Don2 (Don1 Revised)
Contributor
So, you don't feel like listing any of the myriad ways that Wyoming is different to Vermont? Like, having a population density one tenth of Vermont's?
Why would this matter? Land isn't catching the disease, people are and so the vast nothingness that is a subset of Wyoming is irrelevant. There are populated areas in each state and remote areas in each state. The populated areas create more risk and so the states decide policy with risky areas in mind. For example, Cheyenne is nearly half the population density of Burlington VT. If Cheyenne is 2000 ppl per mile sq but Burlington is 4000 ppl per mile sq, it's not really that different.