To explain the "no west" comment, in 1812 the American "west" only reached as far as the Mississippi River.
The northern states were heavily involved in international trade, having the ports and ship building yards. The men who sailed on those ships were likewise mostly from the north and were the ones being impressed into the British navy. The agrarian south's interests lay entirely in the production of tobacco, cotton, sugar, sorghum and a few other large cash crops. The commerce was mostly within America and they had little interest in shipping issues.
It allows people worldwide to identify the same species.
Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich<span> which was published in 1962</span><span> created a sensation because his novel portrays a grim detail of life in Stalinist concentration camp---a life which he had been condemned and an indictment of the Stalinist past.</span><span> </span>
<span>On his pilgrimage to Mecca he introduced the kingdom of Mali to the world which was really unknown at the time He made a good impression to all of the people he met along the way. Also he was so rich that the amount of gold that he bought dropped the world price of gold.</span> Musa<span> not only gave money and donated to the cities he passed on the way to </span>Mecca<span>, including Cairo and Medina, but also traded gold for several holy souvenirs.He was so famous and rich that people thought that he built a mosque every Friday.</span>