New York is the only state besides Hawaii where the majority of its population lives on an island (50.8%).
Legally speaking, NYC + Long Island is a peninsula and is treated as such by the courts and the government, but also legally speaking, pizza is a vegetable and cannabis has no accepted medical purpose, so that doesn't mean very much.
I don't think an island works. The four counties on Long Island only total about 8 million. You have to add in other islands to go over 50%.
By "an island" I meant like, there are 50.8% of the people who live on
any island, rather than one specific island. 50.8% of the people can say "I live on an island" is how I thought about it in my head when writing that post.
I can confirm that it's accurate, but how does it defy conventional wisdom?
It's not really something that people tend to consider/not really a fact that stands out. New York and Hawaii being in the same category for that in spite of being starkly different feels a bit weird.
When you think about it, yeah, it makes perfect sense and there's nothing odd about it, in the same way how eating being stuffing dead stuff into a hole on your face isn't weird. It's normal but it's kind of weird when you think about it a bit.