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Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

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  • #61
    Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

    Ben might have been in the first in that situation, but Zeke Elliott was suspended last season despite no criminal charges filed against him, much less a conviction. The only difference was that Jerruh decided to got mano-a-mano with the league only to get bit in the backside.

    This +1000...
    Cal U (Pa.) Class of 2014

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    • #62
      Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

      im just talking trash lol but Columbus is on a whole different trajectory than pgh and cle. place is exploding and on top o the multi billion dollar sports complex/amusement just north in lewis center is icing on the cake.

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      • #63
        Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

        Originally posted by GhostOfHomer01 View Post
        im just talking trash lol but Columbus is on a whole different trajectory than pgh and cle. place is exploding and on top o the multi billion dollar sports complex/amusement just north in lewis center is icing on the cake.
        It's flat. The entire midwest is growing because its flat. They can grow and explode because they have room to grow and explode. Because they're flat.

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        • #64
          Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

          Originally posted by IUP24 View Post
          It's flat. The entire midwest is growing because its flat. They can grow and explode because they have room to grow and explode. Because they're flat.
          its flat? lmao thats why?

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          • #65
            Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

            Originally posted by IUP24 View Post
            It's flat. The entire midwest is growing because its flat. They can grow and explode because they have room to grow and explode. Because they're flat.
            or because Columbus didnt have to adjust from de-industrialization and is passing up all the cities attempting to transition lol

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            • #66
              Last edited by IUP24; 09-04-2018, 03:31 PM.

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              • #67

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                • #68
                  Originally posted by GhostOfHomer01 View Post
                  or because Columbus didnt have to adjust from de-industrialization and is passing up all the cities attempting to transition lol

                  So you think it was funny that hundreds of thousands of people lost their jobs due to industry getting destroyed in blue collar cities like Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Detroit?



                  Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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                  • #69
                    Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

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                    • #70
                      Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

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                      • #71
                        Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

                        Originally posted by IUP24 View Post
                        So you think it was funny that hundreds of thousands of people lost their jobs due to industry getting destroyed in blue collar cities like Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Detroit?



                        Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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                        • #72
                          Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

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                          • #73
                            Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

                            Originally posted by IUP24 View Post
                            It's flat. The entire midwest is growing because its flat. They can grow and explode because they have room to grow and explode. Because they're flat.
                            Columbus is growing because 1) it is the home of the flagship state university in a fairly large population state and 2) it is a state capital city in a relatively large population state. It has nothing to do with topography.

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                            • #74
                              Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

                              Originally posted by CHIP72 View Post
                              Columbus is growing because 1) it is the home of the flagship state university in a fairly large population state and 2) it is a state capital city in a relatively large population state. It has nothing to do with topography.
                              You don't quite understand my point. There's room for it to grow. When you drive outside of Columbus proper it's nothing but farmland. That's my point. Cities like that can grow and expand because they're in a location where they can grow and expand. You're right about what you said, but if that city was landlocked like Pittsburgh, Cleveland, or Cincinnati, it wouldn't keep growing out.

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                              • #75
                                Re: Panic in Yinzer Land (Leveon Bell)

                                Originally posted by IUP24 View Post
                                You don't quite understand my point. There's room for it to grow. When you drive outside of Columbus proper it's nothing but farmland. That's my point. Cities like that can grow and expand because they're in a location where they can grow and expand. You're right about what you said, but if that city was landlocked like Pittsburgh, Cleveland, or Cincinnati, it wouldn't keep growing out.
                                Those cities could grow upward.

                                I live in the DC area, and this area is growing like crazy. I can assure you it isn't because (or at least solely because) farmland outside of DC is being developed at a fast rate.

                                The reason why the Pittsburgh metropolitan area isn't growing has nothing to do with lack of land to develop (you can go 15-20 miles east outside of downtown Pittsburgh on PA 286 not too far from Monroeville and think you are in the middle of nowhere), and almost everything to do with an aging population that is dying off just as fast as they can be replaced. Pittsburgh has a relatively low rate of immigration from other parts of the U.S. or world outside of western Pennsylvania, and that doesn't help matters.

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