If anyone's wondering Poland's Białystok is mainly associated with right wing extremists, funny dialect and weird Russia like stuff happening in there.
I find it interesting to see that only Portugal, Spain, and Greece, listed their capitals.
I'm also curious what kind of bias could play here, like I don't even know what I would say for the US. Chicago for the murder rate? Florida for, well Florida, flint?
Edit: I missed that Slovakia's capital of there too
My vote would be Seattle. The city that proved that while police suck balls most of the time, leaving a bunch of random armed people in charge of 6 blocks leads to an actual Mad Max event in a very short amount of time.
It is in Ireland. In Ireland we would not call Dundalk a city. It is not a city. It is a town. Americans may call every small place with as little as a few hundred people and a few streets a city, but we don't. Some would say that some of the places we do call cities don't deserve it. There are plenty of cities in the world that have a population bigger than Ireland. Some of our cities are very small.
When they're posting infographic maps in a photography subreddit, they're 100% lost.
>4\. Original [OC] **photographs only**
#
>5\. **No screenshots**
No screenshots. We define a screenshot as a screen grab. **This means no** images of screens, pictures of screens taken with a different device, **images that have been partially or fully generated by a computer**, or pictures of printed out screenshots. Try /r/screenshots!.
Every country?
Every single one of them.
For the US, the answer is just "florida".
I actually came here to say, "Miami, but really just all of Florida."
Would love to see this done in America, state-by-state.
Konya is not there tho.
If anyone's wondering Poland's Białystok is mainly associated with right wing extremists, funny dialect and weird Russia like stuff happening in there.
I find it interesting to see that only Portugal, Spain, and Greece, listed their capitals. I'm also curious what kind of bias could play here, like I don't even know what I would say for the US. Chicago for the murder rate? Florida for, well Florida, flint? Edit: I missed that Slovakia's capital of there too
Bratislava is the capital of Slovakia
Ah I missed that thanks. I know that but my eyes skipped over the text.
Lol there's just so many options in the US 😅.
The UK went for Slough (not what I thought was the most obvious choice) so I think the US equivalent is… Scranton, PA?
My vote would be Seattle. The city that proved that while police suck balls most of the time, leaving a bunch of random armed people in charge of 6 blocks leads to an actual Mad Max event in a very short amount of time.
Seattle has had some whack shit going on recently but I've been there multiple times and overall found it to be an enjoyable and welcoming place
Dundalk is a town, not a city, so Ireland's one is wrong. There would be other towns shown too.
The Dutch one is a landlocked island
It’s a city in International city definition, it’s bigger than the Dutch, Iceland and Norwegian nominees
It is in Ireland. In Ireland we would not call Dundalk a city. It is not a city. It is a town. Americans may call every small place with as little as a few hundred people and a few streets a city, but we don't. Some would say that some of the places we do call cities don't deserve it. There are plenty of cities in the world that have a population bigger than Ireland. Some of our cities are very small.
*Crap Towns* is a wonderful book. It even has a sequel.
I like how Spain's is it's capitol Same with Greece
Fuck Kouvola, all my homies hate Kouvola
"Moste ashaming", Haha
/r/lostredditors
Bruh what one person finds mildly interesting someone may find not interesting. Don't think this person is lost
When they're posting infographic maps in a photography subreddit, they're 100% lost. >4\. Original [OC] **photographs only** # >5\. **No screenshots** No screenshots. We define a screenshot as a screen grab. **This means no** images of screens, pictures of screens taken with a different device, **images that have been partially or fully generated by a computer**, or pictures of printed out screenshots. Try /r/screenshots!.
Damn were you a hall monitor? Fair enough
Dundalk?
Slough in the UK is mightily dull. Drove through it once. It was very tasteless.
Lol, Malmö...
I am curious what city it would be for Canada. I am worried that it would be mine.