And when you really think about it, things have worked out really well for US despite our size. It seems like there is just so much that every little area specliazes in. Silicone Valley and Hollywood out West. Logging in the PNW. Oil and gas in the S and SE. Financial centers in NY and Chicago. Manufacturing in the Midwest. Vermont has…errr I have no idea.
Sometimes I think a lot of the problems of the US are caused because we’re so Damn physically large of a country. I mean, it gives us advantages as well I suppose. I’m well aware that there are other large countries ( physically speaking ) like Canada and Russia but to be frank they just don’t have enough of a population compared to us. I’ve seen a few map overlays and Texas alone is larger than most European countries.
Mind you, I’m not advocating for splitting us up or nothing like that. Just that we should find ways to manage a little better.
America's large size and all the advantages of geography and resources that comes with it is more beneficial that disadvantageous. But more than anything, it's Americans themselves that put America over the top.
The Hollywood we've known was
invented by an elite yet isolated class of American Jews, and along with the music industry, our entertainment industry has projected American culture as a default pop culture across the globe.
After WWII, America, who up until WWII had little experience handling global affairs, did about as good of a job as anyone could've done to stabilize the world through the atomic age, the cold war, and into globalization.
And America's academic freedom and scientific ingenuity invented the age of aviation, the nuclear age, and the internet era, ushering the world into entirely new realities. And in tandem with England, America invented industrialization; in tandem with Russia, America invented the space age.
It's a credit to Americans themselves.
Compare that to nations with arguably just as many vast resources in terms of coastline, natural harbors, oil fields, minerals to be mined, agricultural capacity, rivers to be harnessed for energy, and tourism potential. Nations like Mexico, Brazil, Russia, and India come to mind. So what holds them back? Mostly it comes down to longstanding dictatorships and/or endemic national corruption that leads to a combination of unsound financial systems, widespread poverty and crime, limited educational opportunity, and national healthcare stuck in the 1970s.