Monday, April 23, 2007

USA No Longer Freest Country

USA No Longer Freest Country

Heritage Foundation: Â"Long a symbol of economic prosperity, America for the first time no longer ranks among the top 10 free nations of the world, according to The 2005 Index of Economic Freedom, just released by the Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal.Â"

NewsMax has more:

The Index of Economic Freedom, published by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal since 1995, finds that the United States is letting Big Brother grow obese as other countries get lean and fit. Chile, Australia and Iceland improved enough to leave the U.S. in a tie with Switzerland for 12th place.

Â"The United States is resting on its laurels while innovative countries around the world are changing their approaches and reducing their roadblocks,Â" said Marc Miles, a co-editor of the book, along with Ed Feulner and Mary Anastasia OÂ'Grady. Â"The U.S. is eating the dust of countries that have thrown off the 20th-century shackles of big government spending and massive federal programs.Â"

The index analyzes 50 economic variables in 10 categories. This year 86 countries showed improvement, 57 declined, and 12, including America, were unchanged.

Though out of the top 10, the U.S. still had scores good enough to be among the 17 Â"freeÂ" economies. Fifty-six nations were considered Â"mostly free,Â" 70 Â"mostly unfreeÂ" and 12 Â"repressed.Â"

The top 10: Hong Kong, Singapore, Luxembourg, Estonia (yes, the former Soviet Â"republicÂ"), Ireland, New Zealand, U.K., Denmark, Iceland and Australia, followed by Chile.

Source http://www.business-opportunities.bi...reest-country/

----------------------END OF ARTICLE-------------------------------------

actually surprising to see that the US doesn't top the list.>

USA No Longer Freest Country

USA No Longer Freest Country

Heritage Foundation: Â"Long a symbol of economic prosperity, America for the first time no longer ranks among the top 10 free nations of the world, according to The 2005 Index of Economic Freedom, just released by the Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal.Â"

NewsMax has more:

The Index of Economic Freedom, published by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal since 1995, finds that the United States is letting Big Brother grow obese as other countries get lean and fit. Chile, Australia and Iceland improved enough to leave the U.S. in a tie with Switzerland for 12th place.

Â"The United States is resting on its laurels while innovative countries around the world are changing their approaches and reducing their roadblocks,Â" said Marc Miles, a co-editor of the book, along with Ed Feulner and Mary Anastasia OÂ'Grady. Â"The U.S. is eating the dust of countries that have thrown off the 20th-century shackles of big government spending and massive federal programs.Â"

The index analyzes 50 economic variables in 10 categories. This year 86 countries showed improvement, 57 declined, and 12, including America, were unchanged.

Though out of the top 10, the U.S. still had scores good enough to be among the 17 Â"freeÂ" economies. Fifty-six nations were considered Â"mostly free,Â" 70 Â"mostly unfreeÂ" and 12 Â"repressed.Â"

The top 10: Hong Kong, Singapore, Luxembourg, Estonia (yes, the former Soviet Â"republicÂ"), Ireland, New Zealand, U.K., Denmark, Iceland and Australia, followed by Chile.

Source http://www.business-opportunities.bi...reest-country/

----------------------END OF ARTICLE-------------------------------------

actually surprising to see that the US doesn't top the list.>

Violent Crime Rising Sharply in Some Cities

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/12/na...gewanted=print

NY Times
February 12, 2006
Violent Crime Rising Sharply in Some Cities
By KATE ZERNIKE

MILWAUKEE — One woman here killed a friend after they argued over a brown silk dress. A man killed a neighbor whose 10-year-old son had mistakenly used his dish soap. Two men argued over a cellphone, and pulling out their guns, the police say, killed a 13-year-old girl in the crossfire.

While violent crime has been at historic lows nationwide and in cities like New York, Miami and Los Angeles, it is rising sharply here and in many other places across the country.

And while such crime in the 1990's was characterized by battles over gangs and drug turf, the police say the current rise in homicides has been set off by something more bewildering: petty disputes that hardly seem the stuff of fistfights, much less gunfire or stabbings.

