From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.
The
Jesusland map is an
Internet meme satirizing the
red state-blue state divide, created very shortly following the
2004 United States Presidential election. It has been sighted throughout
American and global media since its creation.
Origin
The original image was created on November 3, 2004 by G. Webb, a poster on yakyak.org (http://www.yakyak.org/), an Internet message board for fans of the work of Jeff Minter (see the original discussion (http://www.yakyak.org/viewtopic.php?t=26994)). Its creation has been incorrectly attributed to many different individuals, most notably Michael Moore.
Geography
The meme is in the form of a map of North America which depicts a new hypothetical national border between the United States and Canada. The "blue states" from the 2004 election have been merged with Canada to form a single nation, which is labeled the "United States of Canada". The remaining "red states" are labeled as "Jesusland." Some view the map as a humorous, cynical, or even bigoted commentary on the cultural and political divide within the United States; others have labeled themselves proud to be from one "nation" or the other.
Variations
The Jesusland map including
AlbertaSimilar maps give different labels to the geographically separated blue states. The northeastern states are referred to as "Eastern
Realitania," "Northeastistan," or "New America"; the central blue states near the
Great Lakes are labeled "Central Realitania" or "Minniwillinois"; and the blue states along the
Pacific Coast are called "Western Realitania," "Pacificstan," or "Baja Canada" (with
Hawaii being separately labeled "The Tropic of Canada"). Another has chosen the overall name "
Realistan." The red states in these variant maps are called "Jesusistan," "Redstateistan," "
Redneckistan," or "the United State of
Texas," and some maps purport to show a
capital of
Crawford, Texas, the home of
U.S. President George W. Bush (although one map shows
Alaska as having been returned to
Russia). A popular variation of the map pokes fun at the cultural divide in
Canada by including
Alberta, which tends to vote conservative in Canadian elections, in "Jesusland". Some conservative versions replace "Jesusland" with "God's Country", or refer to the "United States of Canada" as "Godless Communists". One version replaces Jesusland with "Dumbfuckistan".
Analysis
In the context of the Jesusland Map, the states in which a majority voted
Democratic in the election are viewed as more socially
liberal or
socialist in outlook, and therefore having more cultural similarities with Canada than with the remainder of the United States. The
Republican-voting red states, in common with 22 percent of all voters nationwide, tended to vote based more on what they referred to as moral values, such as opposition to
gay marriage and embryonic
stem cell research.
[1] (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5297138) Holders of these values are characterized by a high degree of faith in
Christianity, thus causing the name of
Jesus to be affixed to the hypothetical country
[2] (http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2004/144/31.0.html); indeed, based on a comment by a Republican official in an article by
Ron Suskind of the
New York Times, some have characterized the divide as being one between a "faith-based community" and a "
reality-based community".
The gap is seen as stark enough that some bloggers on the Democratic side, including the musician Moby, have ironically or semi-seriously advocated secession, whilst some on the Republican side, such as Mike Thompson, a past Chairman of the Florida Conservative Union, suggested the Federal government should expel the blue states [3] (http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=5652). Perhaps to that end, some have also noted the similarity between the electoral map of the U.S. in 2004 (which was somewhat similar to the electoral map following the 2000 election) and a map of the United States in 1860, showing the free and slave states prior to the American Civil War. [4] (http://michiganimc.org/usermedia/image/7/large/election%202004%202%20maps%202f6760.JPG)
Critics of the Jesusland Map, and of the concept of the
red state vs. blue state divide in general, have pointed out that the actual electoral map is in fact mostly "purple", containing a mixture of support for both parties (and therefore by comparison, both cultural outlooks) which rarely exceeds 65% towards either side in any given location, and that some
exit polls exaggerated the depth of adherence to the issues, creating a mistaken impression of the public's motivations. They also point out that it generally ignores cultural divides in Canada (where many areas have some cultural similarities with the "red states", although generally only on a regional basis).
See also
External links
Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) United_States_of_Canada (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_of_Canada) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=United_States_of_Canada&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)
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