Jumpshot1370
Jumpshot1370 t1_j9sicos wrote
I’m 100% sure southern Illinois will not be a part of New Canada and eastern Washington and Oregon will be in New America. Nevada, eastern California, and Virginia outside the DC metro area might go to New America too.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j4j15oe wrote
Great job. Correction: UCLA is in the city of Los Angeles, not Pasadena.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j3pbk5a wrote
Reply to 2012 Olympic male athletes’ weight [OC] by highcharts
Curious about distance running (not triathlon, but just running). I guarantee their weights will be a lot lower.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j3ipubf wrote
Reply to comment by jayuhl14 in [OC] Snow persistence across the contiguous U.S. (2001-2020) by houndrunner
October to May, or November to April. For the core of the winter season I suggest December-February.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j1vdsir wrote
Reply to comment by Available-Ad-5609 in [OC] North American cities by number of major sports championships (Updated December 2022) by twintig5
I am aware of this, but still find it interesting that many large cities (ex. Austin, Columbus, El Paso, San Jose) lack NFL, MLB, and NBA teams.
Some large cities, like Colorado Springs and Fort Worth, are overshadowed by nearby larger cities (Denver and Dallas, respectively). Austin might be overshadowed by San Antonio, which is larger, although the former is becoming a major tech center akin to Silicon Valley.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j1stfux wrote
Let me guess: Brazil is less than 1% because the people there speak Portuguese, not Spanish.
Similarly, the United States speaks English. I can only assume the phrase wasn’t translated.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j1s8ixr wrote
Reply to [OC] North American cities by number of major sports championships (Updated December 2022) by twintig5
I merely find it interesting that Cleveland has NBA, NFL, and MLB teams, Cincinnati has MLB and NFL teams, but Columbus (the capital of Ohio, with more people than Cincinnati and Cleveland combined) only has an NHL team.
San Antonio, the 7th largest city in the United States, has only an NBA team. Pittsburgh, which has just over 1/5 the population, has NFL, MLB, and NHL teams.
Jumpshot1370 t1_izzvea5 wrote
Reply to comment by smauryholmes in Complaints about human waste on the streets of San Francisco, by year by born_in_cyberspace
The sidewalks exist, but can you walk on those sidewalks, and feel safe doing so?
I've been to downtown Los Angeles several times. It's pretty bad. From what I have heard (including from San Francisco residents), San Francisco is probably worse.
Jumpshot1370 t1_izzto60 wrote
Reply to comment by smauryholmes in Complaints about human waste on the streets of San Francisco, by year by born_in_cyberspace
“Most walkable city in America”. So walkable, there is a website showing the locations of human feces on sidewalks, among other places. https://wmmr.com/2019/04/17/someone-made-an-interactive-san-francisco-poop-map/
And check out this video. I’m very thankful I don’t live there.
Jumpshot1370 t1_izyki1a wrote
Reply to comment by m0llusk in Complaints about human waste on the streets of San Francisco, by year by born_in_cyberspace
I guarantee it's even higher in 2021 and 2022.
Jumpshot1370 t1_izyk1cr wrote
Reply to comment by GeekSumsMe in Complaints about human waste on the streets of San Francisco, by year by born_in_cyberspace
Net domestic migration rate per 1,000 inhabitants in 2020-2021:
Florida: 10.14
Texas: 5.77
California: -9.36
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_and_territories_by_net_migration
Jumpshot1370 t1_iyoh5od wrote
Reply to comment by pinkshirtbadman in [OC] Birth months of FIFA World Cup players. The top three are January, February and March, possibly due to the "Relative age effect" by desfirsit
In America, at least in my school system in California, the cutoff is in November. So a person born December 2003 - November 2004 would have graduated high school in 2022, someone born December 2004 - November 2005 will graduate high school in 2023, etc. There are some exceptions on the older side, children who started school a little bit late.
At my high school, which I graduated from in 2022, there is a student who was born in October 2005 and is currently a junior. Another student born in November 2005 is currently a senior. There are a few similar cases in other classes.
Jumpshot1370 t1_j9silwq wrote
Reply to comment by RagingHeretic in [OC] National Divorce by the Numbers (Politics, Demographics, GDP) by tabthough
The "parasite state" (as you describe) Texas produces a whole lot of oil, agriculture, and has multiple tech companies. It ranks 15th out of 50 in GDP per capita and has a high net migration rate.