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Essay / Development of the world without religion - 1628
When people question the existence and emergence of planet Earth through science, we discover that there are no generic answers. The conversation will lead to endless debate and lead to vexing, and sometimes violent, interpretations based on each person's beliefs. The answer is what happens inside the geographic world. My research topic is not geography which is tested in CE2, when a teacher asks a student to indicate where London is on a map. In fact, I will focus on the development of urban geography, as it is a development that is less obvious to the average ignorant and inexperienced individual. Rather, professionals who plan many different cities and towns in various parts of the world are the only ones who can successfully create these developments. Some of the categories involved in urban geography include the success and fall of cities and metropolises as a whole, suburbanization, and impacts on social classes. When we see cities collapsing and metropolises collapsing, we are suddenly shocked and become a frightened nation. All the major newspapers and magazines are interested in going to these cities and acting like they're involved in the recovery and the "what do we do next?" It is astonishing that no one sees what is happening in the big cities. When they collapse or begin to collapse, we as a nation begin to play the blame game. We are a united nation, which means we take responsibility for everything that happens to this beautiful place, from the worst to the best of times. The Times magazine ran an issue leading most, if not all, of its issue. about the Detroit scenario...... middle of document ......accessed November 26, 2013).Johnson, Richard. “Detroit – What Could Have Been.” Graphic: Detroit yesterday and today. www.news.nationalpost.com (accessed November 28, 2013). Maynard, Micheline. "Detroit Considers Future of Its Abandoned Blocks." Times Magazine. www.nation.times. (Accessed November 27, 2013).Nicholaides, Becky M. “The Suburbs and the Sun Belt.” OAH History Magazine, October 2003. Rose, Harold M. “The Development of an Urban Subsystem: The Case of the Negro Ghetto.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 60 (1970): 1-17. Schiller, Bradley R. “The Futility of Class War.” Policy Review 151 (2008): 21-30.Staff, NPR. “Can Detroit return to its former glory? » NPR News USA. www.npr.org (accessed November 27, 2013). Tamney, John. “Unions didn’t bankrupt Detroit, but big American cars did.” Forbes. www.forbes.com (accessed November 27, 2013).