Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1634981> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 59 of
59
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1634981 subject Q13263451.
- Q1634981 subject Q15294359.
- Q1634981 subject Q8337942.
- Q1634981 subject Q8410613.
- Q1634981 subject Q8447767.
- Q1634981 subject Q8448376.
- Q1634981 subject Q8607568.
- Q1634981 subject Q8879869.
- Q1634981 abstract "The Jesusland map is an Internet meme created shortly after the 2004 U.S. presidential election that satirizes the red/blue states scheme by dividing the United States and Canada into "The United States of Canada" and "Jesusland". The map implies the existence of a fundamental political divide between contiguous northern and southern regions of North America, the former including both the socially liberal Canada and the West Coast, Northeastern, and Upper Midwestern states, and suggests that these states are closer in spirit to Canada than to the more conservative regions of their own country. The Freakonomics blog opined that the map reflected the "despair, division, and bitterness" of the election campaign and results. Slate Magazine also covered the image and posited that it might be the reason the Canadian Immigration Website received six times its usual page views the day after the election.".
- Q1634981 thumbnail Jesusland_map.svg?width=300.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1128483.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1166.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q11696.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1190344.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1204.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1211497.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q12606.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q128758.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q13263451.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1439.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1527.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q15294359.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1537.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q1548416.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q158691.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q159.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q16.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q168210.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q18389.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q207.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q210181.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q2927074.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q296178.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q3427834.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q35657.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q464075.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q4774130.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q49.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q5029459.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q5119.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q541962.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q60497.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q632014.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q7301223.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q7347.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q797.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q8337942.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q8410613.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q8447767.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q8448376.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q8607568.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q8879869.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q9684.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q978.
- Q1634981 wikiPageWikiLink Q980347.
- Q1634981 comment "The Jesusland map is an Internet meme created shortly after the 2004 U.S. presidential election that satirizes the red/blue states scheme by dividing the United States and Canada into "The United States of Canada" and "Jesusland".".
- Q1634981 label "Jesusland map".
- Q1634981 depiction Jesusland_map.svg.