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Colorme Dubious
World According To Briggs
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Comments by "Colorme Dubious" (@colormedubious4747) on "Texas Vs. Oklahoma. Who is better?" video.
Minor error: Oklahoma is NOT landlocked, at least not in shipping terms. The Port of Catoosa (in Tulsa) is known as "America's most inland port." It connects to the Gulf of Mexico (and the world) via the Arkansas River and the Mississippi River. That obviously doesn't even begin to compare to Texas' 367 miles of coast and 23 seaports (including the #1 and #6 ranked seaports in the USA), but it certainly deserves a mention.
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Not really. It's political theater. The e-mail from Cohen's attorneys is likely to sink the case.
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chrissperling9148 I explicitly stated "not in shipping terms." Reading is fundamental.
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chrissperling9148 Rivers don't count in shipping? The United States has about 12,000 miles of navigable inland waterways using 240 lock sites. The case has been made that America's wealth and power was derived, in large part, from the ability to transport vast amounts of raw materials and finished goods via this important asset. Do you own anything made using wood, iron, stone, or other extracted natural resources? Do you eat grains? The odds are high that those raw materials were transported by barge at some point. Does ANYONE in Current Year understand where the things that impact their daily lives come from? Hint: it isn't "the store."
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chrissperling9148 I clearly do, as I specified that I was referring to SHIPPING, not geography. You obviously have no comprehension of what "shipping" means.
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@UserName-ts3sp I don't know if it's "big" as ports go, but it covers about 2,500 acres and has around 4,000 people working for the 70-odd companies at the port and industrial park. 😀
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@Yoursistersazz Again, reading is FUNdamental. I am fully aware that Oklahoma is GEOGRAPHICALLY landlocked. I used to live there. What I actually SAID was that it is not landlocked in terms of SHIPPING, because it has ocean access via navigable waterways. Cheese and rice, does anyone still know how to READ a simple paragraph?
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Texas does. Mainly because it's so much larger than Oklahoma.
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chrissperling9148 You know nothing, Jon Snow.
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chrissperling9148 Which industry is that?
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@lakenneth374 I found your source list, which also states "The Port of Houston, in terms of foreign tonnage, is the busiest on the top 10 sea ports in USA list." Doesn't "busiest" equate to "number 1?" Context matters. Also of note: on many lists, Los Angeles and Long Beach are treated as a single port, which makes it #1 by every measure. Again, context matters.
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@lakenneth374 Great job turning my casual comment about Tulsa's little-known port into a campaign ad. As long as you brought it up, don't forget to brag about his war on domestic energy production, runaway government spending, more than $6 TRILLION added to the national debt, record inflation, the devaluation of the dollar, sending billions of our tax dollars overseas to engage in a dangerous proxy war, and his super-obvious subservience to China. The guy has his greedy hands in more foreign pockets than a centipede. Are you really PROUD of voting for that senile, corrupt, useless apparatchik? For goodness' sake!
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