no applications. In Europe, printing was developed entirely independently after long thought on how to speed up the process of book copying: Johann Gutenberg, of the German city of Mainz, invented the technical aspects of printing in 1450. Basing the design of his machine on a wine press, Gutenburg developed the use of raised and movable type and from the start used oil based paints. The invention of the printing press revolutionized the spread of knowledge: a printing press was built in Venice in 1469, and the city had 417 printers by 1500. In 1476, a printing press was developed in England by William Caxton; in 1539, the Spaniard Juan Pablos set up an imported press in Mexico City, Mexico. Stephen Day built the first printing press in North America at Massachusetts Bay in 1628, and helped establish the Cambridge Press. By the end of the 1400's, 1,000 new books were being published per year by Europe's book printers. By 1815, the number had climbed to 20,000 per year. The Non-white world's wealthiest city, Constantinople, under the Ottoman Turks, did not acquire its first printing press until the year 1726, and by 1815, the grand total of all the books published in Constantinople in the preceding 89 years, was only 63 titles.
, Farming (and just about all basic farm implements) in Africa or Sumeria, etc. 
I need more info on this. The Sumerians were Indo-Europeans. The Sumerians and Gutians are represented by the 3rd arrow. And anyway, for the civilization known as Sumer did not consist of just one part, but of several phases, stretching over several thousand years, and was comprised of Old European (White Mediterranean); Indo-European Nordic and Semitic elements, sometimes separately, and sometimes together. In the words of famous historian Dr. J.M. Roberts: "By about 4000 BC, most of the Fertile Crescent was occupied by Caucasians. Probably Semitic peoples had already begun to penetrate it by them too, their pressure grew until by the middle of the third millennium BC (well after the appearance of civilization) they would be well established in central Mesopotamia, across the middle sections of the Tigris and Euphrates. The interplay and rivalry off the Semitic peoples with the Caucasians, who were able to hang into the higher lands which enclosed Mesopotamia from the north-east, is one continuous theme that scholars have discerned in the early history of the area. By 2000 BC, the peoples whose languages form part of what is called the 'Indo-European' group have also entered the scene, and from two directions. One of these peoples, the Hittites, pushed into Anatolia from Europe, while their advance was matched from the east by that of the Iranians. Between 2000 BC and 1500 BC branches of these sub-units dispute and mingle with the Semitic and Caucasian peoples in the Crescent itself." -ROBERTS, J.M,, The Hutchinson History of the World, Hutchinson Publishing Group, first published 1976, page 62-63.
The rest is white power zealotry nonsense that is purley lies and propaganda. 
Well, I guess that's enough proof right there...
math was invented in the middle east 
Math isn't invented. 2+2=4. It always was and always will be. Recognition of math by writing was probably first in the middle east. But, then again, who do you think discovered it? What race? The African Negroes didn't ever create a written language, how would they have a number system? Most evidence points to Mesopotamia as the 'birthplace of math'. And we all know where the Caucasoid race started out...
langauge originated in Africa 
It's impossible to know where the first language originated seeing as there is no written proof of its existence. How would someone know, at this point in time, when the first language was invented and WHERE it was created?
and the first alphabet was in Sumeria. 
Again, what do you think the Sumerians were?
Clothes also were invented in Africa. 
African wear consisted of basic loincloths made from untreated animal skins. This did not change until the 1800s when whites introduced technology to them. Any other claims?
------- "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for White children" -David Lane
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nigeltheoutlaw
Connoisseur
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Quote: from kidd rune at 10:30 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Quote: from nigeltheoutlaw at 9:59 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Quote: from kidd rune at 9:46 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Quote: from nigeltheoutlaw at 9:42 pm on Aug. 22, 2008
Hey!!! You are a bigot!! You may not directly come out and admit it by saying " 'Dem niggers are stoopid." But you are trying to rally up a nice base with your stupid, biased, LYING posts. 
Which ones did I lie in? 
http://www.golivewire.com/forums/peer-yassyen-support-a.html I thoroughly disproved just about every one of those claims. Either you had very faulty sources, or just lied and ignored counter evidence. 
Let's review that.
