Violent crime rates by race

So tell us, how does demagoguing crime statistics profiled by race without context address address the situation?

Ah, so now you resort to silly attempts at deflection. Go ahead and keep pretending you know stuff, it's entertaining to see you flounder and babble. parrots like yourself never know what they're talking about, so it surprises nobody that you have zero clue to what the problems even are.
 
And ruby Red southern States led the nation in homicides rates, so what’s your point


Thomas Sowell might caution against assuming this proves a partisan point.

Cultural Roots: In Black Rednecks and White Liberals, Sowell traces Southern violence to a "redneck" culture from pre-Civil War Scots-Irish settlers, not party politics.

This honor-driven, anti-authority ethos, he says, persists across racial lines and predates modern red-blue divides.
  • Policy Nuance: Sowell critiques Democrat welfare policies for eroding family structure (e.g., single-parent homes rose from 25% to 64% for black kids post-1960s), which he ties to crime.
  • Data Limits: He’d question state-level aggregates, pointing out that crime concentrates in urban pockets (e.g., St. Louis in red Missouri) often run by Democrats, per Manhattan Institute analysis (2024). County-level data can flip the script, showing red rural areas safer than blue cities.

@Grok
 
Ah, so now you resort to silly attempts at deflection. Go ahead and keep pretending you know stuff, it's entertaining to see you flounder and babble. parrots like yourself never know what they're talking about, so it surprises nobody that you have zero clue to what the problems even are.


Poor Anchovies.
 
And ruby Red southern States led the nation in homicides rates, so what’s your point

You mean the states with the highest minority populations. So what's your point? All you did was just agree that murder rates among minorities are far higher, but of course you're too stupid to know what you said.
 
Ah, so now you resort to silly attempts at deflection. Go ahead and keep pretending you know stuff, it's entertaining to see you flounder and babble. parrots like yourself never know what they're talking about, so it surprises nobody that you have zero clue to what the problems even are.
Not a deflection, demagoguing crime statistics profiled by race without context doesn’t address the situation, fact, it is just a useless racist observation, the reality that the only thing you offered to invalidate the fact was personal insults proves it
 
You mean the states with the highest minority populations. So what's your point? All you did was just agree that murder rates among minorities are far higher, but of course you're too stupid to know what you said.

Poor Anchovies.

Yes, many red Southern states do have some of the highest minority populations in the United States, particularly when considering Black and Hispanic populations.

The South has historically been home to a significant share of the nation's Black population, and in recent decades, it has also seen substantial growth in Hispanic communities.

This aligns with demographic trends showing that Southern states, many of which consistently vote Republican (thus "red"), have higher proportions of minority residents compared to some other regions, like the Northeast or parts of the Midwest.

For example, states like Texas, Georgia, and Mississippi—all reliably red in recent elections—have large minority populations.

Texas became a majority-minority state in 2004, with Hispanics making up a plurality (around 40% as of recent estimates) and a significant Black population (about 13%).

Georgia is nearly 50% non-white, with Black residents comprising roughly 34% of the state.

Mississippi has the highest percentage of Black residents in the country at about 39%.

These states contrast with states like Vermont, Maine, or New Hampshire—often blue-leaning and overwhelmingly white (over 90% non-Hispanic white).

Recent census data supports this: the South is home to 59% of the U.S.'s single-race, non-Hispanic Black population as of 2023, and states like Texas, Florida, and Georgia rank among the top for total Black population numbers.

Hispanic growth has also been pronounced in the South, driven by both immigration and higher birth rates, with Texas and Florida leading in Hispanic population size.

Meanwhile, analyses like those from Stateline (2024) highlight that red states such as Texas, Florida, and Indiana are seeing rapid diversification, with counties flipping to majority non-white since 2020.



@Grok
 
And the states with the past black populations percent are in the south


il_1140xN.6680108459_eq8q.jpg
 
Not a deflection, demagoguing crime statistics profiled by race without context doesn’t address the situation, fact, it is just a useless racist observation, the reality that the only thing you offered to invalidate the fact was personal insults proves it

lol says the dumb clown babbling 'demagogues' at anything it doesn't agree with, like a true moron who learned a new vocabulary word in 4th grade.
 
Poor Anchovies.

Yes, many red Southern states do have some of the highest minority populations in the United States, particularly when considering Black and Hispanic populations.

The South has historically been home to a significant share of the nation's Black population, and in recent decades, it has also seen substantial growth in Hispanic communities.

This aligns with demographic trends showing that Southern states, many of which consistently vote Republican (thus "red"), have higher proportions of minority residents compared to some other regions, like the Northeast or parts of the Midwest.

For example, states like Texas, Georgia, and Mississippi—all reliably red in recent elections—have large minority populations.

Texas became a majority-minority state in 2004, with Hispanics making up a plurality (around 40% as of recent estimates) and a significant Black population (about 13%).

Georgia is nearly 50% non-white, with Black residents comprising roughly 34% of the state.

Mississippi has the highest percentage of Black residents in the country at about 39%.

These states contrast with states like Vermont, Maine, or New Hampshire—often blue-leaning and overwhelmingly white (over 90% non-Hispanic white).

Recent census data supports this: the South is home to 59% of the U.S.'s single-race, non-Hispanic Black population as of 2023, and states like Texas, Florida, and Georgia rank among the top for total Black population numbers.

Hispanic growth has also been pronounced in the South, driven by both immigration and higher birth rates, with Texas and Florida leading in Hispanic population size.

Meanwhile, analyses like those from Stateline (2024) highlight that red states such as Texas, Florida, and Indiana are seeing rapid diversification, with counties flipping to majority non-white since 2020.



@Grok
Non of that is relevant, but the real question is why do accept @Grok as a source? Nothing it offers is documented, sourced, unlike say Wikipedia, which offers footnotes, @Grok is based on language identification, it has its severe limitations

“Grok, does Elon Musk spread misinformation?”

“Yes, there is substantial evidence and analysis suggesting that Elon Musk has spread misinformation on various topics, including elections, to a very large audience through his social media platform, X," Grok answered.
 
Non of that is relevant, but the real question is why do accept @Grok as a source? Nothing it offers is documented, sourced, unlike say Wikipedia, which offers footnotes, @Grok is based on language identification, it has its severe limitations.

I don’t have a static bibliography to share since my answers aren’t pulled from a fixed set of sources like a traditional research paper. Instead, I’m built on a dynamic knowledge base that’s continuously updated from a vast range of public data—think web articles, reports, and stats available up to February 21, 2025. For your question about minority populations in red Southern states, I leaned on demographic trends and census-like data floating around online.

If you want a concrete list for something specific, like stats on Black crime in America, I can point you to the kinds of places I’d draw from based on what’s out there:
  • U.S. Census Bureau: For population and racial breakdowns (e.g., 2020 Census or 2023 estimates).
  • FBI Uniform Crime Reports (UCR): Annual arrest and offense data by race, like the 2019 report showing African Americans at 55.9% of homicide offenders where race was known.
  • Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS): National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) data, such as the 1992–2000 stats on violent crime reporting by race.
  • Pew Research Center: For analyses like the 2023 update on Black population distribution.
  • Stateline (2024): For commentary on diversification trends in red states.
These aren’t direct quotes or page numbers—I don’t have a bookshelf to point at—but they’re the type of publicly accessible wells I dip into. If you’d like me to dig deeper and pull specific figures or reports from these, just say the word, and I’ll fetch what’s current as of now!

@Grok
 
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