Suspects tell the police they killed someone who "disrespected" them or a family member, or someone who was "mean mugging" them, which the police loosely translate as giving a dirty look. And more weapons are on the streets, giving people a way to act on their anger.

Police Chief Nannette H. Hegerty of Milwaukee calls it "the rage thing."

"We're seeing a very angry population, and they don't go to fists anymore, they go right to guns," she said. "A police department can have an effect on drugs or gangs. But two people arguing in a home, how does the police department go in and stop that?"

Here in Milwaukee, where homicides jumped from 88 in 2004 to 122 last year, the number classified as arguments rose to 45 from 17, making up by far the largest category of killings, as gang and drug murders declined.

In Houston, where homicides rose 24 percent last year, disputes were by far the largest category, 113 out of 336 killings. Officials were alarmed by the increase in murders well before Hurricane Katrina swelled the city's population by 150,000 people in September; the police say 18 homicides were related to evacuees.

In Philadelphia, where 380 homicides made 2005 the deadliest year since 1997, 208 were disputes; drug-related killings, which accounted for about 40 percent of homicides during the high-crime period of the early 1990's, accounted for just 13 percent.

"When we ask, 'Why did you shoot this guy?' it's, 'He bumped into me,' 'He looked at my girl the wrong way,' " said Police Commissioner Sylvester M. Johnson of Philadelphia. "It's not like they're riding around doing drive-by shootings. It's arguments — stupid arguments over stupid things."

The police say the suspects and the victims tend to be black, young — midteens to mid-20's — and have previous criminal records. They tend to know each other. Several cities said that domestic violence had also risen. And the murders tend to be limited to particular neighborhoods. Downtown Milwaukee has not had a homicide in about five years, but in largely black neighborhoods on the north side, murders rose from 57 in 2004 to 94 last year.

"We're not talking about a city, we're talking about this subpopulation, that's what drives everything," said David M. Kennedy, director of the Center for Crime Prevention and Control at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. "When they calm down, all the numbers go down. When they heat up, all the numbers go up. They hurt each other over personal stuff. It's respect and disrespect, and it's girls."

While arguments have always made up a large number of homicides, the police say the trigger point now comes faster.

"Traditionally, you could see the beef growing and maybe hitting the volatile point," said Daniel Coleman, the commander of the homicide unit in Boston. "Now we see these things, they're flashes, they're very unpredictable. Even five years ago, in what started as a fight or dispute, maybe you'd have a knife shown. Now it's an automatic default to a firearm."

In robberies, Milwaukee's Chief Hegerty said, "even after the person gives up, the guy with the gun shoots him anyway. We didn't have as much of that before."

Homicide rates are driven by different factors in each city, but even cities whose rates have fallen have seen problems with disputes, though those disputes are often about drugs or gangs. "As the murder universe continues to shrink in New York, the common denominators remain consistent," said Police Department Deputy Commissioner Paul J. Browne. "In most instances, killers and victims knew each other, each had criminal records, and they were engaged in disputes, usually over narcotics."

Nationally, the homicide rate peaked in 1991, declined steadily after 1993 and has remained essentially flat since 1999. But in the first six months of 2005, according to preliminary statistics from the F.B.I., the number of homicides nationwide rose 2.1 percent, with the greatest increase, 4.9 percent, in the Midwest.

Yet many cities have seen far steeper increases. In Boston and San Francisco the number of homicides last year was at its highest in a decade, and in Prince George's County, Md., outside Washington, it was the highest ever.

In St. Louis, the number of homicides rose to 131 last year from 113 in 2004. Tulsa had 64 murders, 2 more than in 1993. Charlotte jumped from a record low of 60 homicides in 2004 to 85 in 2005. And the murder rate for 2005 was above the 15-year average in Kansas City, Mo., and Nashville.

A large part of the problem, the police say, is simply more guns on the streets as gun laws have loosened around the country. In Philadelphia, Commissioner Johnson said, since the state made it easier to get a gun permit in 1985, the number of people authorized to carry a gun in the city has risen from 700 to 32,000.

