<p>Anyways texas is almost 3 times the size of Britain</p>
<p>So, according to your logic, Texas is bigger than Britain and therefore better, so Russia must be better than America and pretty much all of Europe...</p>
<p>OK, theamazingjasmyn, where did that one come from...</p>
<p>Yes, tans are absolutely everything. They will assure your acceptance into your schools.</p>
<p>Tans don't have anything to do with acceptance but pale people kind of scare me</p>
<p>Texas is a STATE not a country (anymore) so its not like comparing russia to america</p>
<p>Xinjiang's a province in China. It's probably the size of the entire East Coast. Is it better? The Sahka Republic of Russia is almost 5 times bigger than Texas. Is it better?</p>
<p>No because we are in a first world country ha</p>
<p>Tom, aren't you technically American? Oh and theamazingjasmyn, too much sun exposure increases your chances of skin cancer.</p>
<p>Um I live in Texas where its over a hundred degrees pretty much everyday in the summer you kind of have to accept that you're going to be tan and not really think about skin cancer</p>
<p>UM..... yeah, but it SNOWS in winter. I live in California (Southern) and it fluctuates from 80-110, year-around, and people still wear sunscreen and sunglasses.</p>
<p>I'm allergic to sunscreen even the hypoallergenic kind I don't know why I didn't used to be but now I am anyways it really doesn't snow here it snows maybe once a year if that much. Weather is really stupid here last year in march on monday and tuesday it was 90 degrees outside on friday it was snowing. Even now its about 30-40 degrees and it was about 80 our whole winter break but lucky for us even if there is a tiny bit of ice on the roads we get school off</p>
<p>And when it snows its hardly ever more than an inch or two usually less than an inch</p>
<p>aaaaand the state of Western Australia is 4 times bigger. And don't tell me Australia is a third world country.</p>
<p>I don't think theamazingjasmyn knows what she's talking about.</p>
<p>australias also a continent so its disqualified</p>
<p>Ok, now you're being kind of ridiculous. Australia's still much smaller than the US, and so how does it being a continent along with a country disqualify it?</p>
<p>England is a country so I don't quite get why theamazingjasmyn is comparing it to Texas which she just rightfully reminded us is a state</p>
<p>thingslost, yes, I do hold American citizenship because both of my parents are American, but I was born in England so unfortunately that disqualifies me from running for the White House ;-) Where I tell people I'm from, though, really depends on where the person I'm talking to is from and how energetic I'm feeling. As surprising as it may sound, a lot of people get confused when I tell them that I'm both British and American. It does, however, make getting through airports a lot faster. Show your American passport in British airports during a trip stateside, and show your British passport in American airports on the way back across the pond.</p>
<p>theamazingjasmyn... did you miss the part where Nasafato said the STATE of WESTERN Australia?</p>
<p>And GOSH Nasafato DON'T YOU KNOW that Australia's status as a continent automatically makes it suck in comparison with non-continents? SHEESH get your facts straight before you try to argue with theamazingjasmyn, after all she is a walking encyclopedia you know</p>
<p>!!! Yeah, I know what you mean. My parents were born in China, I was born in Russia, and we live in the US. :D</p>
<p>Also, nice sarcasm there. I wonder what score theamazingjasmyn got on her SSATS.</p>
<p>i got 95% so you cant say i'm stupid</p>