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Albert Einstein drew a straight line

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The Starmaker

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Jun 11, 2022, 11:15:44 PM6/11/22
to
From 1905
Albert Einstein
drew a straight line
to 1939.

To build an atomic bomb.

First he had to assemble a team.

He did that in the 1920's
by teaching his students
How to build an atomic bomb.

One of his students was
Leo Szilard.

Next step,
invent a nuclear reactor...

this
https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1148280696122699778/photo/1
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D--DMR5UEAAOsvQ?format=jpg&name=large


is


this.

https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1148279328121090048/photo/1
https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1148280108349714434/photo/1

--
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge
the unchallengeable.

mitchr...@gmail.com

unread,
Jun 12, 2022, 4:25:23 PM6/12/22
to
On Saturday, June 11, 2022 at 8:15:44 PM UTC-7, The Starmaker wrote:
> From 1905
> Albert Einstein
> drew a straight line
> to 1939.
>
> To build an atomic bomb.
>
> First he had to assemble a team.
>
> He did that in the 1920's
> by teaching his students
> How to build an atomic bomb.

He didn't know himself.
That is why you are a liar.
The liar lies and it is not me
it is you...

Mitchell Raemsch

The Starmaker

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Jun 18, 2022, 3:54:33 PM6/18/22
to
Albert Einstein in 1905 who first 'hinted' of "a very interesting conclusion"
https://einsteinpapers.press.princeton.edu/vol2-trans/186

Now, "a very interesting conclusion" is also known as ...the aha! moment.

Visionary Einstein stumbles upon a idea...an atomic bomb.

That is the first stage.

The Second stage is:

"Perhaps it will prove possible to test this theory using bodies whose energy content is variable to a high degree (e.g., salts of radium). -- Albert Einstein (1905)

https://einsteinpapers.press.princeton.edu/vol2-trans/188

"... it will prove possible to test this theory"

Einstein's second stage, he draws up plans to 'test his theory' by drawing up plans to build an atomic bomb.
That means gather up a Team and Build Himself an Atomic Bomb and become what is known today as the CEO.

If his team has a problem like they need tons of Uranium, they come to him at his house and he delivers it.


https://hypertextbook.com/eworld/einstein/#first


CEO
/?se?e'o/
noun
a chief executive officer, the highest-ranking person in a company or other institution, ultimately responsible for making managerial decisions.



https://i.pinimg.com/originals/d0/8f/ac/d08fac53ac36120393aa5bc616c3768a.jpg

The Starmaker

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Jun 21, 2022, 12:27:46 PM6/21/22
to
Following a straight line Timeline from 1905 to 1939...

It's obvious that Albert Einstein was in the process gathering up a team..in the early 1920's


Enrico Fermi was intensively involved with Einstein's theory of relativity and traced the hidden power of atomic nuclei.
In 1923, he wrote that it would probably not be possible to release this energy in the near future, "because
the first effect would be an explosion so terrible that it would tear the physicist who tried it to pieces".
He himself was to unleash this energy two decades later.


In the 1920's when Albert Einstein was teaching his students
How To Build an Atomic Bomb...and what was needed was to
release this energy...

A student asked him..
"What do you need to make this happen?"

Einstein responded, "You start with Radium."


Oh, between 1905 and before the 1920's. Albert Einstein was busy
getting Uranium from that chick Madame Curie.


So, as you can see Albert Einstein was in discussions on...explosions that would tear you to pieces in the 1920's.


I would have to say...he was discussing it with...everyone! Whoever would listen.

The Starmaker

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Jun 21, 2022, 6:17:09 PM6/21/22
to
Now, do yous actually believe this is a BLOUSE that Albert Einstein file
a patent for in 1936????


https://patents.google.com/patent/USD101756?oq=USD101756-0




Of course not. Albert Einstein was tooo busy building his atomic bombs.

He had to come up with a way to protect others from being exposed to
URANIUM RADIATION.