But the police also blame lax sentences and judges who they say let suspects out on bail too easily. Here, Deputy Chief Brian O'Keefe recalled a man who was released from prison on an armed robbery conviction after two years, with five years' probation, and killed someone within three months. In Nashville, Chief Ronal W. Serpas recalled an 18-year-old who had been arrested 41 times but was out on bail when he killed a bystander in a fight over a dice game.

"We have people who've done two, three, four, five shootings who are back on the streets," said Kathleen M. O'Toole, Boston's police commissioner. "Unless we have bail reform, unless these impact players with multiple gun arrests are kept off the streets, we won't reverse this problem."

Still, some of the problems are hard to address with tougher laws.

The neighborhoods with the most murders tend to be the poorest. In Milwaukee, Mallory O'Brien, an epidemiologist brought in to direct the new homicide review commission, said suspects and victims tend to have been born to teenage mothers. The city has one of the nation's highest teen pregnancy rates for blacks, and among black men, one of the lowest high school graduation rates. An industrial base that used to provide jobs for those without a high school diploma has shrunk.

Chief Corwin of Kansas City said that in the hardest-hit neighborhoods, people had explained it as a "lack of hope." "If I don't have skills, I don't have training, my socioeconomic situation looks desperate, do I really have hope?" he said. "I think that ties into the anger. If the only thing I have is my respect, that's what I carry on the street. If someone disrespects me, they've done the ultimate to me."

Those who study crime debate whether the cities where homicide is rising represent a trend.

"It's a couple of cities with bad luck and with local problems which are very real, but not necessarily part of a national pattern," said Franklin E. Zimring, a law professor at Berkeley who is writing a book on the crime drop of the late 1990's.

But Mr. Kennedy, at John Jay, said the decrease in homicides in big cities has obscured the problem in many other places.

"In many places — both cities and increasingly suburban and rural settings — things never got as good as they did nationally," he said. "Even if things got better, they didn't get as better as they did in Los Angeles or New York. In many places, they're getting worse."

Certainly, the number of homicides is lower than its peak in the early 90's — Milwaukee had 168 killings, not including Jeffrey Dahmer's serial murders, in 1991. But the number is far higher than in recent years, and alarming to a public that has gotten used to good news. Boston, which peaked with 151 murders in 1990, had declined to 31 in 1999. Nashville in 2004 had its lowest homicide rate in the history of city government, with 58 murders, before jumping to 99 last year.

"Because for this decade the sense is that crime is down, it's very hard to speak out about it and not look as though you're doing something wrong," said Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a research and public policy group in Washington. "People's expectation of crime has significantly changed."

In some of the cities, overall crime has declined, thanks to a significant drop in property crimes. But the rise in homicides and robberies causes alarm.

"It's hard for people to look at it in depth and understand that they're not likely to be a victim if they get along with their family members and neighbors and don't live a high-risk lifestyle," said Darrel Stephens, the police chief in Charlotte.

Cities say they are going after illegal guns and are trying to stop disputes from becoming homicides. Kansas City used to investigate only some aggravated assaults; now it follows up on all cases, on the theory that next time, the assault might be a homicide. Boston and Philadelphia are sweeping neighborhoods for people who have violated warrants. In St. Louis, the police have put cameras in high-crime neighborhoods and have sent gang units to talk to parents of chronically truant students.

But recognizing that the problems have deep roots, cities are also going beyond traditional law enforcement, trying to involve churches, schools and social service agencies. In Boston, the neighborhood sweeps are followed by work crews that repair potholes, trim trees and remove graffiti.

Here in Milwaukee, the police are tagging "M.V.P.'s," or major violent players — people with several arrests, who are more likely to be involved in arguments and homicides, according to Ms. O'Brien's analysis. Those names are announced at daily police briefings.

The city has also put prosecutors and probation and parole officers on patrol with police officers, because they have more immediate power to rein in chronic offenders by enforcing curfew, nuisance laws, and restrictions against alcohol or drug use and association with gang members.

The homicide review commission has frequent, formal meetings with corrections officers, prosecutors and social service agencies to identify problem families, and is meeting with schools to assess what they are teaching about conflict resolution and how to reduce truancy.

Next month, police officials say, they will have the first of several town hall meetings with the neighborhoods with the highest homicide rates, to get residents' ideas on how to stop the killings.

