Müs wrote:
What's wrong with that? There are a shitton of people who live in those states. It would make sense to have to campaign there.
This goes to RD's earlier question, but what's being missed here is that a country is not made up only of people. While Texas and California are two of the largest states in terms of both area and population, and very tiny states like Delaware and Rhode Island have small populations because they simply don't have room for big populations, the simple fact is that the more concentrated a given population of people is, the less relative political weight each person should have. Rural areas with low populations also tend to provide food and natural resources to the cities. Rural dwellers need protection from the greater weight of population of cities not just for their own protection, but to protect the cities themselves from misguided policies applied to rural areas that could, in the long run, lead to all sorts of problems in the cities themselves as the "B Country" is squashed under a combination of exploitation, do-goodery, and disinterest from a population advantage they can't hope to contest.
Rural life is not the same as urban life. Policies that make sense in terms of urban populations can range from irrelevant to disastrous in a rural setting. Gun control, for example. While most gun control arguments are simply wrong in urban areas, in rural setting they are far worse than wrong. Many rural people rely heavily on guns for food and rural people in general cannot count on the police for protection. There are far too few cops relative to distance, and because there are few people, there is a small tax base and adding significantly more police is not feasible (even if the police could substitute for self-defense, which they can't). Rural dwellers even more than urban dwellers
need to be able to defend themselves.
Remember the thread on the fire company that let a guy's trailer burn? A lot of outrage from urban and suburban dwellers used to having a fire company and not understanding the funding issue that would make providing fire service based on after-the-fact payment incredibly irresponsible.
Those are just two examples. Distance and land area matter. It isn't about everyone being exactly equal. That's why a state-based vote is important. A state tends to contain land and economic activities that bear a relationship to each other because they are contiguous. Even an enormous state like Alaska is more relevant within itself than it is to, say, life in Mississippi.