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thomas grabkowski
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Comments by "thomas grabkowski" (@thomasgrabkowski8283) on "RealLifeLore" channel.
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Not to mention, with far less affordable housing these days
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That’s why the US managed to have 14 times Australia’s population in a similar land area
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And there’s a huge contrast between the populations that can be sustained by humid heat compared to dry heat
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@brianlong2334 As for why Australia’s desert rainfall fluctuates massively. It again is due to lack of mountains, with the Australian deserts caused by subtropical high pressure and the continent being surrounded by cold waters, which could break down from time to time and the waters could warm up as well. Meanwhile the driest deserts are caused by the rain shadows of massive mountain ranges
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@satorugojo6133 More like SSA Socialist States of America
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There’s also some Australians who think Australia is full already
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@ezrathegreatconqueror Java is even getting a high speed train
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It's also related to the fact that much higher percentage of Mexicans don't have cars compared to US as cars are a lot less affordable to the average Mexican than average American
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And countries like Australia and New Zealand have quite low birth rate so natural growth isn’t going to be high
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It's due to high elevation, if it were lowlands rather than highlands, it would be an extremely hot, humid place
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American
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Well the thing in common is that they are all desert countries
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@kingpeanut7273 Exactly. Deserts are pretty much always sunny, but they definitely can't support much people
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Midwestern USA is actually cold and wet, and not and dry. Cold because of high latitude. Wet because of Gulf of Mexico and the Great Lakes. Great Lakes means lots of snow in winter and gulf means despite far inland, Midwest is humid during summer as the winds turn southerly meaning that when it gets hot, the heat is humid, not dry
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And then some Europeans went to America to form an even more individualist society than Europe
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@TomLuTon The cold definitely plays a part. Just look at all the other Arctic and subarctic parts of the world. Northern Scandinavia, northern and eastern parts of Russia, Alaska, all extremely empty and sparsely populated
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@TomLuTon Scandinavia is also warmed by the Gulf Stream meaning the extreme cold sets in at higher latitudes than Canada
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What Australian and North American cities have in common is that they are largely built up after the car, unlike Europe for example
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@blogdesign7126 City of Los Angeles. LA metro area has 3 times NZ population
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@FeelingShred China trying it with its deserts, we should see how it goes
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@FictionHubZA Thanks to increased demand
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@Praisethesunson No, it’s everywhere. Don’t forget communist Cuba and North Korea, countries that reject capitalism are also facing population collapse
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@DMH-bt2zo in the US, the south is most populous region however northeast is most densely populated region
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Yeah, it is also true that the southern US is sparsely populated for a region with a humid subtropical climate
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Firstly, it’s extremely difficult if not near impossible to destroy a mountain range. Secondly, east coast where most live is gonna lose out since the mountains actually help trap rain for the east coast
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@sumeersamarat706 Middle East, North Africa and Southwest USA is desert but far more dense than Australia, especially its desert region
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However, Japan has 25 times NZ population
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And the Outback is like in Arizona
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Actually those 3 countries could have some good high speed rail corridors. Victoria, NSW and southeast Queensland in Australia, Ontario-Quebec in Canada, and for USA, many good options
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@ChrisJohannsen Victoria?
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Quebec does have NHL team(Canadiens)
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Also Rio Grande is also half controlled by the US
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@SuperAerie Canada and Scandinavia are also similar in which the population is extremely concentrated in the south with the north being very sparsely populated
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@ChrisJohannsen Australia is also very hard to invade given the remoteness and climate
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And Manhattan is more than both Dakotas combined
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Airports on the south harbor though
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@thomas316 Canada, UK and NZ have low birth rates too
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Same as how the largest community of many Carribbean island nations including their own nations are found in Miami or NYC. Auckland has probably similar being a wealthy metropolis in close proximity to a lot of impoverished islands thus drawing a lot of immigrants from there
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Yep, he constantly mentions the Great Plains as one of the best geographic locations of the world. Full of shale oil deposits, crisscrossed by numerous navigable rivers and covered in fertile soil amazing for agriculture
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However, it would have a high gdp per capita as the Outback has tons of natural resources to mine and sell to the world
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@impacttoinfinity777 Probably Midwestern
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Forests still exist in Australia
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Because the country keeps a low profile on the world stage
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Biggest issue is that the climate in Phoenix is too dry and there’s not enough water to support its population. At least Houston and Minneapolis have lots of water
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@mildlydispleased3221 UK does get European windstorms though, and sometimes snowstorms
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Or the tropical Canada
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@bigman1163 I'm saying Australia is like tropical version of Canada
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Only North Island. South Island is cold and similar in temperatures to UK and often sub-zero. But sure, Auckland, on the upper North Island has a warm climate with beach culture and streets lined with palm trees
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4. Most Americans live in the east
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@vincentcleaver1925 East of 100W and west of Sierra Nevada/Cascades to be exact
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