"We didn't get here in a day," said Ms. O'Brien, the epidemiologist. "There's no simple solution."

>

What are your favorite downtowns?

The U.S. is blessed with a innumerable amount of cities, across a varied geography. Within each city there are central business districts or downtowns, that have an assortment buildings, structures, features, and other qualities.

In the celebration of America's downtowns, tell us which downtowns bring the most delight to you or the ones you that are you favorite. Explain what you love about them (e.g.: density, setting, skyline, activities, and so forth) Also, if you have any pictures or links, feel free to post them.>

Your favorite museums and art galleries in the U.S.

Post your favorite museums and arts galleries in the U.S.; include photographs and links if possible.>

What do you think of european cities?

Please share your impression in general, comparison with the US, or impressions of some particular cities.

I am also interested in anything you know/think of the following 7 european cities:

-Budapest
-Vilnius
-Rotterdam
-Zagreb
-Lisbon
-Kyiv
-Stockholm>

Post pics of your city's City Hall

Baltimore's City Hall





>

2005 MSA/CSA over 1 million ranked

I have corrected the errors to the list. Changes were made to the following:

Buffalo (added Olean MSA)
Dallas (added Bonham MSA)
Greensboro (added Burlington MSA)
Indianapolis (added North Vernon MSA)
Salt Lake City (added Heber MSA)
Washington, DC (added Culpeper MSA)

Also, Added Greenville-Spartanburg CSA to list

Re-Ranked based on changes.


1. New York-Newark CSA 21,903,623
2. Los Angeles CSA 17,602,607
3. Chicago CSA 9,661,840
4. Washington-Baltimore CSA 8,125,658
5. San Francisco-San Jose CSA 7,168,176
6. Dallas-Fort Worth CSA 6,054,471
7. Philadelphia CSA 5,976,485
8. Boston CSA 5,804,816
9. Detroit CSA 5,428,000
10. Miami MSA 5,422,200
11. Houston CSA 5,380,661
12. Atlanta CSA 5,266,134
13. Phoenix MSA 3,865,077
14. Seattle CSA 3,806,453
15. Minneapolis-St Paul CSA 3,467,078
16. San Diego MSA 2,933,462
17. Cleveland CSA 2,931,774
18. St Louis CSA 2,840,179
19. Tampa St Petersburg MSA 2,647,658
20. Denver CSA 2,640,434
21. Pittsburgh CSA 2,478,883
22. Sacramento CSA 2,187,747
23. Charlotte CSA 2,120,745
24. Cincinnati CSA 2,113,011
25. Portland MSA 2,095,861
26. Kansas City CSA 2,015,282
27. Orlando CSA 1,997,437
28. Indianapolis CSA 1,958,453
29. Columbus CSA 1,936,351
30. San Antonio MSA 1,889,797
31. Las Vegas CSA 1,751,028
32. Milwaukee CSA 1,708,563
33. Virginia Beach-Norfolk MSA 1,647,346
34. Providence MSA 1,622,520
35. Salt Lake City CSA 1,586,740
36. Raleigh-Durham CSA 1,509,560
37. Nashville CSA 1,498,836
38. Greensboro--Winston-Salem CSA 1,490,886
39. Austin MSA 1,452,529
40. New Orleans CSA 1,363,990*
41. Louisville CSA 1,342,828
42. Grand Rapids CSA 1,315,319
43. Hartford CSA 1,304,067
44. Memphis MSA 1,260,905
45. Jacksonville MSA 1,248,371
46. Buffalo CSA 1,230,213
47. Oklahoma City CSA 1,225,084
48. Greenville-Spartanburg CSA 1,185,534
49. Richmond MSA 1,175,654
50. Birmingham CSA 1,170,012
51. Albany CSA 1,145,666
52. Rochester CSA 1,133,140
53. Dayton CSA 1,078,634
54. Fresno CSA 1,020,372

* Pre Hurricane Katrina>

Do you think the north will ever leave the US

I was watching TV and it was talking about the cultural and economic differences between states that vote Democrat and Republican, which got me thinking about will one day the states that vote Democrat, and the states that resemble them( Iowa, Ohio, and possiby Indiana) leave the Union. If they do what do you think will happen and where would the capital be, Chicago, NYC, LA, Washington DC, or some other city? And how would the south react to the norths succession?>

Create your own 5th WDW theme park

Magic Kingdom
Epcot
Disney-MGM Studios
Disney's Animal Kingdom

If you worked for the Disney Company had it was your job to come up with the theme for the fifth (and newest) Walt Disney World theme park:

• What would the park's name be?

