African American
Related: About this forumMovie about black women math genuises coming
Few know about the women who helped make the space program come to pass. Even fewer know they were black women.
http://www.businessinsider.com/katherine-johnson-hidden-figures-nasa-human-computers-2016-8
This is something to celebrate, IMO. For everyone. These women should be the ones we want to emulate. (Not me, I suck at math.) Still, I'm so glad this story is finally coming out.
eppur_se_muova
(37,357 posts)I think they actually paid for an ad (a pretty long one) and the movie was listed as an Olympic sponsor.
Oh, yeah, here we go ... http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/dominique-dawes-hidden-figures-trailer-release_us_57b20e2ce4b0718404124747
Nice to see Dominique Dawes again.
xocet
(3,928 posts)Ilsa
(62,225 posts)xfundy
(5,105 posts)This looks like a total feel-good inspirational film, hopefully one that will show girls (and boys) what's possible if they apply themselves.
I was raised to be a racist redneck but thankfully it didn't stick. I know there will be racists who will hate this, but fuck them.
lapfog_1
(30,105 posts)When i worked at NASA, I would often sponsor a large group of engineers to take an afternoon off and go see the latest SciFi thriller (or Science Thriller)... Apollo 13, Men in Black, Independence Day...
I would buy a few dozen tickets ($5 for the afternoon matinee) and hand them out to everyone who could go.
It was good team building.
If I was still there (given that my group had some responsibility for changing Space Shuttle flight characteristics for the return to flight after Challenger) THIS movie would rate an "all hands" afternoon off to go see it. Get to see how it was done before and during the early computer age.
xfundy
(5,105 posts)Important stuff! We may have to send Newt Gingrich to the moon one day.
lapfog_1
(30,105 posts)At the equator of course.
xfundy
(5,105 posts)It could throw the world out of balance, Keptin!
eppur_se_muova
(37,357 posts)Buckeye_Democrat
(15,034 posts)SusanCalvin
(6,592 posts)nomorenomore08
(13,324 posts)All the more reason why these forgotten stories need to be told.
happy feet
(1,087 posts)I had no idea and I'm quite versed in African American history. Thank-you so much. I will gladly spread the word.
xfundy
(5,105 posts)BlancheSplanchnik
(20,219 posts)Looking forward to it!
Joe Chi Minh
(15,229 posts)our analytical intelligence, due to the different time-scales of the technological development of different continents and races. The fact of the countless high-achieving professionals from China, Africa and India, many currently working in the West shuld lay that misconception to rest.
The Mayan Indians were streets ahead of us in terms of their mathematics and astronomy, even independently devising the notation for zero as a mathematical concept, before the Arabs, who are believed to have received it from India. But, seemingly due to severe droughts and living patterns, lost interest in affairs of the intellect.
Those with a high analytical intelligence were given that, so that they would be able to help the more endemically spiritual, general public. Their intelligence, the unitive intelligence, which has a notably firmer grip on common sense, is of a higher order, and like Mary of Bethany's contemplative prayer, will not be taken away from her in the next life, while everyone in heaven will have full access to all the knowledge to which here on earth the analytical intelligence is ordered. So, it would be fair to say that the analytical intelligence is actually a degradation of the unitive, emotional and spiritual intelligence in the wrong person.
Given the right environment, like the Jews, the Africans and Afro-Saxons, have both in abundance. But the Jews are a strange category, all on their own, the 'remnant', at least, somehow managing to combine their spiritual grasp with a more than usual preoccupation with the materially-oriented analytical intelligence, to a significant degree.
Thanks for the link! I never knew! I must confess that I saw the preview of Taraji, but did not play much attention to what it was about.