• Why Do 'alt-right' trolls Lack Intellect? Because they're 'ambitiou

    From Ted@21:1/5 to Steve on Tue Apr 18 20:46:26 2017
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.society.liberalism, alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian
    XPost: aus.politics

    Steve <stevencanyon@yahooooo.com> wrote:
    On Tue, 18 Apr 2017 00:37:52 GMT, Ted <Sam.M.Tedesco@gmail.com> wrote:

    Steve <stevencanyon@yahooooo.com> wrote:
    On Mon, 17 Apr 2017 19:13:32 -0500, Man of Mind
    <baron.von.mind@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 4/17/2017 6:18 PM, TedSlaphead whined in harmony with:
    StupidSteve <stevencanyon@yahoo.com> whimpered for attention:

    Lochner asked what makes a capacitor work

    No, I didn't..

    I told him it was electromagnetic force.... It is....

    And you were right

    No he wasn't..

    Yes, you were right, Steve.

    I know..


    Kurt doesn't know what the electromagnetic force is.

    And his comment above proves it. But there's no point backing him into a
    corner because he'll never admit when he's made an error, he'll just lie
    and claim he knew the right answer all along. He's therefore not worth the >> waste of time.


    He's still claiming all the university sites are wrong.. example
    below

    "According to Faraday's law, a changing magnetic field can create an electric field"
    http://maxwell.ucdavis.edu/~electro/faraday/overview.html


    "I'll be sure to write the ucdavis.edu site tomorrow, m'kay?
    Rest assured that they'll be correcting that shortly, because
    it's completely wrong, "
    Kurt Licknob challenging ucdavis.edu knowledge of Faraday's law. https://groups.google.com/group/alt.society.liberalism/msg/e3f66eb534b82eae?hl=en


    The poor loser still claims that DC transmission lines have inductive loses...

    I'd have to guess they don't, at least not for linear current flow. But
    Kurt knows the magnetic field is perpendicular to the current (although he
    gets the direction reversed) so I wonder why he said that.




    Poor Kurt. One usually learns about the four forces of
    nature, including electromagnetic force in high school
    science class but somehow, dimwitted Kurt "got a physics degree"
    but never learned that electromagnetic force is behind
    all electric phenomena.

    https://www.britannica.com/science/electromagnetism#ref659547
    "Electromagnetism, science of charge and of the forces and
    fields associated with charge. Electricity and magnetism
    are two aspects of electromagnetism."

    http://energyeducation.ca/encyclopedia/Coulomb%27s_law
    Coulomb's law states that "like charges repel, and unlike
    charges attract," but the more complete form determines
    the strength of the Coulomb force; Coulomb's law shows
    how strong the push or pull (the force) is between two
    points of charge, like a proton and electron in an atom.
    Coulomb's law is the simplest case of the electromagnetic
    force, one of the four fundamental forces.

    https://www.britannica.com/science/electromagnetism
    Electromagnetism, science of charge and of the forces and
    fields associated with charge. Electricity and magnetism
    are two aspects of electromagnetism.

    http://www.school-for-champions.com/science/electromagnetism.htm#.WNl17rjavcc
    At the subatomic level, electromagnetism is defined as the
    force between electrically charged particles.

    Your cites are valid, Steve, except for the last one. The author makes
    several errors.

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