Quote:
Originally Posted by PaulS
See any patterns here?
Rates are the number of reported forcible rapes per 100,000 people.
1. New Jersey - 11.7
2. New York - 14.6
3. Virginia - 17.7
4. Vermont - 19.3
5. North Carolina - 20.3
6. Hawaii - 20.5
7. California - 20.6
8. Maryland - 21
9. Wisconsin - 21.3
10. Georgia - 21.4
11. West Virginia - 22.7
12. Massachusetts - 24.7
13. Missouri - 25.1
14. Louisiana - 25.2
15. Indiana - 25.5
16. Connecticut - 25.6
17. Pennsylvania - 26.1
18. Delaware - 26.5
19. Wyoming - 26.7
20. Alabama - 26.9
21. Florida - 27.2
22. Rhode Island - 27.4
23. Mississippi - 27.5
24. Illinois - 27.7
25. Maine - 28
26. Iowa - 28.3
27. Kentucky - 29
28. Oregon - 29.2
29. Texas - 29.6
30. Idaho - 30
31. Minnesota - 30.5
32. Tennessee - 31.5
33. Ohio - 31.7
34. Washington - 31.8
35. Utah - 33
36. Nevada - 33.7
37. New Hampshire - 34
38. Arizona - 34.7
39. South Carolina - 35.5
40. Kansas - 36.5
41. District of Columbia - 37.3
42. Montana - 37.7
43. Nebraska - 38.3
44. North Dakota 38.9
45. Colorado - 40.7
46. Oklahoma - 41.6
47. Arkansas - 42.3
48. New Mexico - 45.9
49. Michigan - 46.4
50. South Dakota - 70.2
51. Alaska - 79.7
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Not enough info to make a meaningful pattern showing the connection between Republican political philosophy vs. Democrat political philosophy in regard to forcible rapes. Actually, no information in those numbers in that regard.
Also, no breakdown on race of perpetrators.
Much too sketchy to mean a whole lot.
So Alaska had 560 rapes committed by whom? And California had 7774 rapes committed by whom? For whom did the perpetrators vote. And what would that have to do with politics and political philosophy.