Want a good chuckle?

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Will Williams
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by Will Williams » Fri Oct 21, 2022 4:09 pm

Will Williams wrote:
Fri Oct 21, 2022 10:33 am
William Pierce:
[snip]
Read more here: https://nationalvanguard.org/2015/07/br ... -children/ or hear Dr. Pierce read it here: "Brainwashing Our Children" https://www.bitchute.com/video/y4uuMs1DQyDM/
We've been expecting this:

Video Blocked

This video is blocked under the following Community Guideline:
Platform Misuse


Our alleged "free speech" Bitchute video channel has been corrupted by the Thought Police, as usual. First they just screwed with it, removing content "accidentally, then the channel was banned in every European country, but was still viewable in America. Now this.

Never fear. This slide show of Dr. Pierce's "Brainwashing Our Children" can be viewed on our backup Odysee channel: https://odysee.com/@natall:0/william-pi ... children:6 Others banned from Bitchute, YouTube etc. can be found on Odysee as well. Also on video.natall.com that we can control without Jew censors.


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RCavallius
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by RCavallius » Fri Oct 21, 2022 5:46 pm

I just shared that on Gab.
H0216

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Will Williams
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by Will Williams » Fri Oct 21, 2022 5:54 pm

FolkishFreya wrote:
Fri Oct 21, 2022 12:04 pm
I will do whatever I can to further the Alliance's message to help our race. In fact, I will be doubling my dues every month to help support NA's work and because I love my race.

That's the spirit, FF. Let's hope your righteous determination becomes contagious among our long-suffering kin, and soon.

That determination to achieve our Alliance's strategic goal is expressed so well by our organization's founder in the last paragraph of his "Brainwashing Our Children":


The one thing that will give our
people hope is racial separation. And
racial separation is what we will have.

-WLP


Those 20 words should be done up in cross-stitch needlepoint with Life Runes and oak leaves/acorns, mass produced and hung on every Alliance's member's wall, beside our Affirmation and our slogan Do Right and Fear No One as daily reminders.

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Jim Mathias
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by Jim Mathias » Sat Oct 22, 2022 1:25 am

On a lark, I decided to find out who invented the helicopter.

In 1962, a Congoid by the name of Paul E. Williams is credited as having patented the Lockheed Model 186. This was cited in Will's post above. It wasn't the first.

As far back as 1861, a White man came up with the term "helicopter," he was French inventor Gustave de Ponton d'Amécourt and he made a small steam powered model that never lifted of the ground.

In 1905 Ján Bahýľ, a Slovak inventor, uses a internal combustion engine that lifts his helicopter half a meter of the ground.
This wasn't a Congoid's  invention
This wasn't a Congoid's invention
Screenshot 2022-10-22 at 00-07-01 Helicopter Pilots timeline.png (333.5 KiB) Viewed 1513 times
In 1936, The Focke-Wulf FW 61 regarded as the world's first functional helicopter is flown for the first time. Note the swastika on the horizontal/vertical stabilizers at the rear of the helicopter.
Another first for the Germans
Another first for the Germans
NS helicopter.png (387.22 KiB) Viewed 1513 times
I found this here: https://www.timetoast.com/timelines/train-operators
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RCavallius
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by RCavallius » Sat Oct 22, 2022 12:19 pm

I think Leonardo da Vinci envisioned something similar to a helicopter, also.
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White_Vengeance
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by White_Vengeance » Sat Oct 22, 2022 1:21 pm

RCavallius wrote:
Sat Oct 22, 2022 12:19 pm
I think Leonardo da Vinci envisioned something similar to a helicopter, also.
The first studies on helicopters were well in advance of the first airplanes. Leonardo da Vinci is credited with having first thought of a machine for vertical flight, the "airscrew," the design for which, dated 1493, was only discovered in the 19th century. It consisted of a platform surmounted by a helical screw driven by a somewhat rudimentary system, not unlike that of rubber-powered model aircraft. The great Tuscan genius wrote that if this instrument in the form of a screw were well made of linen, the pores of which had been stopped with starch, it should, upon being turned sharply, rise into the air in a spiral. However his design was never put to any practical use.

G.Apostolo "The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Helicopters", 1984

Leonardo da Vinci's helicopter project

Just how Leonardo came to think of the helicopter flying principle is not quite clear. In view of his enormous mental powers, it is conceivable that this could have welled up from his own creative pools of genius. Of course the possibility of his having come in contact with the Chinese top either through his widespread reading or contact with travelers must also be considered. However this may have been, the fact remains that this great Italian designed and built models of the first helicopters intended for human flight.

