Quote:
Originally Posted by craigs
Except that this pairing violates your own rule. San Francisco has 800,000 residents and Los Angeles has 3,800,000 residents, figures which are not "roughly equal" by any reasonable standard.
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Oh please. You cut out the second part of the sentence you quoted because it didn't fit your point, huh? "It's far more interesting to look at states where there are two cities of roughly equal size
or importance (or at least in the same general league)"
San Francisco and LA are clearly both major cities, and anchors of large regions. Both cities are home to major universities, international airports, fortune 500 companies, etc. Each have all the trappings of a major city. Calexico, to use the example you put forth, has none of those things. It's a small town in the middle of desert. Of course it's radically different from San Francisco-- that goes without saying.
It makes sense to compare San Francisco and LA. They're compared all the time, actually. The fact that SF's 49 square miles have 800,000 people and LA's 400+ sq miles has 3.8 million is entirely irrelevant. They're the two largest cities/metros in the state and the entire west coast.