General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Toyota moves from Ca to Tx: When are bluestates going to actively fight job poachers? [View all]kentauros
(29,414 posts)and instead are looking at an electoral map. I see plenty of blue and purple. So, I can only surmise you're still focused on an electoral map that doesn't differentiate voting records by population densities.
And as I figure you've likely looked at my profile by now, I'm also in Texas (native to the state, just so you know.) What you may also not understand when some of us Texans say they're Texans first, and US citizens second, is the idea that we're being facetious. Sure, there are those that aren't, but don't assume everyone is serious about. Sometimes it's just fun to say that just to see if we can get a rise out of the uptight folks.
By the way, we live in the UNITED States of America. Or did you purposely ignore that part for some weird concept that we are actually separate?
Now this is interesting, and supports the idea that Texas is at least purple, and turning blue, seeing as how almost all of our major cities and urban areas (Austin, Beaumont/Port Arthur, Brownsville/McAllen, Dallas/Fort Worth, El Paso, Houston, San Antonio) are strong purple to blue (Corpus appears to be the last to convert) :
Texas Historical Rural and Urban Populations, 19502005

So much for the misinformed contention that we're a "red" state.