|
WAFFLEHOUND posted:This has got to be an American map because it's drawing the bullshit diagonal line that cuts off the Canadian coast off of Alaska. Seriously, look at that poo poo, the border is a straight line and then WHOOPS LETS CLAIM THE COAST AT AN ANGLE RIGHT WHERE THERE'S OIL! What are you talking about? Yes, the border jaunts off at an inexplicable angle, but it doesn't net the US any more oil.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 18:23 |
|
|
# ? May 3, 2024 00:14 |
|
WAFFLEHOUND posted:This has got to be an American map because it's drawing the bullshit diagonal line that cuts off the Canadian coast off of Alaska. Seriously, look at that poo poo, the border is a straight line and then WHOOPS LETS CLAIM THE COAST AT AN ANGLE RIGHT WHERE THERE'S OIL! I'm almost certain it's from The Economist actually. It definitely doesn't look very equidistant though.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 18:31 |
|
a pipe smoking dog posted:I'm almost certain it's from The Economist actually. It definitely doesn't look very equidistant though.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 19:48 |
|
I'm glad they decided to build the arms factory in one of the least defensible areas in the town.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:13 |
|
Varkk posted:Fantasy political maps Who is John Parker and why does he have a green named after him?
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:18 |
|
Dr. Tough posted:Who is John Parker and why does he have a green named after him? My guess is that it references John Parker, commander of the Revolutionary forces at Lexington Green.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:21 |
Freudian posted:What are you talking about? Yes, the border jaunts off at an inexplicable angle, but it doesn't net the US any more oil. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_claims_in_the_Arctic#Beaufort_Sea It's probably one of the more stupid examples of US trying to redraw a border advantageous for oil rights, because clearly the border isn't drawn that way between the Yukon and Alaska and it's basically drawn so that right at the ocean boundary you can go straight out from Canada and end up in the U.S. in basically no time at all. I mean, the whole "The Northwest Passage isn't sovereign Canadian territory and we should be allowed to send our military weaving through Canadian islands as part of international waters" is directly dumber but this one is still pretty bad.
|
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:21 |
|
Elim Garak posted:My guess is that it references John Parker, commander of the Revolutionary forces at Lexington Green. That makes sense
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:23 |
|
Is an equidistant maritime boundary that crazy? With the Canadian proposal if you follow the land border out to sea you stay on the border, but with the American proposal, if you head out to sea perpendicular to the coast you stay in whatever country you were in.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:25 |
tractor fanatic posted:Is an equidistant maritime boundary that crazy? With the Canadian proposal if you follow the land border out to sea you stay on the border, but with the American proposal, if you head out to sea perpendicular to the coast you stay in whatever country you were in. It's literally a pair of alluvial fans right there, that's not exactly stable land. And it just happens that this is the only border that the U.S. is trying to pull this thing with when it just happens to be right over a really oil rich region should say something. In pretty much every other case they just draw it out reasonably from the land borders instead of this weird oblique thing. e. https://maps.google.com/?ll=69.629618,-140.951843&spn=0.209614,0.983963&t=h&z=11 ee. Remember that coastlines are a fractal problem, so drawing a border straight out from a coastline is really really really hard to do. WAFFLEHOUND fucked around with this message at 20:41 on Feb 7, 2013 |
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:36 |
|
We will fight them yanks for every drop of sweet light crude whale oil.
|
# ? Feb 7, 2013 20:47 |
|
Smirr posted:"The Polynesians are generally Barbarous & Pagan" That map is really great. Seems to me to be quite obvious that the nationalities and genders are tied to the types of job historically on offer. Turkish immigrant labourers were mostly male, similar story with Italians (same as in Switzerland), both groups being brought over to do mostly manual labour. The US military has had a large presence in Germany, again mostly male. Female immigrant labourers were brought for service jobs, especially in nursing, where language skills would be required. This would obviously favour those from ex-Soviet states where German was a favoured second language and with a solid education system.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 00:23 |
|
Bensa posted:Seems to me to be quite obvious that the nationalities and genders are tied to the types of job historically on offer. Turkish immigrant labourers were mostly male, similar story with Italians (same as in Switzerland), both groups being brought over to do mostly manual labour. The US military has had a large presence in Germany, again mostly male. Female immigrant labourers were brought for service jobs, especially in nursing, where language skills would be required. This would obviously favour those from ex-Soviet states where German was a favoured second language and with a solid education system. Yeah, all good points. All that, plus simply neighboring countries like Austria for Bavaria, Poland for Brandenburg and the Netherlands for Lower Saxony / NRW. The non-joke about catalog brides was mostly aimed at the presence of Thailand in the lower right map. But then again, the sample size for those two states is really small to begin with.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 00:41 |
|
Angiepants posted:I enjoy this thread immensely. Thanks all y'all. Unfortunately, this is all I have to contribute. But.. you've only given Tibet proper away! To be really politically loaded you need to give all of greater tibet away!