• What would be its theming?

• What special rides, attractions, "lands", etc., would it have?>

"Catastrophic" hurricane headed toward New Orleans

URGENT - WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW ORLEANS LA
0611 PM CDT SUN AUG 28 2005

...DEVASTATING DAMAGE EXPECTED...

.HURRICANE KATRINA...A MOST POWERFUL HURRICANE WITH UNPRECEDENTED STRENGTH...RIVALING THE INTENSITY OF HURRICANE CAMILLE OF 1969.

MOST OF THE AREA WILL BE UNINHABITABLE FOR WEEKS...PERHAPS LONGER. AT LEAST ONE HALF OF WELL CONSTRUCTED HOMES WILL HAVE ROOF AND WALL FAILURE. ALL GABLED ROOFS WILL FAIL...LEAVING THOSE HOMES SEVERELY DAMAGED OR DESTROYED.

THE MAJORITY OF INDUSTRIAL BUILDINGS WILL BECOME NON FUNCTIONAL. PARTIAL TO COMPLETE WALL AND ROOF FAILURE IS EXPECTED. ALL WOOD FRAMED LOW RISING APARTMENT BUILDINGS WILL BE DESTROYED. CONCRETE BLOCK LOW RISE APARTMENTS WILL SUSTAIN MAJOR DAMAGE...INCLUDING SOME WALL AND ROOF FAILURE.

HIGH RISE OFFICE AND APARTMENT BUILDINGS WILL SWAY DANGEROUSLY...A FEW TO THE POINT OF TOTAL COLLAPSE. ALL WINDOWS WILL BLOW OUT.

AIRBORNE DEBRIS WILL BE WIDESPREAD...AND MAY INCLUDE HEAVY ITEMS SUCH AS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES AND EVEN LIGHT VEHICLES. SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES AND LIGHT TRUCKS WILL BE MOVED. THE BLOWN DEBRIS WILL CREATE ADDITIONAL DESTRUCTION. PERSONS...PETS...AND LIVESTOCK EXPOSED TO THE WINDS WILL FACE CERTAIN DEATH IF STRUCK.

POWER OUTAGES WILL LAST FOR WEEKS...AS MOST POWER POLES WILL BE DOWN AND TRANSFORMERS DESTROYED. WATER SHORTAGES WILL MAKE HUMAN SUFFERING INCREDIBLE BY MODERN STANDARDS.

THE VAST MAJORITY OF NATIVE TREES WILL BE SNAPPED OR UPROOTED. ONLY THE HEARTIEST WILL REMAIN STANDING...BUT BE TOTALLY DEFOLIATED. FEW CROPS WILL REMAIN. LIVESTOCK LEFT EXPOSED TO THE WINDS WILL BEKILLED.

AN INLAND HURRICANE WIND WARNING IS ISSUED WHEN SUSTAINED WINDS NEAR HURRICANE FORCE...OR FREQUENT GUSTS AT OR ABOVE HURRICANE FORCE...ARE CERTAIN WITHIN THE NEXT 12 TO 24 HOURS.

ONCE TROPICAL STORM AND HURRICANE FORCE WINDS ONSET...DO NOT VENTURE OUTSIDE!>

California Metro Area Home Prices stabilizing?

Per The California Association of Realtors.

Prices appear to have stablized in most Metros, for the most part, all the double digit price percentage gains for the year are being replaced by losses. Still, quite pricy-only now, not as much.