So he simply designed a Radiation Vest Jacket:

It's not a blouse, it's a radiation vest!


http://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/pages/US5274851-2.png

https://patents.google.com/patent/US5274851A/en?oq=US5274851+

https://patents.google.com/patent/US8067759?oq=radiation+vest

https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/20160923_EOS_0467.jpg



don't forget, he spoke german..that means the word "blouse" might have a
different meaning..
meaning not having to do with 'women'.

The Starmaker

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Jun 25, 2022, 2:10:15 AM6/25/22
to
Certaintly Enrico Fermi drew a straight line from 1905 to 1939...(a little ahead of his time in 1923.)

Enrico Fermi was intensively involved with Einstein's theory of relativity and traced the hidden power of atomic nuclei.
In 1923, he wrote that it would probably not be possible to release this energy in the near future, "because
the first effect would be an explosion so terrible that it would tear the physicist who tried it to pieces".
He himself was to unleash this energy two decades later.




The Starmaker

unread,
Jul 10, 2022, 4:04:09 PM7/10/22
to
Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...

"If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, and challenge
the unchallengeable.

whodat

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Jul 10, 2022, 5:04:52 PM7/10/22
to
On 7/10/2022 3:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
> Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...
>
> "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
> formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein

There is so much made-up crap posted on Usenet that if you're going to
quote someone, anyone, like you claim to here, the only proper way to do
it is to cite one or more sources for the statement.

I won't accept what you have posted without at least two apparently
reliable sources. There's too much anti-Einstein crap posted here to
simply accept your posting without something more.

After the A bomb was used, Albert Einstein did state his regret:

“Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic
bomb, I would never have lifted a finger.”

https://time.com/5641891/einstein-szilard-letter/

For the moment I accept Time as a reliable source, although that could
change.

[...]

The Starmaker

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Jul 10, 2022, 9:26:39 PM7/10/22
to
Einstein said:
"If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein


Now, I don't understand that comment by Albert Einstein...

What difference does it make if it kills Germans of Japan? We went to war with both.
Japan attacked America.

Was Albert Einstein had some kind of Hatred of Germans??? Was it personal? He was with war with Germans all his life?

Who made Albert Einstein President of the Earth?

Does he think he can tell the United States what to do? Who to murder, who not to murder?


You give these little 'science guys' in their lab coats a little power and they want to blow up the Earth!

whodat

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Jul 10, 2022, 10:04:00 PM7/10/22
to
On 7/10/2022 7:41 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
> whodat wrote:
>>
>> On 7/10/2022 3:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
>>> Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...
>>>
>>> "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
>>> formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
>>
>> There is so much made-up crap posted on Usenet that if you're going to
>> quote someone, anyone, like you claim to here, the only proper way to do
>> it is to cite one or more sources for the statement.
>>
>> I won't accept what you have posted without at least two apparently
>> reliable sources. There's too much anti-Einstein crap posted here to
>> simply accept your posting without something more.
>>
>> After the A bomb was used, Albert Einstein did state his regret:
>>
>> “Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic
>> bomb, I would never have lifted a finger.â€
Thank you.


whodat

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Jul 10, 2022, 10:12:06 PM7/10/22
to
On 7/10/2022 8:26 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
> Einstein said:
> "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
> formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
>
>
> Now, I don't understand that comment by Albert Einstein...
>
> What difference does it make if it kills Germans of Japan? We went to war with both.
> Japan attacked America.
>
> Was Albert Einstein had some kind of Hatred of Germans??? Was it personal? He was with war with Germans all his life?
>
> Who made Albert Einstein President of the Earth?
>
> Does he think he can tell the United States what to do? Who to murder, who not to murder?
>
>
> You give these little 'science guys' in their lab coats a little power and they want to blow up the Earth!
>
>
>
>
>
>
> The Starmaker wrote:
>>
>> whodat wrote:
>>>
>>> On 7/10/2022 3:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
>>>> Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...
>>>>
>>>> "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
>>>> formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
>>>
>>> There is so much made-up crap posted on Usenet that if you're going to
>>> quote someone, anyone, like you claim to here, the only proper way to do
>>> it is to cite one or more sources for the statement.
>>>
>>> I won't accept what you have posted without at least two apparently
>>> reliable sources. There's too much anti-Einstein crap posted here to
>>> simply accept your posting without something more.