One of the first of Leonardo's helicopter designs called for a shallow saucer-like gondola on which two upright posts were attached. Each of the posts carried a double set of wings. By means of a rather complicated system of cords, cylinders, and foot pedals, the pilot set the wings in motion with movements of his feet, hands, and head! Alas, the poor flyer, if he suddenly developed a cramp in his leg!

The wings of this craft were not of the flapping variety, but rather they moved in a horizontal plane, crisscrossing one another. This motion compressed the air between the wings and gave the craft lift. Leonardo provided his helicopter with a landing gear in the form of a pair of ladders about twenty-four feet long. These were intended not only to help the take-offs but also to cushion the craft when it landed. During flight they were supposed to be hauled into the gondola or fuselage.

Unlike many inventors, Leonardo was not above feeling that perhaps, should his helicopter ever reach the flying stage, an accident might occur. Therefore, along with a description of his craft, he also included the very wise suggestion that during the helicopter's test flight, the pilot fly it over water. In the event of an accident, he would thus be tumbled onto this yielding surface and unharmed.

While speaking of Leonardo's caution about flying, it is interesting to note that in connection with his helicopter studies he also devised what was perhaps the world's first parachute. The Italian genius was quite optimistic about his life-saving device; he showed this when he said, "If a man have a tent roof of caulked linen 24 feet broad and 24 feet high, he will be able to let himself fall from any great height without danger to himself."

The helicopter experiments also led Leonardo to design what many believe to be the first airplane instrument. This was a pendulum device that hung within a glass ring. "This ball within the ring will enable you to guide the apparatus straight ahead or aslant as you wish."

Craving perfection in all that he did, Leonardo soon began to feel unhappy with his first helicopter models. One of the major causes of his dissatisfaction was the manner of powering his flying machine. He came to the conclusion, one that was to profoundly affect aircraft experiments in the years ahead, that mechanical rather than human power must be used before a successful flying machine could be built.

With this thought in mind, he undertook some new experiments before designing a different model helicopter. Standing in the center of his studio one day, he took a large, thin ruler and swung it in rapid circles above his head. He felt a distinctive upward pull on his arm. From this he reasoned that it he could build a flying machine having a rapidly rotating wing above it, powered by mechanical means he would achieve a successful aircraft. Leonardo proceeded to build a model of his new helicopter design, powering it with a spring motor.

Many of the helicopter models which he built are said to have taken to the air successfully. It is quite likely they were fashioned along the lines of those using a coiled spring for a motor. These craft had a wing-like rotor for rising into the air.

Among the last of the helicopter models designed by Leonardo was one which had the appearance of an artificial Christmas tree. More important to the great Italian, it is the design which historians say made him the partial originator of the word "helicopter." He described the craft with a good deal of confidence in its flying ability. "I say that this instrument made with a helix and is well made, that is to say, of flaxed linen of which one has closed the pores with starch and is turned with a great speed, the said helix is able to make a screw in the air and to climb high."

The helix he mentions is a Greek word meaning "spiral" or "twist." This was combined later with another Greek word, pteron, meaning "wing." In still later years through much usage, the words were fused in such a manner that the term "helicopter" came to be born.

As in his many other fields of endeavor, Leonardo da Vinci left his imprint on the very infant subject of aeronautics. By his work with ornithopters and helicopter models he is said to have begun the first sound experiments in search of a practical heavier-than-air flying machine. Leonardo was strongly convinced that if man were to accomplish his long desired goal of traveling in the sky above him, it would be by a flying machine based on the principle of the helicopter. A little more than two hundred years were to pass before Leonardo's ideas on flying machines were to be picked up and carried forward by a whole host of helicopter experimenters. Alas for this band of aeronautical pioneers, man's first ascent into the sky was made by an entirely different type of aircraft, the hot-air balloon.
Any White person who can see the threat to the future of the White race today and who refuses, whether from cowardice or selfishness, to stand up for his/her people does not deserve to be counted among them.

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Will Williams
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by Will Williams » Sat Oct 22, 2022 5:10 pm

Jim Mathias wrote:
Sat Oct 22, 2022 1:25 am
On a lark, I decided to find out who invented the helicopter.

In 1962, a Congoid by the name of Paul E. Williams is credited as having patented the Lockheed Model 186. This was cited in Will's post above. It wasn't the first.

As far back as 1861, a White man came up with the term "helicopter," he was French inventor Gustave de Ponton d'Amécourt and he made a small steam powered model that never lifted of the ground.

In 1905 Ján Bahýľ, a Slovak inventor, uses a internal combustion engine that lifts his helicopter half a meter of the ground.
Screenshot 2022-10-22 at 00-07-01 Helicopter Pilots timeline.png

In 1936, The Focke-Wulf FW 61 regarded as the world's first functional helicopter is flown for the first time. Note the swastika on the horizontal/vertical stabilizers at the rear of the helicopter.

