- 1,795
Official language of Oregon? English.
Official language of California? English (except LA).
Official language of Georgia? English. Ish.
Official language of Maryland? English.
Official language of North Dakota? English.
Official language of England? English.
Official language of France? French.
Official language of Germany? German.
Official language of Spain? Spanish.
Official language of Italy? Italian.
And that's not even getting into freaky-speaking countries like Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Finland, Slovenia or The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
Each State (or Commonwealth) in the US has its own laws based on a common framework and are all governed by one overriding law - Federal Law. Each country in Europe has its own laws based on NO common framework and there is no single governing law above that.
Fact is that Italy gets as many seats in the UN Security Council as the US does - and far more than Texas does.
I'm not saying that you should know all of the countries in Europe - I doubt many people in the UK can either. Just that comparing them to States because of their sizes is foolhardy (especially when you factor in Rhode Island).
I never said anything about official languages, seats in councils or size relationships. All I said was that it wouldn't be a huge stretch to compare the two. Yes, it is quite a loose comparison, but they do have similarities. Of course Texas isn't it's own independent country that could ultimately do whatever it pleases tell everyone else to sod off, but many interactions between states and between countries could be compared, like travel or trade. It would be just as foolhardy to think of the US as all one, homogenous place. It is made up of many, somewhat independent states that can be very different from one another. Hell, some parts of the US may just as well be another country, as different as they are *cough* *cough* Louisiana *cough* cough*.