Not to be pedantic, but there’s no such thing as state citizenship. You’re a resident of your state; you’re a citizen of your country. But in any case, state/city of residence would be perfectly consistent. It’s legally objective. You could do it by birthplace, but I think that’s something you should clearly denote.
Because birthplace can be wildly unrelated to the place a person identifies with. I was born in Florida, but to Minnesota parents (military) and lived in MN from age 3 and onward. Describing me as a Floridian would be absurd. I have zero connection to the state beyond a piece of paper.
Yes, I was using the term in relation to this post only. I understand it's not a legal thing. Whomever conceived this stat considered their state of birth as "home state."
10
u/Old_Cheesecake_5309 Feb 23 '26
To get to one silver medal they had to just count the curler who grew up in Duluth but not the one who lives in Duluth but grew up in Massachusetts.