What's funny about this is that you ignore the millions of counterexamples and lie in the face of overwhelming, damning evidence to the contrary. Why don't you do this on your real profile like a man? Just to dispell this, paper was invented in Egypt 
In Egypt bound reeds - papyrus - was made into parchment. Paper was never created in Egypt. In Europe, the process to make a textile thin enough to be comfortably used, meant a laborious process of pulping thicker scraps of textiles by hand. This process was revolutionized in 1798 by the French scientist Nicholas Louis Robert, who invented the first mechanical paper pulping machine. The raw material was still crude textile. Robert's machine was improved by the British stationers and brothers Henry Fourdrinier and Sealy Fourdrinier, who in 1803, produced the first of the machines that bear their name. Only in 1840, was the process of producing paper from ground wood developed in Europe, and the idea of adding chemicals only took place in 1850, creating the modern paper making process which has lasted to this day. In 1850, the German Friedrich Gottlob Keller devised the first method of making paper from wood pulp. In 1852, the Englishman Hugh Burgess, improved upon the process by mixing the wood pulp with chemicals, and in 1867, the American chemist C.B. Tilghman, started adding sulfites during the pulping process. Finally, as late as 1879, the Swede C.F. Dahl, perfected the use of wood by adding yet another chemical.
the printing press in China 
This is also untrue: in China a simple system of pattern inking had been developed in which a strip of material was lain against a water based painted picture. This only worked for very basic patterns and was consequently was not widespread. There is also no evidence that this technique was ever exported anywhere as it had virtually no applications. In Europe, printing was developed entirely independently after long thought on how to speed up the process of book copying: Johann Gutenberg, of the German city of Mainz, invented the technical aspects of printing in 1450. Basing the design of his machine on a wine press, Gutenburg developed the use of raised and movable type and from the start used oil based paints. The invention of the printing press revolutionized the spread of knowledge: a printing press was built in Venice in 1469, and the city had 417 printers by 1500. In 1476, a printing press was developed in England by William Caxton; in 1539, the Spaniard Juan Pablos set up an imported press in Mexico City, Mexico. Stephen Day built the first printing press in North America at Massachusetts Bay in 1628, and helped establish the Cambridge Press. By the end of the 1400's, 1,000 new books were being published per year by Europe's book printers. By 1815, the number had climbed to 20,000 per year. The Non-white world's wealthiest city, Constantinople, under the Ottoman Turks, did not acquire its first printing press until the year 1726, and by 1815, the grand total of all the books published in Constantinople in the preceding 89 years, was only 63 titles.
, Farming (and just about all basic farm implements) in Africa or Sumeria, etc. 
I need more info on this. The Sumerians were Indo-Europeans. The Sumerians and Gutians are represented by the 3rd arrow. And anyway, for the civilization known as Sumer did not consist of just one part, but of several phases, stretching over several thousand years, and was comprised of Old European (White Mediterranean); Indo-European Nordic and Semitic elements, sometimes separately, and sometimes together. In the words of famous historian Dr. J.M. Roberts: "By about 4000 BC, most of the Fertile Crescent was occupied by Caucasians. Probably Semitic peoples had already begun to penetrate it by them too, their pressure grew until by the middle of the third millennium BC (well after the appearance of civilization) they would be well established in central Mesopotamia, across the middle sections of the Tigris and Euphrates. The interplay and rivalry off the Semitic peoples with the Caucasians, who were able to hang into the higher lands which enclosed Mesopotamia from the north-east, is one continuous theme that scholars have discerned in the early history of the area. By 2000 BC, the peoples whose languages form part of what is called the 'Indo-European' group have also entered the scene, and from two directions. One of these peoples, the Hittites, pushed into Anatolia from Europe, while their advance was matched from the east by that of the Iranians. Between 2000 BC and 1500 BC branches of these sub-units dispute and mingle with the Semitic and Caucasian peoples in the Crescent itself." -ROBERTS, J.M,, The Hutchinson History of the World, Hutchinson Publishing Group, first published 1976, page 62-63.
The rest is white power zealotry nonsense that is purley lies and propaganda. 
Well, I guess that's enough proof right there...
math was invented in the middle east 
Math isn't invented. 2+2=4. It always was and always will be. Recognition of math by writing was probably first in the middle east. But, then again, who do you think discovered it? What race? The African Negroes didn't ever create a written language, how would they have a number system? Most evidence points to Mesopotamia as the 'birthplace of math'. And we all know where the Caucasoid race started out...
langauge originated in Africa 
It's impossible to know where the first language originated seeing as there is no written proof of its existence. How would someone know, at this point in time, when the first language was invented and WHERE it was created?
and the first alphabet was in Sumeria. 
Again, what do you think the Sumerians were?
Clothes also were invented in Africa. 
African wear consisted of basic loincloths made from untreated animal skins. This did not change until the 1800s when whites introduced technology to them. Any other claims? 
Since I do not have the evidence currently to disprove these, I won't bullshit it. you win. Spread your bigoted propaganda in peace.
------- I made it rain on my hoes.Then god smote me for trying to play god.
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