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Second: Boston
San Francisco
Philadelphia
Seattle
DC
San Diego
Dallas
Nashville
New Orleans
Las Vegas
Third:
Houston
Miami
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Milwaukee
Detroit
Portland
Memphis
Indianapolis
Minneapolis
Atlanta
Phoenix
Denver
Kansas City
St. Louis
How you rank these will of course depend on the criteria you use. I would consider dropping San Diego, Las Vegas, Nashville, and New Orleans from second to third tier. I'd move Houston and Atlanta up to second tier, probably Denver and Cleveland as well.
Detroit is an interesting case. It could be argued that, at least for the time being, it has lost some importance in national and international affairs, with its declining share of auto production, but historically it would be more tier two.
Miami is another interesting case. The metro area compares in population to most of the second-tier cities' populations, and the city is notable as the center of Carribean culture in the U.S., but then there is the question of whether that culture really has a strong national influence in the U.S. or is largely limited to southern FL.
Minneapolis, hmmm. I'm not especially aware of that city's economic strong suits. I'd be inclined to consider it as a solid candidate for tier two, because I get the general impression that it's a pretty large and important city, but I could be way off there. I just don't know enough about what makes the Twin Cities tick to really say for sure.
How you rank these will of course depend on the criteria you use. I would consider dropping San Diego, Las Vegas, Nashville, and New Orleans from second to third tier. I'd move Houston and Atlanta up to second tier, probably Denver and Cleveland as well.
Detroit is an interesting case. It could be argued that, at least for the time being, it has lost some importance in national and international affairs, with its declining share of auto production, but historically it would be more tier two.
Miami is another interesting case. The metro area compares in population to most of the second-tier cities' populations, and the city is notable as the center of Carribean culture in the U.S., but then there is the question of whether that culture really has a strong national influence in the U.S. or is largely limited to southern FL.
Minneapolis, hmmm. I'm not especially aware of that city's economic strong suits. I'd be inclined to consider it as a solid candidate for tier two, because I get the general impression that it's a pretty large and important city, but I could be way off there. I just don't know enough about what makes the Twin Cities tick to really say for sure.
Yeah, that's pretty much how I would rank them. I would leave Minneapolis and Denver in tier three and Miami in tier two. Houston and Dallas should be in the same tier, whether its 2nd or 3rd.
why does citydata have so many stupid threads like this. Somebody picks cities and puts a bunch on third that you know she has never travelled to them all that she is ranking. I may be wrong. Maybe she did, but still?
I am just saying. I am a poster on SSP much more than here. ON that forum, if somebody tries a city bashing or city vs city thread it is locked. It creates more intelligent urban discussions rather than, "My city is pretty, and your's smells" type arguments.
Although, I do see that far more people see the later thread much more fun and exciting, and I guess this is the forum for it.
Is there even a definition on what a "Tier" freakin is?
Citydata.com's forum is going from a second Tier forum to a third "Tier" one with threads like this.
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