Quote from OldTrader:
I agree with your statement. I for one am sick of it. I think it ought to be a requirement that before you start bitching about the US, you should name your country and name one noteworthy accomplish by a business in your country, you know, some innovation, etc. The bottom line is the US carries the rest of the world on it's back, and then puts up with the bitching. Let's here about any accomplishment from any of these countries. And I include Canada in that too....strictly a second-rate country.
OldTrader
And a big fuck you from this Canadian right here...
We've done plenty, including not getting into unecessary wars...
Thomas Ahearn, (1855-1938), invented the electric cooking range and the electric car heater.
Anthony R. Barringer (b. 1925), 70 patents for mineral exploration technology
Earl W. Bascom, (1906 â 1995), co-invented rodeo's side-delivery chute, invented reverse-opening side-delivery chute, hornless bronc saddle, one-hand bareback rigging and high-cut chaps
Alexander Graham Bell, (1847-1922), Invented the telephone in Canada, developed it in US. (Canadian/American/SCOT )
Joseph-Armand Bombardier, invented the snowmobile
Gerald Bull, invented the G5 howitzer and the Iraqi supergun.
Thomas Carroll, first self-propelled combine harvester
Mathew Evans, co-inventor of the first electric light bulb
Reginald Fessenden, (1866-1932), radio inventor who made the first radio-transmitted audio transmission and the first two-way transatlantic radio transmission; also invented sonar and patented the first television system.
Sir Sandford Fleming, (1827-1915), inventor of the system of Standard Time zones in use today
Wilbur R. Franks, invented the "anti-black-out-suit" (the G-suit)
Abraham Gesner, (1797-1864), inventor of kerosene; known as the "Father of the Petroleum Industry."
James Gosling, (born 1956), invented Java computer language
Sam Jacks, inventor of ringette
George Klein, often called the most productive inventor in Canada in the 20th century; electric wheelchairs, microsurgical staple gun, the ZEEP nuclear reactor and the Canadarm
Thomas Edvard Krogh, developed technique of radiometric uranium-lead dating to further the precision of Geochronology
Hugh Le Caine, (1914-1977), invented the music synthesizer in 1945
Elijah McCoy, (born 1844), automatic machinery lubricator, lawn sprinkler, the "Real McCoy"
Cluny MacPherson, invented the first general-issue gas mask used by the British Army in World War I.
Dr. James Naismith, invented basketball
P. L. Robertson, invented the Robertson Screw
Thomas F. Ryan, (1872-1971), invented Five-pin bowling
Arthur Sicard, invented the snowblower in 1925.
Simon Sunatori, (born 1959), Canadian engineer, inventor and entrepreneur, best known for the invention of the MagneScribe and the Magic Spicer
Lewis Urry, invented the long-lasting alkaline battery
Thomas Willson, Canadian inventor
Henry Woodward, co-inventor of the first electric light bulb