3% of Iowans in denial
Ohio
Lizardman constant. You'd probably have about 3% answering yes in California or Maine as well.
Western Iowa gets awfully Great Plains-ish. I could see someone living there answering "no" to the survey.
Actually the lowest value on the map for the discrepancy to the definition.
Is Idaho 25% dumbasses? I've never been
Higher percent then that considering how OBGYN's are running from the state like its on fire due to post Roe stuff they've been doing.
Good point.
I'll give the western Midwest states a pass but the really confusing part here is how anyone in Minnesota/Wisconsin/Illinois/Indiana/Iowa/Ohio can think they aren't in the Midwest...
For Ohio, it's important to remember that the southeast 1/3 of the state is Appalachian foothills. As for the other state, I have no fucking clue
I'm from Idaho. So the first answer is, yes a lot of people there are. School is meant to hit legal requirements sorta while training kids to take over the farming business from their parents. Second answer is south Idaho is basically flat deserty farmland with lots of wind, cattle, and small farming towns. It can feel very Midwest in that sense even if it is pretty far from the official Midwest border
I suppose that's a fair way to look at it if you're considering the "functional" definition of Midwest (farming-based flyover states) instead of the geographic location
I would call ND SD KS NE "Great Plains."
Idaho? Really?
Oklahoma is also not Midwest. They aren't friendly enough.
As a Wisconsinite, I've always been confused why it's considered "midwest". Wisconsin is in the eastern half of the US, and at the very top. Should be called the "midnorth"
Well America used to be just a handful of colonies along the eastern seaboard, but then there was the whole manifest destiny thing. Going west meant heading out to the new frontier. Midwesterners are people who gave up midway.
Also sometimes referred to as the "Midwest Expanse"
"Midwest" was once called "West". Like, Ohio was "The West", with "The West" meaning anything west the coastal plain.
Then people went even further west, but they still wanted to call the west of the past "West" so they called it "Middle West".
You kind of see the same thing in Asia. To Europe, Jerusalem was in "The East". Heck, even Constantinople was in "The East?" Then people saw just how much East there was. So... Middle East?
Call it skyrim then
25% confusion. Idaho is mid and west, but not midwest. Y'all Pacific Northwest.
How does Ohio barely beat Oklahoma?
What even is Oklahoma? Other than a failed petrostate
It's at an unholy cultural crossroads. Can't decide if it's Midwestern, Southern, Southwestern, or Texan.
The weeeeed capital of America babbbbbyyyy
That’s Vermont, it’s Appalachia for hippies
Conservatives in charge of education in Idaho got mfrs identifying as Midwesterners. 🪓🚁
I'm a product of the Idaho education system, and it's not great. Luckily got a start in Washington, so it didn't ruin me completely. But that result does not surprise me at all.
I want to meet the 9% of people in Pennsylvania that think they're in the Midwest.
Imagine living in Arkansas and trying to claim you are a Midwesterner with a straight face.
Imagine doing so in Idaho! Like that’s almost all the way west
wyoming and colorado are so high? like nah bro ur j west. also ohio being lower than illinois is nuts. maybe a lot of people in the appalachia region bc here in toledo we know where we are.
It really feels like there's been some sort of movement in Ohio to disown being in the Midwest. I'm in north east Ohio and I know I'm in the Midwest.
Yeah I can’t believe it. We are “mountain west” (as opposed to pacific west).
My bet with Wyoming is that most of the (admittedly small) population is in the Eastern part of the state, like Cheyenne and Laramie, if kinda makes sense they'd see themselves as more "Midwest"
It’s probably the same confused souls in Kentucky
From the driver's seat of a semi, Colorado feels like bits and pieces of its neighboring states smooshed together. You got Utahrado, New Mexirado, Wyomirado, and, yes, Nebraskarado, which is probably where the Midwestern Coloradans live. The only part where I really feel like I'm in a distinct state is the high mountain forests that shoot down the middle of the state.
Denver is probably where it is because it's right at the intersection of quite a few of these biomes. I wouldn't be surprised to learn it's been a major trading center for about as long as humans have roamed the continent.
Can someone explain to a european why this huge chunk of the eastern half of the country is called "midwest"?
It makes more sense when you consider that for most of US history the country was significantly smaller than it is now. Originally the country pretty much just consisted of the East Coast - and France, England, and Spain still had large chunks of territory within the US's current borders.
Much of what's now considered the west wasn't captured from Spain/Mexico until much later. So basically just look at it from the perspective of the East Coast where the US originated. To them at that time what we consider the Midwest now would have just been the west. And the terms changed with the westward expansion.
Manifest destiny / westward expansion
As someone who moved here from New England let me explain.
- Cheese curds
- Dontcha know?
- Discount Canada
That's the midwest.
I’d be curious about Texas. I hear it labeled as South, Southwest and then just Texas
Coastal part is The South. Inland, you get Southwest. Then there's the panhandle, and while I don't know much about what the locals think of it, from the driver's seat of a semi it's indistinguishable from the flatter parts of Oklahoma. (Meanwhile, one of my favorite truck stops is in the hilly part of Oklahoma: the Chocktaw travel center in Stringtown.)
Lol The Ohio
I’ve definitely visited that 9% in Pensyltucky.
The Ohio River was once the border of the frontier. Some ways that border is still there.