You might have a better understanding if you expose yourself by reading
"Mein Kampf" or at least enough of it to get the gist. One of the
difficulties in communicating in Usenet is that so many of the
participants refuse to familiarize themselves with sufficient
information to grasp matters under discussion in the correct historical
context.



>>> After the A bomb was used, Albert Einstein did state his regret:
>>>
>>> “Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic
>>> bomb, I would never have lifted a finger.â€

J. J. Lodder

unread,
Jul 11, 2022, 4:07:36 AM7/11/22
to
The Starmaker <star...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

> whodat wrote:
> >
> > On 7/10/2022 3:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
> > > Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...
> > >
> > > "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
> > > formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
> >
> > There is so much made-up crap posted on Usenet that if you're going to
> > quote someone, anyone, like you claim to here, the only proper way to do
> > it is to cite one or more sources for the statement.
> >
> > I won't accept what you have posted without at least two apparently
> > reliable sources. There's too much anti-Einstein crap posted here to
> > simply accept your posting without something more.
> >
> > After the A bomb was used, Albert Einstein did state his regret:
> >
> > ╲Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic
> > bomb, I would never have lifted a finger.╡
> >
> > https://time.com/5641891/einstein-szilard-letter/
> >
> > For the moment I accept Time as a reliable source, although that could
> > change.
> >
> > [...]
>
>
> https://www.google.com/search?q=%22If+I+had+foreseen+Hiroshima+and+Nagasaki,+I
+would+have+torn+up+my+formula+in+1905.%22&hl=en&gbv=2&sxsrf=ALiCzsbZ9OW4DJiF5RWZCgAHf5gkwViStA:1657499724062&source=lnms&tbm=bks&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiP4pHSy-_4AhVLj2oFHZZQCokQ_AUICygG
>
> https://books.google.com/books?newbks=0&id=0isgAQAAIAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolu
me&q=%22If+I+had+foreseen+Hiroshima+and+Nagasaki%2C+I+would+have+torn+up+my++formula+in+1905.%22+
>
> https://books.google.com/books?id=ZQsFEAAAQBAJ&newbks=0&printsec=frontcover&pg
=PA238&dq=%22If+I+had+foreseen+Hiroshima+and+Nagasaki,+I+would+have+torn+up+my+formula+in+1905.%22&hl=en#v=onepage&q=%22If%20I%20had%20foreseen%20Hiroshima%20and%20Nagasaki%2C%20I%20would%20have%20torn%20up%20my%20formula%20in%201905.%22&f=false

Crap, all of it. All 'quotes' are unsourced.
The author has just been grabbing stuff off the net.

BTW, he has produced a range of very similar books for other persons,
Oscar Wilde, Queen Elizabeth II and many more.

You get more reliable results by just askin Google directly,

Jan

The Starmaker

unread,
Jul 11, 2022, 1:20:32 PM7/11/22
to
Sorry, I didn't provide you with the braille version for the visually impaired...(and mentally impaired),

but one of the links are 'from Google" directly, and it points to

Professor Hermanns interviewed Einstein in Germany before World War II,
Einstein and the Poet: In Search of the Cosmic Man

https://books.google.com/books?id=0isgAQAAIAAJ&newbks=0&hl=en



https://books.google.com/books?newbks=0&id=0isgAQAAIAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=%22If+I+had+foreseen+Hiroshima+and+Nagasaki%2C+I+would+have+torn+up+my++formula+in+1905.%22


The author did not grab it from the net, he grabbed it from Einstein. The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.

