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Army of GOD wrote:I don't consider Ohio to be the midwest. Not really Michigan either. I guess it depends on your perception
though, keep in mind the original 13 colonies were all on the east coast, so EVERYTHING was west.
notyou2 wrote:I never understood why Michigan and Ohio are considered "mid-west" when in fact they are much closer to the east coast. Perhaps a new term is needed. Easterly west, or early west. Maybe east of west or far-westerly east US.
To me the "west" should start at Minnesota/North Dakota border, and mid west would be like Montana and Idaho.
In Canada the "west" starts at Ontario/Manitoba border (Manitoba is considered western Canada, and Ontario is considered eastern Canada), WHICH MAKES SENSE WHEN LOOKING AT A MAP.
Are y'all dumbasses?
patches70 wrote:notyou2 wrote:I never understood why Michigan and Ohio are considered "mid-west" when in fact they are much closer to the east coast. Perhaps a new term is needed. Easterly west, or early west. Maybe east of west or far-westerly east US.
To me the "west" should start at Minnesota/North Dakota border, and mid west would be like Montana and Idaho.
In Canada the "west" starts at Ontario/Manitoba border (Manitoba is considered western Canada, and Ontario is considered eastern Canada), WHICH MAKES SENSE WHEN LOOKING AT A MAP.
Are y'all dumbasses?
You're knowledge of American history is shockingly inadequate.
"The West" in the context you are referring comes from the 1600's and is also known as the "American Frontier". This generally means anything west of the Mississippi river. Anything on the west side of the Mississippi is referred to as "the West" and the idea still persists until even today.
Instead of suggesting changing terms to suit your ignorance perhaps you could instead learn something about what you are talking about?
How's that for a suggestion?
patches70 wrote:
notyou2 wrote:patches70 wrote:notyou2 wrote:I never understood why Michigan and Ohio are considered "mid-west" when in fact they are much closer to the east coast. Perhaps a new term is needed. Easterly west, or early west. Maybe east of west or far-westerly east US.
To me the "west" should start at Minnesota/North Dakota border, and mid west would be like Montana and Idaho.
In Canada the "west" starts at Ontario/Manitoba border (Manitoba is considered western Canada, and Ontario is considered eastern Canada), WHICH MAKES SENSE WHEN LOOKING AT A MAP.
Are y'all dumbasses?
You're knowledge of American history is shockingly inadequate.
"The West" in the context you are referring comes from the 1600's and is also known as the "American Frontier". This generally means anything west of the Mississippi river. Anything on the west side of the Mississippi is referred to as "the West" and the idea still persists until even today.
Instead of suggesting changing terms to suit your ignorance perhaps you could instead learn something about what you are talking about?
How's that for a suggestion?
Not my fault you're a moron and don't know east from west. Don't take it out on me. I never called you the asshole you seem to be.
PS: Canadians know a hell of a lot more about US history than many Americans know about there own history. Most Americans care nothing of the wider world about them. Who are really the ignorant asses? Oh and fuckyou patches. I didn't mean to press on your one last nerve youcunt.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
jgordon1111 wrote:Wow this thread went south real fast
KoolBak wrote:lol. I agree with Not...we're not living in the fucking 18th century...The Old West is a historical period thang. Should be Western, Eastern and Central, divied approx at Idaho eastern border and Illinois eastern border. Bam.
What gets me is the lingering South vs North that the "South" still clings to from the civil war like a starving dog and a tasty bone. WTF...I'm an Oregonian, thus a "Yank"? lol And the "South" encompasses a huge portion of the usa. I propose the northern border of say Alabama and the southern border of Minnesota for North, Central and South.
Whatever.....damnable south and east anyway
patches70 wrote:
notyou2 wrote:patches70 wrote:
The hat seems to be failing to keep America's head warm.
FYI:
- Canada and the US have the longest undefended border in the world
- They are the largest trading partners in the world
- We add about 10% to your economy, indirectly employing approximately 10% of your work force
- Many Canadians have second homes in the US
- We are your largest single tourist group
notyou2 wrote:
There was also Upper and Lower Canada. Upper Canada became Ontario, and Lower Canada became Quebec, which are actually reversed when you look at a map, Quebec being up and Ontario being down. So we had misnomers as well.
Dukasaur wrote:notyou2 wrote:
There was also Upper and Lower Canada. Upper Canada became Ontario, and Lower Canada became Quebec, which are actually reversed when you look at a map, Quebec being up and Ontario being down. So we had misnomers as well.
It's not a misnomer. Upper and Lower Canada has nothing to do with North and South. Upper Canada was Upper because it was the highlands, up the river (the St. Lawrence RIver) and Lower Canada was Lower because it was the lowlands, down toward the mouth of the river. In a time when virtually all commerce had to move either upriver or downriver, it was far more significant to identify which way was up than which way was north.
notyou2 wrote:Dukasaur wrote:notyou2 wrote:
There was also Upper and Lower Canada. Upper Canada became Ontario, and Lower Canada became Quebec, which are actually reversed when you look at a map, Quebec being up and Ontario being down. So we had misnomers as well.
It's not a misnomer. Upper and Lower Canada has nothing to do with North and South. Upper Canada was Upper because it was the highlands, up the river (the St. Lawrence RIver) and Lower Canada was Lower because it was the lowlands, down toward the mouth of the river. In a time when virtually all commerce had to move either upriver or downriver, it was far more significant to identify which way was up than which way was north.
It's a matter of perspective Duk. I was talking about the "midwest" and looking at a map. When looking at a map, lower Canada is UP and upper Canada is DOWN.
I honestly thought you would understand that. I wasn't reasoning why it was such, I know why. Now go prattle somewhere else.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
KoolBak wrote:I love Canadians
KoolBak wrote:I love Canadians
Dukasaur wrote:Duk wrote blah blah blah blah
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