B weight of gold that should be it
Latin America is the most dangerous region in the world, and the situation is getting worse, a lot worse. According to a recent World Bank study, over the past two decades nearly every region in the world has grown safer or at least stayed the same, except, that is, Latin America. Latin America holds eight percent of the world’s population but suffers 40 percent of the world’s homicides and 60 percent of the kidnappings. The murder rate in Latin America is 26 per 100,000. In Europe it is nine.
Of the 50 most murderous cities in the world, 41 are located in Latin America. Mexico’s Acapulco ranked third, with 113 murders per 100,000 in population, behind the Latin American cities of Caracas, Venezuela, placing second at 134, and San Pedro Sula, Honduras, with 187, winning the dubious honor as the most dangerous city in the world.
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Geography affected the way that early societies and cultures developed in the early Americans because the Native societies lived off of the land and developed a special relationship with the land which is shown through their religious and cultural beliefs. The immigrant populations societies and cultures were also impacted by geography in that they began developing the coastal regions and places that had access to river ways and then moved their development inland over the centuries. The land played an important role in the ways that each society sought to grow and develop in regards to how they viewed the land.
<span>In order to know if a country is in its golden age, you need to know about its future, specifically whether or not it will perform worse than it currently does. Cuz nobody can tell for sure about the future</span>