"Apparently, the debate comes down to how you define the first flight of an airplane."
1 posted on
12/10/2003 2:56:50 PM PST by
Print
To: Print
It was only later that the secretive Orville and Wilbur Wright proved they had beaten Santos-Dumont at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, three years earlier on December 17.
2 posted on
12/10/2003 3:02:42 PM PST by
Weimdog
To: Print
Ask the average Brazilian how long it takes for the earth to rotate I full turn and they will tell you. "The earth is stationary and the sun takes one day to revolve around us". Santos was a pioneer but I'll never believe he was first.
3 posted on
12/10/2003 3:03:55 PM PST by
Conspiracy Guy
(Ignorance can be corrected with knowledge. Stupid is permanent.)
To: Print
Sounds to me like a party boy that had a good idea, but not the drive to develop it that the Wright's had. CNN should leave it alone.
4 posted on
12/10/2003 3:06:40 PM PST by
Thebaddog
(Scratch the itch.)
To: Print
Here we go again.
The Chinese discovered America before 1430.
Right.
Unless they announce it at the time, or close to the time of the event, it doesn't count. The whole point of recognition is the celebration of an invention's or discovery's benefit to the whole world.
5 posted on
12/10/2003 3:07:38 PM PST by
Publius6961
(40% of Californians are as dumb as a sack of rocks.)
To: Print
Only if Alberto is not classified as a white male.
6 posted on
12/10/2003 3:14:51 PM PST by
MrBambaLaMamba
(Buy 'Allah' brand urinal cakes - If you can't kill the enemy at least you can piss on their god)
To: Print
Of course it was. As everyone knows, nothing was ever really invented in the US, it was always done somewhere else (usually Europe) first and the US guy stole the credit.
Of course, this logic works both ways, everything Europe supposedly invented was done by the Chinese 1000 years earlier, and Europe stole the credit.
To: Print
No matter how hard I try I can't get "Santos-Dumont Patterson Air Force Base" to roll off of my tongue.
8 posted on
12/10/2003 3:17:50 PM PST by
stevem
To: Print
"Apparently, the debate comes down to how you define the first flight of an airplane."Many developments occurred simultaneously in many countries.
It's not like, had the Wright Brothers been hit by lightening, that manned heavier than air flight would not have developed.
It always reminds me of the the controversy about electricity, AC vs DC, and the Edison vs Tesla rivalry .
Acknowledging Santos-Dumont's, or Langley for that matter, contributions doesn't diminish the Wright's one whit.
10 posted on
12/10/2003 3:22:03 PM PST by
billorites
(freepo ergo sum)
To: Print
At his summer home in the Brazilian mountain town of Petropolis, tour guides perpetuate myths about Santos-Dumont -- such as how he invented the wristwatch.
Santos-Dumont experts deny that assertion, although they concede he was probably the first male civilian to use a watch after asking his friend Louis Cartier to make him a timepiece he could use while flying. Previously, only royalty and soldiers had used watches.
He also invented the internet and carved Al Gore's head out of a single piece of wood.
12 posted on
12/10/2003 3:30:13 PM PST by
Arkinsaw
(What LSU game? Huh? No idea what you are talking about.)
To: Print
What is this? Take Credit For Everything The Americans Did First Day? Sheesh...
13 posted on
12/10/2003 3:30:42 PM PST by
Prime Choice
(Leftist opinions may be free, but I still feel like I'm getting ripped off every time I receive one.)
To: Print
AL GORE invented the airplane, everyone knows that
To: Print
Maybe a Brazilian invented empennage.
15 posted on
12/10/2003 3:32:21 PM PST by
Consort
To: Print
To: Print
The New Zealanders think they have a guy who invented flight, too, but they have too much class to press the claim.
To: Print
CNN. Not even worth reading.
24 posted on
08/25/2024 8:43:33 AM PDT by
CodeToad
(Rule #1: The elites want you dead.)
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