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re: Question for the OT - what African American man do you admire the most?
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:49 pm to theantiquetiger
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:49 pm to theantiquetiger

Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:52 pm to OMLandshark
Frederick Douglas is the right answer here.
More recently I will say Ken Hamblin. He's been preaching personal responsibility in the black community to make themselves successful for decades now.
More recently I will say Ken Hamblin. He's been preaching personal responsibility in the black community to make themselves successful for decades now.
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:52 pm to theantiquetiger
i dunno about naming favorites but Created Equal - Clarence Thomas in His Own Words was a great doc on the life of Clarence Thomas
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:53 pm to kywildcatfanone
quote:
More recently I will say Ken Hamblin
Dude was a baller at safety for the Hogs back in the day.
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:54 pm to theantiquetiger
quote:
what African American man do you admire the most
Thr Let’s Move Initative

Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:54 pm to kywildcatfanone
quote:"Name one major American city that improved morally, socially, and economically after the city elected a liberal black mayor ('You can't do it')" -- K.H.
More recently I will say Ken Hamblin
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:55 pm to theantiquetiger
billy cosby and SuperSaint
This post was edited on 12/7/21 at 7:02 pm
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:55 pm to theantiquetiger
Why are we asking this? OP makes it seem as if black men can’t be admired and need to go above and beyond. What Swedes do you admire? Australians? Native Americans?
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:56 pm to theantiquetiger
Easy.
Tiger Tiger Woods yall.
Tiger Tiger Woods yall.
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:57 pm to theantiquetiger
Vivian Thomas
quote:
Dr. Vivien Theodore Thomas was born in Lake Providence, Louisiana in 1910. The grandson of a slave, Vivien Thomas attended Pearl High School in Nashville, and graduated with honors in 1929. In the wake of the stock market crash in October, he secured a job as a laboratory assistant in 1930 with Dr. Alfred Blalock at Vanderbilt University.
quote:
Tutored in anatomy and physiology by Blalock and his young research fellow, Dr. Joseph Beard, Thomas rapidly mastered complex surgical techniques and research methodology. In an era when institutional racism was the norm, Thomas was classified, and paid, as a janitor, despite the fact that by the mid-1930s he was doing the work of a postdoctoral researcher in Blalock’s lab. Together he and Blalock did groundbreaking research into the causes of hemorrhagic and traumatic shock. This work later evolved into research on Crush syndrome and saved the lives of thousands of soldiers on the battlefields of World War II.
quote:
Blalock and Thomas began experimental work in vascular and cardiac surgery, defying medical taboos against operating upon the heart. It was this work that laid the foundation for the revolutionary lifesaving surgery they were to perform at Johns Hopkins a decade later. By 1940, the work Blalock had done with Thomas placed him at the forefront of American surgery, and when he was offered the position of Chief of Surgery at his alma mater, Johns Hopkins in 1941, he requested that Thomas accompany him.
quote:
In 1943, while pursuing his shock research, Blalock was approached by renowned pediatric cardiologist Dr. Helen Taussig, who was seeking a surgical solution to a complex and fatal four-part heart anomaly called Tetralogy of Fallot (also known as blue baby syndrome, although other cardiac anomalies produce blueness, or cyanosis). Thomas was charged with the task of first creating a blue baby-like condition (cyanosis) in a dog, then correcting the condition by means of the pulmonary-to-subclavian anastomosis. In nearly two years of laboratory work involving some 200 dogs, demonstrated that the corrective procedure was not lethal, thus persuading Blalock that the operation could be safely attempted on a human patient. During this first procedure in 1944, Thomas stood on a step-stool behind Blalock coaching him through the procedure. When the procedure was published in the May 1945 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, Blalock and Taussig received sole credit for the Blalock-Taussig shunt. Thomas received no mention and, in Blalock’s writings, he was never credited for his role.
quote:The man designed some of the most radical and beneficial cardiac surgeries in the cardiac surgery field, and sadly didn’t receive as much credit as he deserved.
To the host of young surgeons Thomas trained during the 1940s, he became a figure of legend, the model of the dexterous and efficient cutting surgeon. “Even if you’d never seen surgery before, you could do it because Vivien made it look so simple,” the renowned surgeon Denton Cooley told Washingtonian magazine in 1989. “There wasn’t a false move, not a wasted motion, when he operated.” Surgeons like Cooley, along with Alex Haller, Frank Spencer, Rowena Spencer, and others credited Thomas with teaching them the surgical technique which placed them at the forefront of medicine in the United States.
This post was edited on 12/7/21 at 6:59 pm
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:57 pm to PillPusher
quote:the bikini team
What Swedes do you admire?
quote:the non-nazis
Australians?
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:58 pm to theantiquetiger
Fredrick Douglas, for sure. Also, Garret Augustus Morgan, Jackie Robinson, Henry Johnson from the Harlem Hellfighters, and Curtis Lowe.
Posted on 12/7/21 at 6:59 pm to PillPusher
quote:
Why are we asking this? OP makes it seem as if black men can’t be admired and need to go above and beyond. What Swedes do you admire? Australians? Native Americans?
I said in the OP why I asked this question.
Go start your own thread with those stupid questions, you racist.
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