The Conservative Cave
Current Events => The DUmpster => Topic started by: SSG Snuggle Bunny on August 02, 2015, 09:27:54 AM
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chalmers (95 posts)
We must do away with the absolutely specious notion that everybody has to earn a living.
(http://40.media.tumblr.com/de3d127891122de4dd455dacf9b62878/tumblr_mxkjgjymEz1r9x4k0o1_500.jpg)
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10027035630
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chalmers (96 posts)
We must do away with the absolutely specious notion that everybody has to earn a living.
(http://40.media.tumblr.com/de3d127891122de4dd455dacf9b62878/tumblr_mxkjgjymEz1r9x4k0o1_500.jpg)
Don't worry, Bucky, the DUmmies are WAY ahead of you. (http://www.democraticunderground.com/10027035630)
What a pantload from yet another hypocrite. RB Fuller was a brilliant man, but grew up (a) privileged, and (b) disregarded his family and their needs as he sought out Universal Truth or whatever it is liberals go looking for.
Doesn't mean the DUmmies won't lap it up:
daleanime (11,174 posts)
1. Massive K&R.....
There's plenty of things that need to be done, but under a 'free market' system no one is willing to pay for most of them.
Funny you should mention that, DUmbass. You'd think an anti-ratrace freethinking liberal futurist "citizen of the Universe" Bucky Fuller would make his inventions part of the public domain, so people could take them and implement them. This would be consistent with his philosophy that we work for the betterment of others. Golly, wonder why Bucky had so many PATENTS, the point of which is to keep invention and innovation OUT of the public domain:
1927 U.S. Patent 1,633,702 Stockade: building structure
1927 U.S. Patent 1,634,900 Stockade: pneumatic forming process
1928 (Application Abandoned) 4D house
1937 U.S. Patent 2,101,057 Dymaxion car
1940 U.S. Patent 2,220,482 Dymaxion bathroom
1944 U.S. Patent 2,343,764 Dymaxion deployment unit (sheet)
1944 U.S. Patent 2,351,419 Dymaxion deployment unit (frame)
1946 U.S. Patent 2,393,676 Dymaxion map
1946 (No Patent) Dymaxion house (Wichita)
1954 U.S. Patent 2,682,235 Geodesic dome
1959 U.S. Patent 2,881,717 Paperboard dome
1959 U.S. Patent 2,905,113 Plydome
1959 U.S. Patent 2,914,074 Catenary (geodesic tent)
1961 U.S. Patent 2,986,241 Octet truss
1962 U.S. Patent 3,063,521 Tensegrity
1963 U.S. Patent 3,080,583 Submarisle (undersea island)
1964 U.S. Patent 3,139,957 Aspension (suspension building)
1965 U.S. Patent 3,197,927 Monohex (geodesic structures)
1965 U.S. Patent 3,203,144 Laminar dome
1965 (Filed – No Patent) Octa spinner
1967 U.S. Patent 3,354,591 Star tensegrity (octahedral truss)
1970 U.S. Patent 3,524,422 Rowing needles (watercraft)
1974 U.S. Patent 3,810,336 Geodesic hexa-pent
1975 U.S. Patent 3,863,455 Floatable breakwater
1975 U.S. Patent 3,866,366 Non-symmetrical tensegrity
1979 U.S. Patent 4,136,994 Floating breakwater
1980 U.S. Patent 4,207,715 Tensegrity truss
1983 U.S. Patent 4,377,114 Hanging storage shelf unit
Gee, for someone critical of "inspectors who inspect inspectors," he sure as shit didn't have a problem with lawyers and patent clerks!
Another day, another liberal bullshitter.
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I never heard of the guy, but when I read that quote I knew he was the patron saint of DUmmyland.
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As long as we have our current tort law system, governmental regulators, and fixation with protecting idiots from the natural consequences of their ill-planned actions (All touchstones of Liberalism), we will never run out of layers of inspectors, people making instruments for them, and layers of people to inspect those instruments.
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I guess I'm too stoooooopid to see the wisdom of that statement. I haven't made any such "technological breakthrough" and probably won't in my remaining days or decades. Yet somehow I've managed to support myself and my family. Obviously I'm missing something due to my stoooooopidity.
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I just saw another thread here with this. Merge, possibly?
Anyway, look at the post count of the OP . . .
95 posts
Hmmm . . . . :whistling:
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Utopianism fails at its first encounter with human nature as the DUmbasses prove.
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I've heard of Buckminster.
I heard he invented buckminsterfullerine.
Also known as the "Bucky Ball".
It was a lattice of carbon atoms that formed a zeppelin shape.
I heard that was the initial stages of the science now known as nano science.
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1959 U.S. Patent 2,881,717 Paperboard dome
1959 First appearance of the modern patented DUnce cap.
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The ultimate pyramid scheme.
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I've heard of Buckminster.
I heard he invented buckminsterfullerine.
Also known as the "Bucky Ball".
It was a lattice of carbon atoms that formed a zeppelin shape.
I heard that was the initial stages of the science now known as nano science.
They named it in honor of him. He was an architect famous for his creation of the geodesic dome. An example of his work is here:
(http://f.tqn.com/y/architecture/1/W/g/9/spaceshipearth.jpg)
This is one of his more noticeable achievements. The "Bucky ball" was given it's name because it's structure resembled that of his domes.
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They named it in honor of him. He was an architect famous for his creation of the geodesic dome. An example of his work is here:
(http://f.tqn.com/y/architecture/1/W/g/9/spaceshipearth.jpg)
This is one of his more noticeable achievements. The "Bucky ball" was given it's name because it's structure resembled that of his domes.
Yeah. He had nothing to do with nanoscience, his work just happened to become faddish in the late 60s and early 70s after more or less flopping due to practicalities in his own working life...it was a lot more suited to mega-projects and 'Wonders' than to the everyday lifestyle he envisioned, and that sort of fame propelled him into a certain not-entirely-earned place of prominence in the minds of the popular scientific press and impressionable science/engineering/technology students of the period.