Visual example...
@freemo So, where is people there is blue? I mean, cows and bushes don't vote.
Yea sorta... when people are huddled on top of eachother and packed densly they tend to go blue. Those same people allowed to be spread out in nature tend to vote red.
One could argue cities are less healthy to live in due to the tight space, overcrowding, violence, etc. This leads to people demanding more controls (a classically blue outlook). We know from rat models overcrowding leads to oretty unhealthy rats.
@casastorta yes that woukd be suburbs, the live near people but arent under u healthy population density... those are generally red too.
@freemo @casastorta Uh, no, the suburbs tend to go blue because of their proximity to the cities, except in very deep red states. Only very tiny portions of this country are truly urban. Like 90%+ of the blue land mass in this country is not urban or super dense.