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 00:53 |
|
Budzilla posted:This should have been posted in the OP. PNAC redrawing of the ME. The Dammam territory was give to Saudi Arabia a while ago so the UAE still having that piece looks like a gain to me. Also everyone forgot Arab Shia State
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 03:29 |
Fizzil posted:Also everyone forgot Arab Shia State Except those people who pointed it out.
|
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 04:41 |
|
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 06:46 |
|
I'd just like to say that as a proud Wisconsinite, I can truly understand the Palestinian struggle. The Toledo War had nothing to do with us, we didn't take sides so we don't deserve censure (or reward, but we aren't asking for a reward). Despite that, our land was taken from us and given to a foreign power, utterly unlike us. I understand that the current residents of the UP are also blameless in this struggle, they have a right to live there, of course. To visit that injustice upon them would be to recreate the same injustice that was imposed upon us and that would be the height of barbarism. Thankfully, if you look at the current culture of the UP, you will see that it is 'Sconie to the core. As I recall, the self-determination of nations is one of the 14 points. So, all I'm saying is that there should be a plebiscite to determine whether the UP remains with the foreign occupiers at Michigan or recognize their true status as Wisconsinites. Naturally, Wisconsin Militia members need to be present in the UP to ensure that the vote is fair and that Michiganders do not use force to influence the vote. Of course, that is a pipe-dream for the future. I know it won't happen immediately. However, with the help of the Wisconsin Militia I have been able to establish a small settlement within our ancestral territory. When the plebiscite comes, these will be instrumental in ensuring that Greater Wisconsin can thrive.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 07:21 |
|
Have you noticed the GOP is all but dead at the state level in California? Well, political entrepreneur and Riverside County Supervisor Jeff Stone has and plan to do something about that! No, it's not "treat Hispanics with dignity." It's a secessionist movement! Behold, the glorious state of South California: This thread has been fascinating, I've been learning so much.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 07:43 |
|
Ammat The Ankh posted:This thread has been fascinating, I've been learning so much. There was almost a war over this proposed state: Largely because the people of franklin were like "gently caress all y'all we are seceding from your state"
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 07:49 |
|
Ammat The Ankh posted:Have you noticed the GOP is all but dead at the state level in California? Well, political entrepreneur and Riverside County Supervisor Jeff Stone has and plan to do something about that! No, it's not "treat Hispanics with dignity." It's a secessionist movement! Behold, the glorious state of South California: Why'd they stop the Central Valley secession at Merced?
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 08:02 |
|
A small, inaccurately-named Balkan country, dreaming of greater things:
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 08:26 |
|
Kavak posted:Why'd they stop the Central Valley secession at Merced? Merced is a dirty Liberal stronghold. But according to the 08 election map so is Fresno, San Diego, and Riverside so who knows. Ammat The Ankh fucked around with this message at 09:01 on Feb 8, 2013 |
# ? Feb 8, 2013 08:39 |
|
The Sin of Onan posted:Macedonia Isn't one of the platforms of the Golden Dawn "invade Macedonia and make them change their name" ? I remember hearing that.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 08:43 |
|
Red_Mage posted:Isn't one of the platforms of the Golden Dawn "invade Macedonia and make them change their name" ? Greece is Mad About Names and refuses to allow Macedonia into any IGOs that require consensus under the name Macedonia, hence why they are "Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" in the United Nations et al. I hear it's really all because of who gets to claim Alexander as their own, but I don't know if that's true (though it sounds silly enough to be plausible).
