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The Rod Martin Report
The Rod Martin Report
The Geopolitics of the United States, Part 1: The Inevitable Empire
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Geopolitics, Tech & Markets

The Geopolitics of the United States, Part 1: The Inevitable Empire

The geography of the United States makes the country uniquely capable of becoming a dominant global power.

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Jul 04, 2016
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The Rod Martin Report
The Rod Martin Report
The Geopolitics of the United States, Part 1: The Inevitable Empire
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by George Friedman
July 4, 2016

Like nearly all of the peoples of North and South America, most Americans are not originally from the territory that became the United States. They are a diverse collection of peoples primarily from a dozen different Western European states, mixed in with smaller groups from a hundred more. All of the New World entities struggled to carve a modern nation and state out of the American continents. Brazil is an excellent case of how that struggle can be a difficult one. The United States falls on the opposite end of the spectrum.

The Geopolitics of the United States, Part 2: American Identity and the Threats of Tomorrow

The Geopolitics of the United States, Part 2: American Identity and the Threats of Tomorrow

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·
October 22, 2024
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The American geography is an impressive one. The Greater Mississippi Basin together with the Intracoastal Waterway has more kilometers of navigable internal waterways than the rest of the world combined. The American Midwest is both overlaid by this waterway and is the world's largest contiguous piece of farmland. The U.S. Atlantic Coast possesses more major ports than the rest of the Western Hemisphere combined. Two vast oceans insu…

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