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  Msg # 47 of 668 on ZZNY4439, Thursday 9-28-22, 11:05  
  From: TOM SHELLY, LEGENDARY WHI  
  To: ALL  
  Subj: Re: Monday bitching blacks (1/9)  
 XPost: nyc.general, soc.culture.usa, alt.support.loneliness 
 XPost: soc.culture.african.american 
 From: Tom_Shelly_White_God@yahoo.com 
  
 On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 12:23:09 +1000, "Darkfalz"  
 wrote: 
  
 > WHAT THE FUCK IS WITH YOU BLACKS ALL THE 
 >> TIME???? 
  
  
  
 niggers need excuses to hide from the fact that they are not only a 
 cursed species but the lowest group or race in the world and everyone 
 knows it. 
  
 FACT #2: Throughout 6,000 years of recorded 
                    history, the Black African Negro has invented 
 nothing. 
                    Not a written language, weaved cloth, a calendar, a 
                    plow, a road, a bridge, a railway, a ship, a system 
 of 
                    measurement, or even the wheel. (Note: This is in 
                    reference to the pure-blooded Negro.) He is not 
                    known to have ever cultivated a single crop or 
                    domesticated a single animal for his own use 
 (although 
                    many powerful and docile beasts abounded around 
                    him.) His only known means of transporting goods 
                    was on the top of his hard burry head. For shelter 
 he 
                    never progressed beyond the common mud hut, the 
                    construction of which a beaver or muskrat is 
 capable. 
                    (21) (39) 
  
  
 21.Pendell, Elmer, Sex Versus Civilization, 
                         Noontide Press 
  
 39.Weisman, Charles A. The Origins of Race and 
                         Civilization, 1990, SFA 
  
  
  
  
 Europa: The History of the White Race 
  
 Chapter Fifty Eight 
  
 Shaping the World: The White Technological Revolution 
  
 The world today is dominated by technology as never before. It is 
 impossible 
 to travel anywhere without seeing some vestiges of or manifestations 
 of 
 technological wizardry which have shaped all life on the planet today, 
 particularly those innovations developed at the time of the Industrial 
 Revolution. 
  
 While this fact is commonly known and countless books and works have 
 been 
 written on the subject, all have ignored one crucial feature of this 
 astonishing technological revolution: the plain facts are that the 
 great 
 technological innovations which have set the pace for the entire world 
 are 
 exclusively the product of a tiny minority of Whites. 
  
 This fact, like so many other unpalatable truths in history, is 
 ignored 
 because of the political implications it carries: it is possibly the 
 most 
 politically incorrect view which can be made, although the facts leave 
 any 
 objective observer with no other option but to arrive at this 
 inescapable 
 conclusion. 
  
 Origins 
  
 While it is often claimed that the modern technological age began with 
 the 
 era of the Industrial Revolution, the reality is that many of the 
 technologies which have shaped the modern world pre-date the era of 
 the 
 Industrial Revolution by sometimes hundreds of years. 
  
 This is not to down play the importance of the Industrial Revolution, 
 which 
 in itself was a period of perhaps 200 years which saw science and 
 technology 
 leapfrog in terms of development, but merely to put things into 
 perspective: 
 that much of the knowledge sharing and ability which created that 
 explosion 
 of genius was only possible because of earlier developments. 
  
 Ancient Inventors 
  
 . Archimedes (287-212 BC) was a Classical Greek inventor who defined 
 the 
 principle of the lever and is credited with inventing the compound 
 pulley. 
 During his stay in Egypt, he invented the hydraulic screw for raising 
 water 
 from a lower to a higher level. He is best known for discovering the 
 law of 
 hydrostatics, often called Archimedes' principle, which states that a 
 body 
 immersed in fluid loses weight equal to the weight of the amount of 
 fluid it 
 displaces. He also invented the catapult and the first "laser beam" - 
 a 
 system of mirrors he developed for the kingdom of Syracuse which 
 focused the 
 suns' rays on invaders' boats and set them on fire - the basic 
 principle 
 behind a magnifying glass. 
  
 . Ctesibius (3rd century BC) was a Classical Greek inventor who won 
 fame for 
 his invention of a number of devices using the pressure created by air 
 and 
 water. He used water weights, or containers made heavy by filling them 
 with 
 water, and compressed air, to construct an air-powered catapult. His 
 most 
 famous invention was the great improvement he made to the ancient 
 Egyptian 
 clepsydra, or water clock, in which water dripping into a container at 
 a 
 steady rate raised a float that carried a pointer to mark the hours. 
 He 
 equipped the float with a rack that turned a toothed wheel and made 
 the 
 clock work a number of adornments: whistling birds, moving puppets, 
 ringing 
 bells, and other gadgets. The accuracy of Ctesibius's water clock was 
 only 
 eventually surpassed in 1657 by the pendulum clock of Dutch inventor 
 Christiaan Huygens, but the spirit of Ctesibius's clock still survives 
 in 
 the cuckoo clock. 
  
 . Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) was not only a great artist but also a 
 stunningly advanced inventor whose surviving documents and manuscripts 
 are 
 filled with designs for many of the machines regarded as 19th or 20th 
 century inventions, but were in fact modeled in his 16th century 
 plans. 
 These designs included: portable bridges; cannons; armored vehicles; a 
 submarine; an underwater diving suit; and models for aircraft. 
  
 Computers 
  
 The history of the development of an item regarded as on the cutting 
 edge of 
 modern technology - the computer - serves as another excellent example 
 of 
 how the development of modern technology predates the era of the 
 Industrial 
 Revolution. 
  
 . The first computer - a machine which could do mathematical equations 
 - was 
 built as early as 1623 by the German scientist Wilhelm Schikard. He 
 built a 
 machine that used 11 complete and 6 incomplete sprocketed wheels that 
 could 
 add and, with the aid of logarithm tables, multiply and divide. 
  
 . In 1642, the Frenchman Blaise Pascal, invented a machine that added 
 and 
 subtracted, automatically carrying and borrowing digits from column to 
 column. The 17th century German mathematician, Gottfried Leibniz, 
 designed a 
 special gearing system to enable Pascal's machine to do multiplication 
 as 
 well. 
  
 . The first programmable computer was developed in 1804 when the 
 Frenchman, 
 Joseph-Marie Jacquard, invented a spinning loom which used punched 
 cards to 
 program preselected patterns. Jacquard was rewarded by Napoleon 
 Bonaparte 
 for his work, but was forced to flee Lyon when he was attacked by 
 weavers 
 who saw themselves being replaced by his invention. His looms are 
 however 
 still used today, especially in the manufacture of fine furniture 
 fabrics. 
  
 . The British mathematician and inventor, Charles Babbage, started 
 building, 
 but never completed, two astonishing computers called the Difference 
 Engine 
 and the Analytical Engine. The latter became the basis upon which all 
 modern 
 computers were developed. Babbage never managed to finish building his 
 machines - although all the plans were completed - because of 
 financial 
  
 [continued in next message] 
  
 --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 
  * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) 

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