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 08:47 |
|
Wait, aren't modern Macedonians of Slavic origin? I thought the Slavs didn't leave the Urals until like, 800 years after Alexander died.
TheIllestVillain fucked around with this message at 13:19 on Feb 8, 2013 |
# ? Feb 8, 2013 08:55 |
|
eSports Chaebol posted:Greece is Mad About Names and refuses to allow Macedonia into any IGOs that require consensus under the name Macedonia, hence why they are "Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" in the United Nations et al. I hear it's really all because of who gets to claim Alexander as their own, but I don't know if that's true (though it sounds silly enough to be plausible). Basically. It's a slap-fight about who was a bad enough dude to take down the Persian Empire. It's a giant oneupmanship contest; the Greeks get mad about Macedonia's name, so the Macedonians rename their airport after Alexander. The Greeks build a giant statue of him, so the Macedonians fly some Pakistani tribe supposedly descended from Greek/Macedonian colonists into their country and hold a big homecoming festival. I heard the Greeks were planning on making a giant Mount-Rushmore-esque Alexander the Great mountain-bust a while back. The debt crisis put an end to that one, I think. TheIllestVillain posted:Wait, aren't modern Macedonians of Slavic origin? The Slavs didn't leave the Urals until like, 800 years after Alexander died. Very probably. The migrating Slavs probably intermarried with the local population, but the ancient kingdom of Macedonia was well outside the borders of the modern republic anyway, so there probably isn't any real link. Red_Mage posted:Isn't one of the platforms of the Golden Dawn "invade Macedonia and make them change their name" ? Ha! Hadn't heard that one. Those crazy Greek Nazis! What will they think of next?
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 09:13 |
|
The Sin of Onan posted:Basically. It's a slap-fight about who was a bad enough dude to take down the Persian Empire. It's a giant oneupmanship contest; the Greeks get mad about Macedonia's name, so the Macedonians rename their airport after Alexander. The Greeks build a giant statue of him, so the Macedonians fly some Pakistani tribe supposedly descended from Greek/Macedonian colonists into their country and hold a big homecoming festival. It must've been the Kalash people who live in the Chitral region along the border of Afghanistan. During the Great Game, the British came up with the idea that they and other ethnic groups in the region (Pashtuns mostly) must descend from Greeks because they can look white on occasion. Of course this was bunk and it turns out they're native to the area.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 09:41 |
|
For all the complaining about the perceived racism in the flat projections, I gotta say its a significant improvement over whatever the gently caress Coppo was using. Africa looking like an upscaled Norway is pretty boss though. Other highlights include a coral reef shaped Ireland, the English channel separating England and Scotland, Korea just flat out not existing, and Mauritius being the same size as Madagascar. Red_Mage fucked around with this message at 10:02 on Feb 8, 2013 |
# ? Feb 8, 2013 09:57 |
|
Another way to divide up Antartica. I believe this stems from the UK using the Falklands as the base of a claim, saying they had southern facing coastline that faces directly at Antartica, delineated by longitude.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 10:53 |
|
TheIllestVillain posted:Wait, aren't modern Macedonians of Slavic origin? The Slavs didn't leave the Urals until like, 800 years after Alexander died. Well they speak Bulgarian so basically they are just Bulgarians who through a quirk of history ended up in a State of Serbo-Croat speakers in a region the Ottomans called Macedonia because it was in vaguely the same area as Macedonia. That whole region is just ridiculous; did you know Serbs, Croats, and Bosnians are all ethnically the same and speak the same language? The only difference is their religion. e: Albanians and Kosovars are a whole different kettle of fish though.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 12:02 |
|
TheIllestVillain posted:Wait, aren't modern Macedonians of Slavic origin? The Slavs didn't leave the Urals until like, 800 years after Alexander died. I'm bad at/casually interested in ethnography, and I remember reading about Slav tribes living south of Denmark during the first century, noted in correspondences amongst Roman military leaders. Is this not true, or is there some distinction between North and South Slavs that's applicable?
