This is Central African Republic. It's a Republic in Central Africa.
This is Central African Republic. It's a Republic in Central Africa
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>ywn live in city called Bimbo
why even live
really really really interesting my burgerfriend
tell me more about it please
what are the green areas
National parks and a nature reserve
"""Central"""
""""""African""""""
""""""""Republic""""""""
Christians are killing muslims there
That was the Central African Empire. It was an Empire in Central Africa.
Should have been the Ubangi Shari Republic after independence 2bh
>It's a Republic in Central Africa
Proofs?
what an ugly flag
The red stripe ruins it
why are they so black? even in South Africa they're whiter.
you live in a town full of bimbos
I read so on the pornweb
I don't know, I sort of like it to be honest. Less generic compared to the dozens of flags with similar color/design schemes.
The light South Africans blacks you see are Capoids of Khoi people or mutts. The dark ones are Bantu.
Thoughts on the separatist Republic of Logone?
Yep, and it belongs to u.. I mean, France has interests here
They have a right to self-determination
Anyone who wants to disassociate themselves with CAR and have a faint chance of not living in a shithole should have that right. They'd be vulnerable to influence from Islamist groups, though. Which I guess isn't any worse than the genocide against them.
In blue the only paved roads in all CAR. They have a lot of troubles with their infrastructure.
They didn't have wheels until the 19th century.
How does it feel to know you can't buy bread from bimbo?
There was not much need for a wheel in areas that didn't have easily-navigable land and/or transportation animals. Much of Sub-Saharan Africa was and still is mountainous and remote with dense forest that made it difficult to get around as a person, let alone as a caravan. Places like DRC are still a nightmare to navigate by virtue of the terrain.
>there are no mountains in Europe, the middle east or Asia
Dumb leafposter
en.wikipedia.org
>In medieval Europe, before the 1200s, there were no organized networks of streets inside cities, merely shifting footpaths. With the invention of the horse harness and wagons with swivelled front axles that could make tight turns, urban street networks stabilized.
>As states developed and became richer, especially with the Renaissance, new roads and bridges began to be built, often based on Roman designs. Although there were attempts to rediscover Roman methods, there was little useful innovation in road building before the 18th century.
>Between 1725 and 1737 General George Wade constructed 250 miles (400 km) of road and 40 bridges to improve Britain's control of the Scottish Highlands, using Roman road designs with large stones at the bottom and gravel on top, with a typical overall depth of two metres. They were so poorly aligned and steep, according to Thomas Telford, "as to be unfit for the purposes of civil life" and also rough and poorly drained.
You're trying to claim white superiority for something they didn't get right until less than 200 years ago.
Literally everybody had wheels except sub-Saharans.