If you haven’t visited Israel or the Gaza Strip or spent much time thinking about their geography, it can be hard to understand how compact they are and how violence in one spot can feel immediate and personal throughout the area.
Maps of the region often look like this: Israel fills the frame. To people who are used to looking at maps of the United States, there seems to be plenty of space between major cities.
Now do it for areas that people not in the LA area will understand.
To be fair, the article is from the LA Times. Maybe your local newspaper can do a similar comparison.
thetruesize.com
(e: if anyone else is having an issue getting rid of the “how it works” pop up, once you type in and search for a country it refreshes and the x becomes clickable)Putting it over Florida illustrates it much better, I think
Or the northeast corridor.
The length of Gaza is less than the distance from DC to Baltimore.
Funny easter egg, if you write your mom it takes up the whole map.
Israel is slightly larger in both size and population than New Jersey. Gaza is about twice the size of DC, with about 2.5 times the DC population.
The whole shootin’ match would fit inside the state of Pennsylvania
A 6 hour drive, top to bottom, would be about the same as the Southern Oregon border to Seattle. 3 hours to Portland, 3 hours to Seattle.
Likewise, about 6 hours to drive from the West Coast of Washington to the eastern border. So Israel is about an tall as Washington State is wide.
So it’s like if a fascist group seized control of Vancouver island and started lobbing rockets while Hezbo-Idaho invades from the east
Potato rockets from Idaho, yes. Also, Northern Idaho is practically a terrorist state anyway with its history of KKK enclave and, well, general elected officials.
Stories like this are why I pay for an LA Times subscription. Support local newspapers!
I’m trying to keep up my subscription, but the coverage has just gotten more and more superficial. I understand it’s a question of $$. Still, makes me sad what we have lost as a society.
About the southern part of Des Moines to the north suburbs of the Twin Cities. Super narrow though, barely anything off of the interstate. Much smaller than Minnesota.
It’s like how Las Vegas hyper-concentrates fun or Portland hyper-concentrates (mostly good) weird.
Except they do it with, you know, zealous hatred.
I visited Portland last year, and I have to say that the once zany vibe of the city has really eroded with their drug and homelessness crisis. Entire blocks of the city sidewalks packed building to curb with tents and people and trash. I took my boys on a trip and stopped in Seattle, Portland, LA, San Diego, and Phoenix, and Portland was easily the hardest hit.
The housing crisis is really bad, and a lot of those homeless people in Portland are refugees from other States. I know a trans woman who had to live out of a trailer on airBNB for a while after fleeing west
Somewhat related-
I guess that depends on how you interpret creating the earth.
Weirdly, “the Earth” seems to have been entirely within that circle until more recent times.
Yes, it is a bit of religion (holy land) conflict, while removing people from their lands.
History shows the people do not go peacefully.
I wonder how this will be resolved, will it be similar to the natives in the US and other countries?
Seems to always be the case. The natives always get screwed.
Yes, once they are almost wiped out, then some “help” is given.
Every fking time.
Jerusalem looks gerrymandered as fuck.
True, looks like all government like to use it, in different ways.
Yeah, I‘m relieved that American Indians haven’t resorted to rockets. Instead they’re playing the long game by weaponizing casinos.
I don’t understand. How does relate to Ice Hockey rinks size wise?