Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Nebraska: The Cornhusker State

  • Alternate Nicknames
    • Beef State
    • Treeplanter State
  • Capital: Lincoln
  • Major Cities
    • Omaha
    • Grand Island
    • North Platte
  • Major Geographic Features
    • Missouri River
    • Platte River
      • The North and South Platte Rivers converge in Nebraska to form the Platte River
    • Badlands
    • Sand Hills
    • Great Plains
  • Nebraska is not home to any national parks
  • 1803: The United States gains control of present-day Nebraska with the Louisiana Purchase
  • 1854: The Kansas-Nebraska Act provides the format of governing the Nebraska Territory through popular sovereignty
  • 1865: The Transcontinental Railroad passes through Omaha
  • 1867: Nebraska becomes the 37th state
  • Nebraska is the only state with a unicameral legislature
    • Nebraska has one house of representatives and no state senate
  • Motto: "Equality before Law"
  • Official Drink: Kool-Aid
    • 1927: Kool-Aid was created in Hastings, Nebraska
  • Name Origin
    • Oto Indian language for "Flat water"
  • Hebron, Nebraska is home to the world's largest porch swing
  • 95% of the state is farms and ranches
  • More than 33% of the state's population lives in Omaha and Lincoln
  • Famous People
    • Gerald Ford
    • Malcolm X
    • Buffalo Bill

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Zimbabwe Gives an Early Christmas Gift

This week Zimbabwe has given its people an early Christmas gift. After abandoning its original currency five years ago, Zimbabwe currently uses the US dollar and the South African rand as its currency despite very few coins of these money in circulation. As a result, most shoppers were simply given arbitrary items for change such as candy. So, leading up to Christmas, this week the central bank of Zimbabwe reintroduced coins of the original Zimbabwe dollar into circulation. However, the government insists that the nation will not return to using the Zimbabwe dollar in the near future.

The economy of Zimbabwe grew unstable in the latter part of the first decade of the 21st century. Hyperinflation caused the government to start printing Zimbabwe dollar notes worth $100 trillion. Prices fluctuated hourly, and 80% of the population was unemployed. Abandoning the Zimbabwe dollar in favor of the US dollar and South African rand has helped stabilize the economy, though many Zimbabweans still face harsh financial difficulties.

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Geopolitics of the Papacy

The Catholic Church is emerging as a world diplomatic influence again after the relatively dormant papacy of Benedict XVI. United States President Barack Obama announced this week that he and Cuban president Raul Castro have agreed to reopen American-Cuban relations and that this agreement was brokered by Pope Francis.

It makes sense that Pope Francis would make his first attempts at diplomacy in the Western Hemisphere. Francis is the first Latin American pope and the first pope from outside of Europe since Gregory III of Syria in 741. Unlike Pope John Paul II, who is famous for condemning communism in Easter Europe after growing up a Pole in communist Poland, Francis isn't from Europe and therefore isn't as familiar with European problems and diplomacy. Instead, Francis chose an arena that he is familiar with as the former Archbishop of Buenos Aires - the Americas. So, Francis and the Vatican diplomats facilitated the talks between the United States and Cuba, ending over 50 years of cold relations between the two nations.

However, Francis is not limited to the troubles of the Western Hemisphere. The Vatican's location in the heart of Italy allows him to address the geopolitical issues of Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. In fact, Francis has already begun calling for a halt of religious persecution in the Middle East and successfully called for the release of Meriam Ibrahim, an Ethiopian Christian sentenced to death for her faith. While these examples demonstrate this pope's willingness to call out for those in need around the world, they do not actually involve any concrete diplomacy and influence as the United States-Cuba agreement did. However, such options will  be available to Francis now that he has already started work as a world diplomat.

As previously mentioned, the Vatican used to enjoy a large influence on world politics. From before the Middle Ages and into the Reformation, the Papacy had a large amount of authority over governments as it was considered to be the ultimate religious authority on earth. After the unification of Italy (of which the Pope did not approve), the Vatican lost its influence over politics until the rise of the fascists in Italy in the 1920's when the Vatican became a separate entity with the Lateran Treaty. However, the Vatican was not nearly restored to its previous prestige and influence until the papacy of John Paul II who was an ardent anti-communist. In the 1980's, the work of John Paul II as a diplomat was so important that many consider him to be as important as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan in the fall of communism in Eastern Europe. John Paul II's successor was rather inactive in world diplomacy, but with this move by Pope Francis to reopen United States-Cuba relations, the Vatican may be returning as leader of world politics.

Monday, December 15, 2014

Belarus

  • Capital: Minsk
  • Major City: Homyel
  • Major Geographical Features
    • Belorussian Ridge
    • Polatsk Lowland
    • Polesye Marshes
  • Official Name: Republic of Belarus
    • Formerly: The Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic
  • Religion: Eastern Orthodox (80%)
  • Languages:
    • Byelorussian 
    • Russian
  • Independence: 1991 from the Soviet Union
  • Government: republic by name, when the nation is in fact a dictatorship
  • Currency: Belorussian ruble (BYB/BYR)
  • Kansas is slightly larger than Belarus
  • Literacy: 99.6%
  • Climate: cold winters with cool summers
  • Landlocked
  • Belarus has a lot of glacial scoring, leading to over 1,000 lakes
  • Home to large deposits of granite, limestone, marble, chalk, sand, gravel, and clay
  • Belarus has the strongest political ties to Russia of the former Soviet republics 
  • Minsk is home to the headquarters of the Commonwealth of Independent States
  • Belarus means "White Russia"
  • 70% of the radiation from the Chernobyl incident is in Belarus
  • Exports
    • Cars
    • Iron
    • Steel

