I disagree. First, when the states signed on to the Constitution they were indeed independent. Now, they are not. (After all, look what happened in 1865 when states tried to assert their independence) Second, the states we added on later, especially those in the Midwest, were not done so based on some specific need to separate them based on local needs. They are all basically boxes for a reason, and that’s that Congress was drawing arbitrary lines. Also, anyone who wants to explain to me why we need both a North and a South Dakota is welcome to.
Finally, as I mentioned before the country is simply a drastically different place than it was 230 years ago. Would Virginia have signed on if Delaware didn’t get 10x the representation but instead got 70x? Seems dubious. If we designed a system from scratch today would we give Wyoming 70x the representation of California? I sincerely doubt it. Would we make it so 11% of the population can stop all legislation? Hell no.
That’s the system we have currently though. There’s a good op-Ed in the Washington Post today about just this issue. If our government were working well and this were the case I can see the argument for not changing things. Instead though our government is almost entirely dysfunctional, frequently shutting itself down, unable to pass even overwhelmingly popular legislation. Considering its poor performance maybe it’s a time to change how things are done?