Terrence Howard, who famously contended that one plus one equals two, claims to be transforming the world. Terrence Howard claims to have created a new hydrogen technology for Uganda’s military. The American actor recently visited Uganda after being invited by Uganda’s minister of agriculture, animal industry, and Fisheries, Frank Tumwebaze.
Howard briefly left the six-season television series Empire in 2019 and has been outspoken about his scientific pursuits, going viral that same year for declaring on the red carpet that he had made some breakthroughs in my own life with the science that, you all know, Pythagoras was hunting for.
The American actor visited Uganda this week at the request of Uganda’s Minister of Agriculture, Animal Industry, and Fisheries, Frank Tumwebaze. Tumwebaze posted on Twitter that Howard was in Uganda to” discover Uganda’s uniqueness and share the gospel”.
Howard went on to say that by using cutting-edge drone technology, he would be able to clean the ocean and Protect Uganda from exploitation. In a 2021 news release, he dubbed this apparatus The Lynchpin and claimed that the technology was protected by 86 patents. The Actor is notorious for making big scientific and technological claims that are frequently not supported by extensive proof of concept. Terrence Howard felt that one time one does not equal one, according to a 2015 Rolling Stone story. Instead, he held the belief that one time one equals two.
It is uncertain how or if Howard’s ambitions for Uganda would be realized, but he remained optimistic in his presentation saying,” The essential aim is to protect the sovereignty of a peaceful land and a peaceful people without having to lose our young men’s lives.”
While a portion of Howard’s speech was uploaded on Twitter by Uganda Broadcasting Corporation and is now making the rounds, hazy assertions like incorporating “the grand unified field equation” into geometry were most likely not the message they wanted to share.