That accounts, roughly, for the million-odd square miles of Alaska, but I'd always thought it had been purchased in 1867, not between 2000 and 2004.
There is still a problem with population, however. I always thought jobs were outsourced, not residents. And 27 million, that's a bit more than what has really been outsourced.
Christian Lheureux
Directeur BU Infrastructure / Manager of IT Infrastructure BU
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> -----Message d'origine-----
> De : HP-3000 Systems Discussion [mailto:[log in to unmask]] De la part
> de Johnson, Tracy
> Envoyé : vendredi 5 novembre 2004 16:09
> À : [log in to unmask]
> Objet : Re: [HP3000-L] OT:The Strange Calculus of USA Today
> Importance : Faible
>
> James Byrne writes:
> >
> > Craig Lalley wrote:
> >
> > > So the US had 3,009,632 square miles in 2000 and
> > > 4,021,000 square mile in 2004
> > >
> > > Not bad we grew by 25%!
> >
> > Yes, but what happened to the population?
> >
> > 2000 == 148,000,000 + 133,000,000 = 281,000,000
> > 2004 == 150,900,000 + 103,600,000 = 254,100,000
>
>
> That doesn't even account for the extra 171,599 sq.mi. for Iraq!
>
> BT
>
>
> Tracy Johnson
> MSI Schaevitz Sensors
>
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