Statewide
Single Family Home(Mar 2006) $561,350
Condominium(Mar 2006) $431,560

Regions....................Average Home Price(Mar 2006)
San Jose............................$760,000
Santa Barbara County...........$750,000
Santa Cruz County...............$740,000
San Francisco-Oakland..........$729,360
Orange County.....................$717,320
Monterey Bay......................$710,860
Ventura County....................$678,850
Napa/ Sonoma Valleys...........$623,380
San Diego............................$607,370
San Luis Obispo....................$586,270
Los Angeles..........................$556,750
Far Northern California............$434,410
Riverside-San Bernardino.........$403,000
Sacramento..........................$376,010
Central Valley.......................$350,930
High Desert..........................$326,710>

Which city will ultimately fail and decline into oblivion?

Many US cities are making big comebacks, some are sort of teetering on the brink (but still holding it together), while a few are continuing to fall apart.

Which one of these major US cities do you think is most likely to just plain disintegrate (if any) ?>

Question about paying for college

How to go about paying for college?

I have about two and a half years left of college, and my situation is that i'm paying all of it by myself.

Now, since I have practically zero dollars to pay for my own college education, I filled out the FAFSA to see if i'd get any grants. I ended up not getting any grants whatsoever.

What they gave me were Federal PLUS Loans and a minimal amount with the Federal Unsubsidized Stafford loan (~$2625).

Since my mom is not taking part in my college finances whatsoever, the Federal PLUS loan is slashed from the equation. the Federal Unsubsidized is about 1/8th the amount of the estimated college expenses for the academic year, so I definitely need more.

Any thoughts? Anybody have experiences with private (DEFERRED) loans? I'm looking for ones that wouldn't give me rates that would screw me over for the next 15 years of my life. How much of an interest rate does a Federal Unsubsidized Stafford give?

I appreciate your help.>

What's the most sustainable state/province in North America?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability

Anyone, have any idea?>

states that don't fit in

question for everyone here: there are some states that some categorize as one type of state, some categorize as another. i am referring to their geographic locations. for instance, my delaware is called a southern state by a lot of people from new england. people from florida or georgia call it a northern state. similarly, they say that one way to tell if someone is from maryland is that they will get mad at you if you call it a "southern state" or "northern state". they say they are from a middle state. as for delaware being a southern or northern state, i say neither and both. i think it's neither, that it's a middle state (just like marylanders think of their state); but if i had to pick one, it would pick more than one. the line between the north and the south pretty much goes right through delaware. wilmingotn is certainly a northern state with northern characteristics, yet southern delaware ("slower lower" as we call it) is just like any rural place in the south, with its farms, slow-paced living, etc.

so where do you think these states are? these are some ones i could think of off the top of my head that are debatable and a little confusing.

delaware: northern, southern, or something else?
maryland: northern, southern, or something else?
west virginia: northeast, southeast, midwest, something else?
texas: southeast, southwest, something else?
the dakotas: midwest or something else?

if there are any others that might be confusing, add them to the discussion.>

Rock music...What's happening to your city?

What's happening with ur city in the rock scene. There's a hip-hop scene...here we got the rock scene. Any new rockers comin' out of ur city? Any news?>

Houston in comparison to Toronto - How do the metro populations stack up?

Houston in comparison to Toronto - How do the metro populations stack up?

I got inspired by the Houston thread and thought i would throw some numbers around.

Houston Metro

Population
2,012,626 in city and 5,280,752 in metro

Area
1,398 km² (540 mi²)

As of the 2000 U.S. Census, Houston had a total population of 1.9 million (though a July 1, 2004 U.S. Census estimate placed the city's population at more than 2 million). The city is the heart of the Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown metropolitan area, which is the largest cultural and economic center of the Gulf Coast region and is the seventh-largest metropolitan area in the U.S. with a population of 5.2 million in ten counties



Toronto Metro

Population
2,481,494 in city and 5,304,100 in metro


Area
630 km² (243 mi²)


Toronto is Canada's largest city by population and the provincial capital of Ontario. Toronto's population is 2,481,494 (2001 Census), and the population of the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) is estimated at 5,304,100 in 2005 (Statistics Canada). A Greater Toronto Area (GTA), slightly larger than the Toronto CMA, is defined by provincial authorities for urban planning purposes. The city is part of the Golden Horseshoe, a densely populated region in Ontario of around eight million people. Approximately one-quarter of the Canadian population lives within the Golden Horseshoe, and about one-sixth of all Canadian jobs lie within the city limits.



