US regions you learned in school vs your "personal" US regions (user search)
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  US regions you learned in school vs your "personal" US regions (search mode)
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Author Topic: US regions you learned in school vs your "personal" US regions  (Read 967 times)
Hoosier_Nick
Nicholas_Roberts
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« on: June 13, 2017, 07:40:46 PM »


It voted for Bush in '00 by a long shot, isn't desert-y enough to be The Southwest, and on the wrong side of the Midwest to be Flyover Country.


How does that make any sense? Indiana is just as midwestern as Ohio. Both very rural with a couple big cities, strong union presence, part of the old rust belt, etc. And if you're bringing politics into this, by trends, Indiana is pretty much in lock-step with the rest of the region. We even went to Obama in '08.
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