Sorry, I didn't provide you with the braille version for the visually impaired...(and mentally impaired).

The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.

.... .. ... ..... .. ...
.. . . . . .... .. ... . .. .
. . . . . ...... .. . ... ... .... .... ... . ... ... there was no net then.


https://www.brailletranslator.org/


is there a translator for the mentality impaired?

The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.

whodat

unread,
Jul 11, 2022, 8:58:07 PM7/11/22
to
On 7/11/2022 12:20 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
> J. J. Lodder wrote:
>>
>> The Starmaker <star...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>>
>>> whodat wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 7/10/2022 3:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
>>>>> Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...
>>>>>
>>>>> "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
>>>>> formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
>>>>
>>>> There is so much made-up crap posted on Usenet that if you're going to
>>>> quote someone, anyone, like you claim to here, the only proper way to do
>>>> it is to cite one or more sources for the statement.
>>>>
>>>> I won't accept what you have posted without at least two apparently
>>>> reliable sources. There's too much anti-Einstein crap posted here to
>>>> simply accept your posting without something more.
>>>>
>>>> After the A bomb was used, Albert Einstein did state his regret:
>>>>
>>>> ╲Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic
>>>> bomb, I would never have lifted a finger.╡
"The U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) was the
first public packet-switched computer network. It was first used in
1969 and finally decommissioned in 1989. ARPANET's main use was for
academic and research purposes."

https://www.techtarget.com/searchnetworking/definition/ARPANET

The Starmaker

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Jul 11, 2022, 11:59:28 PM7/11/22
to
> > The author did not grab it from the net, he grabbed it from Einstein. The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
> >
> > Sorry, I didn't provide you with the braille version for the visually impaired...(and mentally impaired).
> >
> > The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
> >
> > .... .. ... ..... .. ...
> > .. . . . . .... .. ... . .. .
> > . . . . . ...... .. . ... ... .... .... ... . ... ... there was no net then.
> >
> >
> > https://www.brailletranslator.org/
> >
> >
> > is there a translator for the mentality impaired?
> >
> > The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
>
> "The U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) was the
> first public packet-switched computer network. It was first used in
> 1969 and finally decommissioned in 1989. ARPANET's main use was for
> academic and research purposes."
>
> https://www.techtarget.com/searchnetworking/definition/ARPANET


The first web page went live on August 6, 1991.


Net means Internet where you can download stuff like cracks and movies

"The author has just been grabbing stuff off the net." -J. J. Lodder


The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.





Ross A. Finlayson

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Jul 12, 2022, 1:04:41 AM7/12/22
to
I just figure he figured if he could be first to formulaically estimate,
upon fundamental principles, as or more accurate than others,
that matter-energy conversion, which is so highly dynamical as
to be expected to exist in the power regions of splitting the atom,
was that it was according to the sums of atomic numbers, in terms
of products in and out of what is the fission bomb.

Here the point seems a, "fission bomb calorimeter", in effect, though
these days people talk about "chemically assisted" and "lower energy",
nuclear fusion or nuclear activity.

Rays are pretty powerful in energy, results of rays and trans-uranic elements
is much the input and store on the Earth, energy.

Mostly mineral oil from carbon that's mineralized or petroleum, filled
the all the industrial age, while, that having the effect of spinning up
or down the Earth in effect and the solar blanket or global warming,
after smog, today results a fuel fleet and transition, for interchangeability.

The temperatures there is talk of them rising "degrees per century"
but even since the 80's, or, 50 years, or 18252 days, the degrees changed so
much that all new thermometers were issued and it's noticeable even
in the last 25 years, fives and tens of degrees higher, and more.

That's not to say that global warming is out of control, water's
the universal solvent and least viscous lubricant, basically with
the triple points of water and freezing and water and boiling,
making enough water go around for everybody is mostly also
too rainy everywhere for most.

Addition formula, ..., quadratic, ....