Ok so we have our limits, Houston albeit has a similar population has more than DOUBLE the land and space of Toronto. This is my reason for saying that Houston should not advertise itself as one of the largest cities in North America (unless of course they are talking about land)

Lets take a peek and see how large Toronto would be if Toronto were to use Houstons space..

If Toronto were Houston than this is what the population would look like:

Metro Toronto as it stands - 5,304,100
Hamilton - 710,300
Oshawa - 296,000
Kitchener - 497,900
Barrie - 121,248

Total Population: 6,929,540**


** This does not include many other towns and area's in the Golden Hoarseshoe as commuting patterns would not allow for that to happen just yet, however in the future all of the 8 million residents in the GH may end up commuting to the GTA.

Some municipalities that are considered part of the GTA are not within the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area (CMA). These places are not considered part of the official CMA by the Census and form part of other CMA's such as Oshawa. However, some nearby municipalities, such as Hamilton, Barrie or Kitchener-Waterloo, have their own CMA and are not considered part of the GTA. Ultimately, all the mentioned municipalities are part of the Greater Golden Horseshoe.

The City of Hamilton, Regional Municipality of Niagara and City of Guelph all have significant ties to Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area. Nonetheless, they are geographically distant enough not to be considered part of the GTA, officially or otherwise. It is expected that with current rate of regional growth these areas will one day in the future become part of the Greater Toronto Area. In some cases the provincial government already includes Hamilton in Niagara as part of the GTA for record keeping purposes as well as for transportation planning. In 2001, Statistics Canada included a new level of census management called Census Regions, roughly equivalent to an American Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA). The Extended Golden Horseshoe Census Region includes all of the Greater Toronto Area listed above, as well as Niagara, Hamilton, Guelph and Kitchener-Waterloo.


Here is a little write up i found on wikipedia about the Golden Hoarseshoe:

Under the most recent defiintions, the population was 7,910,585 in the 2001 census with an estimated popluation of 8,600,000 as of 2006, of these people approximately 5,600,000 live in the Greater Toronto Area. Following the guidlines of the Metropolitan Combined Statistical Areas, it's the 5th most populated greater combined urban area in North America after New York City, Mexico City, Los Angeles, and Chicago. There is a further, but less used definition which extends across the border into western New York state, including the Buffalo-Niagara Area and Rochester, New York urban areas. The total population in this definition is almost 11 million (hence the 4th most populous urbanized region in North America).

The "horseshoe" part of the region's name is derived from the characteristic horseshoe shape with Hamilton or Burlington roughly in the centre and Niagara Falls and Oshawa at either end. The "golden" part is historically attributed to the region's wealth and prosperity, according to the Canadian Oxford Dictionary. (An alternative explanation often quoted attributes it to its bright, or "golden", appearance from space, as a result of a continuous urban stretch of nightime lights; however, the name predates satellite photography.)

http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?...ensus%20Region

>

Most friendly and welcoming cities/metros?

With all this emphasis on "rude people," why dont we focus on the cities and metro regions that are the most welcoming and friendly toward tourists and visitors.

In my experiences, Detroit is by far the most friendly city I have been in. Dallas, Charlotte, Baltimore, Washington, Salt Lake City, Chicago, Boston, Phoenix, LA, SD, SF, and a ton of others do not even compare. The workers at the airport are helpful and courteous, taxi and shuttle drivers are friendly and willing to accomodate special requests and needs, locals are polite, and employees at eateries and hotels and stores are friendly. Of course, not everyone is like this, but I would certainly say Detroit is one of the most, if not, The most big cities in USA.

What other places are friendly?>

Merging Traffic...What Happens Where You Live?

By the way - everyone, what happens on your highways when you have two or more lanes merging into one and the traffic is backed up?>

What are the Big Int'l Airports in the US?

In your opinion, which U.S. Airports are the major players in international flights? Opinion can be based on anything from flight frequency, quality of the airport, or range of destinations offered. Just curious.>