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I was specifically addressing the point that:

"It's quite hard to find a similar scenario in Europe: these vast, sparsely-populated tracts of land."

Saying that a part of Europe should be excluded from debate about whether Europe has "sparsely-populated tracts of land" because it is remote and sparsely populated seems a bit circular.

A sizeable chunk of Russia is in Europe - not sure why that should be excluded?

Edit: If people mean the EU or Western Europe when they say "Europe" then that's fine - but it's arguably similar to people from Europe only regarding the US as the two coasts!



>If people mean the EU or Western Europe when they say "Europe" then that's fine

Yep, that's what I refer to. I imagine most Americans do as well. From my perspective, I don't expect Europeans to automatically include considerations of Alaska.

>it's arguably similar to people from Europe only regarding the US as the two coasts!

A well-known term in the USA is "fly-over country." That refers to all the land between the two coasts. Our own "coasties" already view the rest of the country as another world. We already do that to ourseleves!




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