Reading the Wiki about "acceleration":

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acceleration_(special_relativity)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stress%E2%80%93energy_tensor
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proper_reference_frame_(flat_spacetime)
https://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath422/kmath422.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redox
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_electrode_potential_(data_page)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nernst_equation

I didn't write these but I am reading them.

whodat

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Jul 12, 2022, 1:23:17 PM7/12/22
to
On 7/11/2022 10:59 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
> whodat wrote:
>>
>> On 7/11/2022 12:20 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
>>> J. J. Lodder wrote:
>>>>
>>>> The Starmaker <star...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> whodat wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On 7/10/2022 3:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
>>>>>>> Here is another straight line drawn by Albert Einstein himself...
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> "If I had foreseen Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I would have torn up my
>>>>>>> formula in 1905." - Albert Einstein
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There is so much made-up crap posted on Usenet that if you're going to
>>>>>> quote someone, anyone, like you claim to here, the only proper way to do
>>>>>> it is to cite one or more sources for the statement.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I won't accept what you have posted without at least two apparently
>>>>>> reliable sources. There's too much anti-Einstein crap posted here to
>>>>>> simply accept your posting without something more.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> After the A bomb was used, Albert Einstein did state his regret:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ╲Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic
>>>>>> bomb, I would never have lifted a finger.╡
Thanks for redefining what "net" means to suit your purposes.

I'm done with this topic. Try to do better in future.

The Starmaker

unread,
Jul 12, 2022, 3:41:12 PM7/12/22
to
> >>> The author did not grab it from the net, he grabbed it from Einstein. The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
> >>>
> >>> Sorry, I didn't provide you with the braille version for the visually impaired...(and mentally impaired).
> >>>
> >>> The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
> >>>
> >>> .... .. ... ..... .. ...
> >>> .. . . . . .... .. ... . .. .
> >>> . . . . . ...... .. . ... ... .... .... ... . ... ... there was no net then.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> https://www.brailletranslator.org/
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> is there a translator for the mentality impaired?
> >>>
> >>> The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
> >>
> >> "The U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) was the
> >> first public packet-switched computer network. It was first used in
> >> 1969 and finally decommissioned in 1989. ARPANET's main use was for
> >> academic and research purposes."
> >>
> >> https://www.techtarget.com/searchnetworking/definition/ARPANET
> >
> >
> > The first web page went live on August 6, 1991.
> >
> >
> > Net means Internet where you can download stuff like cracks and movies
> >
> > "The author has just been grabbing stuff off the net." -J. J. Lodder
> >
> >
> > The book was published in 1983...there was no net then.
>
> Thanks for redefining what "net" means to suit your purposes.

It did not suit my purpose. J. J. Lodder wrote:

"The author has just been grabbing stuff off the net." -J. J. Lodder


How can an author grab stuff off the net if there were no webpages in 1983 to grab from???? Can you explain that to me?


Of course you cannot. It doesn't suit your purpose.



I's simply IMPOSSIBLE!

The Starmaker

unread,
Sep 10, 2022, 4:38:58 PM9/10/22
to
Here is another straight line....

"That weapon has a direct link to Einstein's three-page paper. In a
nuclear fission reaction, an atomic nucleus splits, resulting in a
reduced overall mass of matter, which is emitted in the form of
released energy."



https://books.google.com/books/publisher/content?id=beczEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT103&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&bul=1&sig=ACfU3U0doVFp-NdYMPAN4NynNdyiGgubPw&w=1280


On Sun, 10 Jul 2022 13:04:10 -0700, The Starmaker

The Starmaker

unread,
Sep 12, 2022, 2:27:57 AM9/12/22
to
Here is another straight line...


On 6 August 1945, while vacationing at Lake Saranac, the author of the
Theory of Relativity overheard a radio announcement of the destruction
of Hiroshima: the horrific, spectacular proof of his 1905 equation of
equivalence: E = mc2.
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