3.5 million of a country with 350 million of a country
What a moron comparison
Yep. Ed Zachary.
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3.5 million of a country with 350 million of a country
What a moron comparison
3.
No more.
Sure, but not at a high level mall.
Mexico, our southern neighbor is 100 times more violent than the U.S., check the murder rate in Juarez and they lead the most violent American city by far. It's not even close. You don't know what you're talking about.
However, Russia is definitely a first world county and their murder rate is double that of the US
Since when?
Since the end of the Cold War. Prior to that, the USSR was considered second world country because it was a political distinction. Since then, the definition of second world has morphed into a fiscal distinction. Since Russia has the ninth largest economy in the world, they are a first world country. Look it up.
I'll get right on that, thanks. I must have missed the memo on how this and that "became a fiscal distinction".
Question asked and answered. No need to get your panties in a bunch. Since you missed the memo and don't care to enlighten yourself, I looked it up for you.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_World
The Second World refers to the former Socialist, industrial states (formally the Eastern Bloc), mostly the territory and the influence of the Soviet Union. Following World War II, there were nineteen communist states, and after the fall of the Soviet Union, only five socialist states remained: China, Cuba, Laos, North Korea and Vietnam. Along with "First World" and "Third World", the term was used to divide the states of Earth into three broad categories. In other words, the concept of "Second World" was a construct of the Cold War and the term has largely fallen out of use since the revolutions of 1989, though it is still used to describe countries that are in between poverty and prosperity, many of which are now capitalist states. Subsequently, the actual meaning of the terms "First World", "Second World" and "Third World" changed from being based on political ideology to an economic definition.[1] The three world theory has been criticized as crude and relativity outdated for its nominal ordering (1, 2, 3) and sociologists have coined the term "developed", "developing", and "underdeveloped" as replacement terms for global stratification?nevertheless, the three world theory is still popular in contemporary literature and media. This might also cause semantic variation of the term between describing a region's political entities and its people.
Ref 1. http://books.google.com/books?id=LP...ge&q=sociology second world countries&f=false
I hate to throw gasoline on the fire, but you claimed Russia is now a first world country. However in the article you presented and in the related articles, Russia is not classified as a "first world" country. As the definition has changed from its old cold war definition, there is no current standard definition of a first world country. However most 'experts' typically consider first world countries as ones that have a combination of an advanced economy, a high ranking on the Human Development Index, and an OECD nation with high income.
Russia is not listed by the IMF as having an "advanced economy", it does not rank in the top 50 of the Human Development Index, and does not appear on the World Bank listing of high income OECD nations. In fact other than size of the economy, there is very little evidence to support Russia being a "first world" country. Again the sources are the article you posted and its referenced and related articles.