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 13:07 |
|
This Jacket Is Me posted:I'm bad at/casually interested in ethnography, and I remember reading about Slav tribes living south of Denmark during the first century, noted in correspondences amongst Roman military leaders. Is this not true, or is there some distinction between North and South Slavs that's applicable? Slavs probably originated from the Ukraine, and probably didn't start major expansion until the 4th-5th century. You're likely thinking of the Saxons.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 13:27 |
|
This Jacket Is Me posted:I'm bad at/casually interested in ethnography, and I remember reading about Slav tribes living south of Denmark during the first century, noted in correspondences amongst Roman military leaders. Is this not true, or is there some distinction between North and South Slavs that's applicable?
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 13:32 |
|
a pipe smoking dog posted:Well they speak Bulgarian so basically they are just Bulgarians who through a quirk of history ended up in a State of Serbo-Croat speakers in a region the Ottomans called Macedonia because it was in vaguely the same area as Macedonia. The whole issue, in typical Balkans style, has been blown completely out of proportion. The Macedonians are a Slavic group who inhabit what was in antiquity Upper Macedonia, but which was called Macedonia by the Ottomans. They have called themselves and been known as Macedonians for centuries now. When the Slavs moved to this region, they intermixed with the various populations that had lived their previously in antiquity, and thus the population does have some indirect link to the ancient Macedonians, though if you wanted to identify the majority of the "true" descendents (whatever that means - genetic descendants?) of the ancient Macedonians, you'd have to look to what is now northern Greece. During the post-Ottoman period, the Greeks wanted to re-assert their links to the ancient past, and they began a campaign of, for instance, re-naming places according to what was believed to be their ancient names. This led to the ridiculous notion that there can only be one "historical" Macedonia in northern Greece - despite the fact that this was Lower Macedonia in antiquity and FYROM was Upper Macedonia. At this time, the Macedonians made little claim to Alexander or the ancient kingdom of Macedon. When archaeology really became prevalent in both countries, however, the antipathy intensified, and in the process the ethnic identities of the inhabitants of FYROM and Greece as we know them today were formed, then hardened. This whole conflict is especially ironic considering the constant fighting in antiquity over whether the Macedonians were Greek or not. (The concept of Greekness was constantly changing throughout antiquity, so it's a stupid point anyway!) It's kind of like the French claiming a "Gallic" identity, despite the fact that modern France comprised only one part of the area inhabited by Gallic peoples in antiquity, and that massive population movements since antiquity (including the invasion of the Franks, who gave the country its name) have brought various peoples into this region since. Basically, ethnicity is a flexible, political category that is constantly defined in opposition to other groups! A politically-loaded pro-FYROM map of ancient Macedonia before its expansion under Philip II, father of Alexander the Great, claiming a "historical ethnic Macedonia" as if that was some concrete entity that was somehow invaded and occupied already in prehistory by non-Macedonian peoples.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 14:48 |
|
http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/02/07/fox_news_expert_on_solar_energy_germany_gets_a_lot_more_sun_than_we_do_video.html
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 15:05 |
|
Not political, more social. Certainly interesting if you want to know how far certain cities influence spreads: The United States, divided by the most popular NFL team in each area (according to Facebook likes) http://deadspin.com/5979970/facebook-data-provides-the-most-accurate-nfl-fandom-map-ever-created Does this ring true? I like how much of the Upper Peninsula is Packers territory and how Hawaii is apparently hardcore Steelers country. And how the Jets have just one small segment of Long Island where their fans dominate
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 15:44 |
|
Andy Impey posted:Not political, more social. Certainly interesting if you want to know how far certain cities influence spreads: The United States, divided by the most popular NFL team in each area (according to Facebook likes) From the looks of things, I guess regions without their own franchises generally default to "Steelers fans" or "Cowboys fans" depending on some arcane formula. I do like the voids where people presumably don't watch football (or don't answer surveys), and how certain fandoms stop dead right at the state line.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 15:59 |
|
I'm really surprised at how popular the Steelers are in the Carolinas, it's not like there's no local team.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 16:12 |
|
|
# ? May 3, 2024 00:14 |
|
The Monkey Man posted:I'm really surprised at how popular the Steelers are in the Carolinas, it's not like there's no local team. Well North Carolina does have a fair amount of Northern transplants in Research Triangle, plus there's also the bandwagon effect. I fully expect to see an uptick in Ravens fans here in Florida.
|
# ? Feb 8, 2013 16:21 |