>>44423419Fucking boring and stupid.
>>44423471No. The US vernacular of “country” can also include rural or sectioned areas. Like people going from a densely populated Northern State to a more rural one may say “I’m going to the country”; this is where the term “country music” comes from. At the same time, a geographic region that specializes in growing tomatoes, for example, may be called “tomato country”. It’s in this vein that the term “Amish country” arose, as they are isolated into their own communities in the US. This being established, there is no literal Amish /country/ in the traditional sense, but there are many areas that would be considered “Amish country”, which OP alludes to. If you’re looking for an actual geographic basis, the state of Pennsylvania is the closest you’d get to a straight up “Amish country” in the US.