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Ice Mage Kara wrote:Yet a wonder also means what it inspires in others. For many millions, my own ancestors included, the Statue of Liberty was a sign of freedom from repression and the start of a new life. It was a symbol, one of rebirth and liberty, and one that has inspired many. Frankly, if voting for it makes you an idiot, then you can put me up as one, if not for the engineering feats (not super impressive but still pretty cool) then for what it's given millions and what it represents.
May-chan wrote:forgive me, living amongst the people of rural Indiana has made me rather bitter and snippy... -_- *opens up the newspaper to read the locals complain that there needs to be enforced prayer in school, all immigrants should be taken to concentration camps, illegal immigrants cause childhood obesity, the world should bow to Bush, the anti-Christ is coming, and so on...*
Christina Anikari wrote:Ummm...not to ruin any of your ideas Guen, but how those were made is quite well known. Not every single engineering detail, but the basic methods are known already. Stonehenge was by large rock slabs quarried and then hauled along on logs until they reached the spot where they are now and then using ropes and logs for lifting were pulled erect. The pyramids were made using thousands of conscripted peasants beating the blocks into shape using rounded stones and then hauled up what was already made and so on.
Christina Anikari wrote:Ummm...Koru. I never mentioned the wooden ramp theory for the pyramids at all.
The wooden logs to roll over was for Stonehenge. Stonehenge was in a moor in England the last time i checked while the Pyramids were on the Giza plateau in Egypt.
Also who would be bloody stupid enough to think that desert dwellers who didn't even have wood enough for using it in basic tools would make ramps from that material?
Colossus of Rhodes, at least that is the one listed among the seven wonders of the ancient world.
May-chan wrote:It's just too bad that Frank Lloyd Wright's design for a mile-high skyscraper never came to be... cause that'd be my #1 choice...
http://s5.photobucket.com/albums/y176/m ... linois.jpg
long tower is long
May-chan wrote:I said idiots because I'm making a strong assumption that many american's don't even really know a full seven of those listed... just like how in the poll of America's greatest president... Bush, Clinton, and Reagan were near or at the top of the list because most of the voters were only familiar with recent presidents... thus I'd imagine they'd vote for statue of liberty because they think "OMG amereka nombar 1! we are tuh bestest hurr hurr! All dose udder 1's R in commie-nazi-terrorist countrees, I thunk..."
-_-
May-chan wrote:heh, Rome is not the oldest. Even if talking about that area, Athens is obviously older and still a major city... As for what the oldest still remaining and still active... I dunno, but I actually think it would probably be in Iraq or Iran actually... since the birth of civilization as we know it took root there...
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