NS helicopter.png

I found this here: https://www.timetoast.com/timelines/train-operators

No, the Negro did not invent the helicopter. He may have invented the door knob and the curtain rod, but had to wait for a White man to invent the door and the window first.

While we're on that subject, though, it was the White Russian/Ukrainian Igor Sikorski who is generally credited with inventing the helicopter:



Helicopter
US Patent Nos. 2,318,259; 2,318,260
Inducted in 1987
Born May 25, 1889 - Died October 26, 1972

Igor I. Sikorsky designed the world's first successful multimotor airplane and the world's first true production helicopter. Born in Kiev, Sikorsky built model aircraft and helicopters as a schoolboy. He was educated in Russia and Paris, and achieved international recognition in 1913 when he designed and flew the first multimotor airplane. After the Russian Revolution he immigrated to the United States and reestablished himself as an aircraft designer.

From 1925 to 1940 he created a series of increasingly successful aircraft which won numerous world records for speed, range, and payload. The famed Sikorsky flying "Clippers" helped transoceanic commercial passenger services. Sikorsky continued to study the helicopter; he filed for a crucial patent in 1931. In late 1938, United Aircraft (now United Technologies) approved his experimental helicopter, and in 1939, the VS-300 made its first flight.

In January 1941 the U.S. Army Air Corps issued a contract for an observation helicopter designated the XR-4. Within months of the delivery of the first units, the XR-4 established the helicopter's humanitarian tradition of life-saving missions in military and civil emergencies. Sikorsky's breakthrough single-rotor design remains the dominant configuration today.

https://www.invent.org/inductees/igor-i-sikorsky
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White_Vengeance
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by White_Vengeance » Sat Oct 22, 2022 9:04 pm

Will Williams wrote:
Sat Oct 22, 2022 5:10 pm



No, the Negro did not invent the helicopter. He may have invented the door knob and the curtain rod, but had to wait for a White man to invent the door and the window first.

I seriously doubt that the blue-gummed, knuckle-draggin' pavement apes invented either the door knob or the curtain rod. My rationale is based upon the fact that despite being domiciled--illegally, I might add--in America for over 400 years the pavement apes' minds are still back in their "mudda land," sub-Saharan Africa. The enfeebled mind and miniaturized brain of the knuckle-draggin' savages are overwhelmed by the high-technology culture and society of America. As the barbaric cannibals' barely-functioning minds naturally conjure up images of sub-Saharan Africa, the only dwelling that makes sense to these feral apes is a mud hut. Mud huts do not have windows or doors, so the barbaric cannibals would not comprehend a "door" or a "window"; consequently it is beyond the abilities of these tar babies to invent a device for something they didn't even know existed.

I actually believe that the low IQ, backwards, ignorant spooks could not even spell "door knob" if you spotted the simian apes the "d," "o", "o," "r," "k," "n," and "o." Yes the woolly-headed, web-footed jig-a-boos are truly THAT stupid!
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by Robert Burns » Sat Oct 22, 2022 9:53 pm

White_Vengeance wrote:
Sat Oct 22, 2022 9:04 pm
I seriously doubt that the blue-gummed, knuckle-draggin' pavement apes invented either the door knob or the curtain rod. My rationale is based upon the fact that despite being domiciled--illegally, I might add--in America for over 400 years the pavement apes' minds are still back in their "mudda land," sub-Saharan Africa. The enfeebled mind and miniaturized brain of the knuckle-draggin' savages are overwhelmed by the high-technology culture and society of America. As the barbaric cannibals' barely-functioning minds naturally conjure up images of sub-Saharan Africa, the only dwelling that makes sense to these feral apes is a mud hut. Mud huts do not have windows or doors, so the barbaric cannibals would not comprehend a "door" or a "window"; consequently it is beyond the abilities of these tar babies to invent a device for something they didn't even know existed.

I actually believe that the low IQ, backwards, ignorant spooks could not even spell "door knob" if you spotted the simian apes the "d," "o", "o," "r," "k," "n," and "o." Yes the woolly-headed, web-footed jig-a-boos are truly THAT stupid!
Jeez, WV. You seem to really dislike them.

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Will Williams
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Re: Want a good chuckle?

Post by Will Williams » Sun Oct 23, 2022 10:23 am

Riley wrote:
Sat Oct 22, 2022 9:53 pm

Jeez, WV. You seem to really dislike them.
It seems that way, Riley, and for good reason. WV, like other racial separatists, know we'll all be better off all the way around when there are no longer gorillas in our midst.

The one thing that will give our
people hope is racial separation. And
racial separation is what we will have.

-WLP
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