Encyclopædia Britannica will continue to use ‘Gulf of Mexico’ for a few reasons:
-We serve an international audience, a majority of which is outside the U.S.
-The Gulf of Mexico is an international body of water, and the U.S.’s authority to rename it is ambiguous.
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-It has been called the ‘Gulf of Mexico’ for more than 425 years.
But it’s important to note the distinction between international and domestic areas.
President Trump has also signed an executive order to change the name of the Alaskan mountain called ‘Denali’ back to its former name, ‘Mount McKinley.’
When that change is made official by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names, we will also make that change.
Just as we did in 2015 when President Barack Obama changed the name of 'McKinley' to ‘Denali.’
Anyway, here's a map from our 1st Edition (1768).
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Pro #1
Preserving the penny keeps consumer prices down and avoids harming low-income households.
The U.S. Federal Reserve found that minorities and low-income people are more likely to use cash than credit cards.
Raymond Lombra, professor of economics at Pennsylvania State University, says the extra rounding charges would exceed $600 million annually and would “be regressive, affecting the poor and other disadvantaged people groups disproportionately.”
Con #1
The penny has practically no value and should be taken out of circulation just as other coins have been in U.S. history.
You can’t buy anything for a penny; vending machines and parking meters won’t accept them.
For the next hour this is strictly a Moo Deng fan account.
Since we can’t think about anything else, join us as we do a deep dive on the wonder that are Pygmy Hippos.
Pygmy hippos are one of two species in the family Hippopotamidae. Unlike your standard large Hippopotamus, the Pygmy Hippo is more adapted for land (less webbed toes, longer legs).
This is beneficial to us because it’s easier to see Moo Deng when she’s out of the water.
Forget Iceland or Bali, real travel influencers go to Poyais.
It’s so exclusive it doesn’t even exist!
The story of this fake country starts in 1822 with a man named Gregor MacGregor (real name).
MacGregor was a Scotsman who rose to the rank of general in the war for Venezuela’s independence from Spain.
After the war, he succeeded in convincing aristocrats in London that he was a war hero.
(Narrator’s voice: he wasn’t.)
Also, he claimed that an Indigenous ruler in Central America had granted him an eight-million-acre tract of land and had appointed him cacique to govern and develop the country.