Canada is ranked number 3 and the U.S. is 5 or 6...Still both insanely good and not much of a diffrent.
#1 country is Norway...which is the only country that reconizes DDR as a sport...coinsidance? I think not XD
I'm not saying Canada is better than Canada its just voted better. Really there about the same just with diffrent pros and cons that approch to diffrent people
Canada's ranked number as the number two most livable country in the world by the UN. It changes spots with Norway every couple years.
Winter sports? Ya, cause you know, we invented basketball, baseball, hockey, and numerous others like lacrosse. Too bad those are year round sports? I don't think hundred degree weather is considered great.
Canada: Hey look, we use centigrade like the rest of the world
USA: Hey look, we can't spell fahrenheit but we still use it!
Canada's ranked number as the number two most livable country in the world by the UN. It changes spots with Norway every couple years.
Winter sports? Ya, cause you know, we invented basketball, baseball, hockey, and numerous others like lacrosse. Too bad those are year round sports? I don't think hundred degree weather is considered great.
Canada: Hey look, we use centigrade like the rest of the world
USA: Hey look, we can't spell fahrenheit but we still use it!
Canada: Better hiking. Better hockey teams. Curling.
-Cons-
USA: Tried to hold Israel back like a bunch of retards. Apparently, it's okay for the US to go and kick the butts of everyone who attacks them, but Israel can't.
Canada: Can get pretty cold? I don't know, I can't think of something.
Last edited by Angel Shiyue; 12-14-2006, 11:37 AM.
Reason: Wait, there's more.
Kashazu, honey, there are places in the U.S.A. that get colder than it does where I live in Canada.
I live below the 49th parallel, on the west coast (We have ferries that go to Seattle, etc.). It rarely gets colder than -1, maybe -2 Celsius. And snow is almost mythical in my city. So much so, that an inch or two causes the whole city to practically shut down. It's pathetic.
So yeah, not necessarily colder. It has more to do with specific geography of where you are, such as elevation, how close you are to, say, the ocean as well (I live on an island). My location in a north to south range has a significantly smaller part in how cold it gets. Of course, add the variables of meteorology, and things can get a little out of whack. Back in 1996, my city received six feet of snow, but as far as I know, that's an occurence of about once every seventy years or so.
Overall, the assumption that Canada is colder than the U.S.A. doesn't hold much veritas.
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