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Virginia: Old Dominion

  • Alternate Nicknames: Mother of Presidents
  • Capital: Richmond
  • Major Cities:
    • Alexandria
    • Arlington
    • Charlottesville
    • Virginia Beach
    • Norfolk
  • Major Geographical Features
    • Atlantic Ocean
    • Chesapeake Bay
    • Potomac River
    • James River
    • Shenandoah River
    • Blue Ridge Mountains
  • National Parks: Shenandoah National Park
  • 1607: Jamestown becomes the 1st permanent British settlement in the Americas
  • 1781: Lord Cornwallis surrenders to George Washington at Yorktown, Virginia
    • Ends the American Revolution
  • 1788: Virginia becomes the 10th state
  • 1861: Virginia becomes the 8th state to secede from the Union
      • Richmond was the capital of the Confederate States of America
  • 1865: Robert E. Lee surrenders to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia
    • Ends the American Civil War
  • Motto: "Thus always to tyrants"
  • Name Meaning: Named after Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen
  • Industries
    • Coal
    • Tobacco
    • Dairy
    • Government
      • Virginia borders the District of Columbia
      • Both the FBI and the CIA are headquartered in Virginia
  • Arlington National Cemetery is located in Virginia
  • Famous People
    • Louis and Clark
    • Richard Byrd
    • Edgar Allen Poe
    • Booker T. Washington
    • George Washington
    • Thomas Jefferson
    • James Madison
    • James Monroe
    • William Henry Harrison
    • John Tyler
    • Zachary Taylor
    • Woodrow Wilson

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Egypt

  • Capital: Cairo
  • Major Cities
    • Alexandria
    • Suez
    • Aswan
    • Giza
    • Port Said
    • Luxor
  • Major Geographical Features
    • Western Desert
    • Libyan Desert
    • Eastern Desert
    • Lake Nasser
    • Nile River
    • Sinai Peninsula
    • Mediterranean Sea
    • Red Sea
    • Gulf of Suez
    • Gulf of Aqaba
    • Suez Canal
  • Official Name: Arab Republic of Egypt
    • Formerly the United Arab Republic (with Syria)
  • Religions:
    • Sunni Muslim
    • Coptic Christian
  • Language: Arabic
  • 1869: Suez Canal completed
  • 1981: President Anwar Sadat assassinated
  • 2011: Longtime President Hosni Mubarak resigns during Egyptian Revolution and sentenced to life imprisonment
  • 2012: Mohamed Morsi (a member of the Muslim Brotherhood) elected president and expands presidential authority
  • 2013: The Egyptian military ousts President Morsi after unrest in the nation
  • Independence: 1922 from the United Kingdom
  • Government: republic
  • Currency: Egyptian Pound
  • Egypt is slightly larger than 3 New Mexicos
  • Literacy: 58%
  • The Sinai Peninsula is the only land bridge between Africa and Eurasia
  • Largest population in the Arab world
  • Nile River is the longest river in the owrld
  • 95% desert
  • Industries
    • Textiles
    • Food
    • Tourism
    • Petroleum
    • Chemicals
  • 2,450 kilometers of coastline
  • 2nd most populated African nation (after Nigeria)
  • 95% of the population lives along the Nile
  • Recently, Egypt has been found to be fostering religious intolerance against Christians and other non-Muslims

Thursday, December 4, 2014

America's Friendliest (and Unfriendliest) Cities

We have already shared with you Conde Nast Traveler's list of the world's most and least friendly cities, and we are proud to also share their lists of America's most and least friendly cities. Newark, New Jersey, comes in as the least friendly city. The Mid-Atlantic and Northeast region clearly differentiated itself as the least friendly region in the United States. Charleston, South Carolina earned the title as the most friendly city in America, topping a list marked by "Southern Hospitality."


Which cities surprised you? Are there any that you want to add the list? Share your thoughts below!

Monday, December 1, 2014

Nevada: The Silver State

  • Other Nicknames:
    • Sagebush State
    • Battle-Born State
  • Capital: Carson City
  • Major Cities
    • Las Begas
    • Reno
    • Elko
    • Ely
    • Winnemucca
  • Major Geographical Features
    • Sierra Nevada Mountains
    • Mojave Desert
    • Colorado River
    • Lake Mead
    • Lake Tahoe
    • Pyramid Lake
    • Toiyabe Mountains
    • Monitor Mountains
    • Schell Creek Mountains
    • Humboldt River
  • National Parks: Great Basin National Park
  • 1848: The United States gains control of Nevada through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
  • 1859: Gold and silver are discovered in the Comstock Lode
  • 1864: Nevada becomes the 36th state
  • 2002: Gambling adds $9 billion to Nevada's economy
  • Motto: "All for our country"
  • Name Meaning: "Snow-Capped" (Spanish)
  • The Hoover Dam on the Colorado River creates Lake Mead
  • Industries
    • Tourism
    • Gambling
      • Nevada's largest industry
    • Mining
    • Agriculture
  • Nevada has the highest marriage rate... due to couples' eloping to Las Vegas to be married by Elvis...
  • Interestingly, Nevada also has the highest divorce rate...
  • Driest state in the Union
  • Lake Mead is one of the largest artificial lakes in the world
  • 87% of Nevada is owned by the federal government
  • Nevada is the fastest growing state by population
    • The population has doubled since 1980

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