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2010-05-30
, 03:15
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Posts: 1,667 |
Thanked: 561 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#61
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2010-05-30
, 03:20
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Posts: 609 |
Thanked: 243 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Eastern USA
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#62
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If the British didn't rape every nation they colonized, I'd be fine with it
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2010-05-30
, 03:21
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Posts: 1,667 |
Thanked: 561 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#63
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2010-06-01
, 16:38
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Posts: 1,296 |
Thanked: 1,773 times |
Joined on Aug 2009
@ Budapest, Hungary
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#64
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That's an awfully broad generalization for a country of nearly 400 million people.
Can you label a map of the 50 US states? Many of which are larger than most European countries. How about South American? Africa? Asia?
Everybody has their own degree of geocentricism. It's hardly a trait unique to Americans.
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2010-06-01
, 20:43
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Posts: 609 |
Thanked: 243 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Eastern USA
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#65
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Sorry for the late reply.
Actually, yes, I can.
At school, we had to learn the location of all countries in the world, and the location of their capital city.
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2010-06-01
, 20:50
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Posts: 62 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on May 2010
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#66
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2010-06-01
, 20:53
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Posts: 62 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on May 2010
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#67
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Nowadays, mostly everyone has to do that. It can't be used as a ruler for ignorance anymore. (Although, in the rare case when people can't name a single country in a given region, it's quite laughable now.)
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2010-06-01
, 21:15
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Posts: 609 |
Thanked: 243 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Eastern USA
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#68
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I'll never forget when one of the less gifted girls in my 10th grade history class was asked to stand beside the wall map and point to the areas being named, and she was utterly stumped by the first one:
ASIA.
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2010-06-01
, 21:41
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Posts: 1,667 |
Thanked: 561 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#69
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2010-06-01
, 21:51
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Posts: 36 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ Phoenix, Arizona
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#70
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