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Excellent atlas électoral américain : http://uselectionatlas.org/

toutes les anciennes élections, toutes les cartes, et même un petit logiciel pour faire les pronos pour 2008 :cool:
 
J'étais étonné par les couleurs choisies, et en fait il est expliqué que le choix du rouge pour les Républicains et du Bleu pour les Démocrates est relativement récent. Quelqu'un aurait plus d'infos là-dessus?
 
Pero Coveilha said:
J'étais étonné par les couleurs choisies, et en fait il est expliqué que le choix du rouge pour les Républicains et du Bleu pour les Démocrates est relativement récent. Quelqu'un aurait plus d'infos là-dessus?
c'est pas le contraire d'ailleurs ? rouge pour les Démocrates et bleu pour les Républicains ?
 
L'usage actuel est tel que je l'ai décrit. Le site donne l'inverse, apparemment parce que ça correspond à l'ancien usage :)confused: )
 
vu sur wikipedia (ça vaut ce que ça vaut, j'ai pas approfondi)

In the United States there is no official association between political parties and specific colours. The two major political parties use the national colours — red, white, and blue — to show their patriotism. The only common situation in which it has been necessary to assign a single colour to a party has been in the production of political maps in graphical displays of election results. In such cases, there has historically been no consistent association of particular parties with particular colours. In the weeks following the 2000 election, however, there arose the terminology of blue states and red states, in which the conservative Republican Party was associated with red and the liberal Democratic Party with blue. Political observers subsequently latched on to this association, which resulted from the use of red for Republican victories and blue for Democratic victories on the display map of a television network. This association has certainly not been consistently applied in the past: during previous presidential elections, about half of the television networks used the opposite association. In 2004, the association was mostly kept.
There is some historical use of blue for Democrats and red for Republicans — in the late 19th century and early 20th century, Texas county election boards used colour coding to help Spanish speakers and illiterates identify the parties.[2] However, this system was not applied consistently in Texas and was not picked up on a national level.
Maps for presidential elections produced by the U.S. government use the opposite system, with red for Democrats and blue for Republicans — for example, see U.S. presidential election, 1992. Nevertheless, since the 2000 election the news media have tended to use red for Republicans and blue for Democrats, especially as it relates to the electoral majority in each state, informally calling them the Red states and Blue states. The colour green is often used for the Green Party, and the colour yellow is often used for the Libertarian Party. A February 2004 article in the New York Times examined this issue.
 
chewy said:
250 documentaires en anglais sur la seconde guerre mondiale:

http://www.stage6.com/History---World-War-II/videos/

Celui-là, on peut le supprimer :

Stage6.com said:
Stage6.com has been shut down. Thank you for supporting the service.

We created Stage6 with the mission of empowering content creators and viewers to discover a new kind of video experience. Ultimately, the continued operation of Stage6 was a very expensive enterprise that required an enormous amount of attention and resources that we at DivX are not in a position to continue to provide. There are a lot of other details involved, but at the end of the day it's really as simple as that.