Bob, the fraud works because the people approving the ballots are part of it.
Of course repubs can cheat too, but the far more likely cheating locations are the big cities run by large, corrupt political machines - and that is predominately dems because of the mindless voting of blacks who keep them in power despite the crime and horrible schools of those cities.
TOP TEN CRIME RATE STATES
10. Arizona
• Violent crime rate: 474.9 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 369 (19th highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 740 adults per 100,000 (6th highest)
• Poverty rate: 14% (14th highest)
• Most dangerous city: Tucson
There were 474.9 violent crimes for every 100,000 people in Arizona in 2018 – more than the 380.6 per 100,000 national rate. The state's higher-than-average violent crime rate still represents a marked improvement from 2017, when there were 505.7 incidents per 100,000 people. The state reported a 4.5% reduction in the number of violent crimes committed between 2017 and 2018 – greater than the 3% national improvement.
As is often the case in states with high crime, Arizona has a relatively large prison population. There are 740 adults incarcerated in state and federal prisons for every 100,000 state residents 18 and over, the sixth highest imprisonment rate among states.
9. South Carolina
• Violent crime rate: 488.3 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 392 (16th highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 494 adults per 100,000 (23rd highest)
• Poverty rate: 15.3% (9th highest)
• Most dangerous city: Greenwood
South Carolina is one of five southern states to rank among the 10 most dangerous states in the country. There were 24,825 violent crimes in the state in 2018, or 488.3 for every 100,000 people. Aggravated assualt and murder are especially concentrated in the state. There were 7.7 homicides and 362.8 aggravated assaults for every 100,000 people in South Carolina in 2018, the sixth and seventh highest rates among states, respectively.
8. Missouri
• Violent crime rate: 502.1 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 607 (8th highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 687 adults per 100,000 (7th highest)
• Poverty rate: 13.2% (19th highest)
• Most dangerous city: St. Louis
Missouri is one of only eight states nationwide with a violent crime rate of more than 500 incidents per 100,000. Crime in Missouri is generally concentrated in major cities. In St. Louis, for example, there were 1,800.4 violent crimes for every 100,000 people in 2018, nearly five times the national violent crime rate of 380.6 per 100,000.
The murder rate in Missouri is particularly high. There were 607 homicides in the state in 2018, equal to 9.9 for every 100,000 people, the second highest murder rate of any state, after only Lousiana.
7. Alabama
• Violent crime rate: 519.6 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 383 (18th highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 626 adults per 100,000 (10th highest)
• Poverty rate: 16.8% (7th highest)
• Most dangerous city: Anniston
Alabama's violent crime rate of 519.6 incidents per 100,000 is the seventh highest among states. In the United States, poorer areas tend to have higher crime rates, and Alabama is no exception. The state's poverty rate of 16.8% is also the seventh highest in the country and well above the 13.1% national poverty rate.
Aggravated assualt and murder are especially concentrated in the state. There were 7.8 homicides and 387.6 aggravated assaults for every 100,000 people in Alabama in 2018, each the fifth highest rate among states.
6. Louisiana
• Violent crime rate: 537.5 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 530 (12th highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 942 adults per 100,000 (the highest)
• Poverty rate: 18.6% (3rd highest)
• Most dangerous city: Opelousas
There were 25,049 violent crimes committed in Louisiana in 2018, or 537.5 for every 100,000 people – the sixth highest among states. Louisiana also locks up a larger share of its population than any other state. There are 942 adults incarcerated in Louisiana state and federal prisons for every 100,000 residents 18 and older, the highest imprisonment rate of any state.
Crime rates tend to be higher in lower income areas with limited economic opportunity. In Louisiana, 18.6% of the population lives below the poverty line compared to 13.1% of Americans. Additionally, 4.9% of the state's labor force was out of work in 2018, well above the 3.9% national unemployment rate.
5. Nevada
• Violent crime rate: 541.1 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 202 (25th lowest)
• Imprisonment rate: 584 adults per 100,000 (13th highest)
• Poverty rate: 12.9% (23rd highest)
• Most dangerous city: North Las Vegas
The number of violent crimes committed in Nevada in 2018 fell by 1.5% from 2017 to 2018. The state also reported near nation-leading declines in murder and robbery, 24.1% and 20.2%, respectively. Still, the state also reported a 22.8% increase in rape over the same period, the second largest increase among states, and its overall violent crime rate of 541.1 per 100,000 people is the fifth highest in the country.
North Las Vegas ranks as the most dangerous city in Nevada, with a violent crime rate of 966.1 per 100,000.
4. Arkansas
• Violent crime rate: 543.6 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 216 (23rd highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 781 adults per 100,000 (4th highest)
• Poverty rate: 17.2% (5th highest)
• Most dangerous city: West Memphis
Despite a slightly larger than average 3.6% reduction in violent crime from 2017 to 2018, Arkansas ranks among the five most dangerous states in the country. There were 543.6 violent crimes for every 100,000 people in the state in 2018, far higher than the 380.6 per 100,000 national rate.
Arkansas's violent crime rate is due in no small part to the concentration of violence in a handful of cities. For example, in Pine Bluff there were 1,609.2 violent crimes for every 100,000 people in 2018. In West Memphis, the most dangerous city in the state, there were 1,970.2 per 100,000.
3. Tennessee
• Violent crime rate: 623.7 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 498 (13th highest)
• Imprisonment rate: 553 adults per 100,000 (18th highest)
• Poverty rate: 15.3% (9th highest)
• Most dangerous city: Memphis
Tennessee has the highest violent crime rate of any state in the South and the third highest of any state nationwide. There were 42,226, violent crimes in Tennessee in 2018, more than double the number reported in Virginia, a state home to over 1.5 million more people than Tennessee.
Much of the violence reported in Tennessee in 2018 was committed in Memphis. The city accounted for roughly 30% of all violent crime in Tennessee and ranks as the most dangerous city in the state with a violent crime rate of 1,943.2 per 100,000.
2. New Mexico
• Violent crime rate: 856.6 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 167 (22nd lowest)
• Imprisonment rate: 448 adults per 100,000 (23rd lowest)
• Poverty rate: 19.5% (2nd highest)
• Most dangerous city: Gallup
New Mexico's violent crime rate of 856.6 incidents per 100,000 people is the highest in the contiguous 48 states and second highest nationwide. There were 17,949 violent crimes reported in New Mexico in 2018, a 10.1% increase from the previous year and the largest increase of any state.
Crime tends to be higher in areas where large shares of the population are struggling. In New Mexico, which is one of only two states with a violent crime rate more than double the national average, 19.5% of the population lives below the poverty line
1. Alaska
• Violent crime rate: 885 per 100,000 people
• Total 2018 murders: 47 (12th lowest)
• Imprisonment rate: 343 adults per 100,000 (14th lowest)
• Poverty rate: 10.9% (13th lowest)
• Most dangerous city: Anchorage
There were 885 violent crimes in Alaska for every 100,000 people in 2018, the most of any state and well above the national rate of 380.6 per 100,000. As is typically the case, aggravated assault accounts for the vast majority of violence in the state.
Rape, too, is especially common in Alaska. There were 161.6 rapes reported for every 100,000 people in Alaska in 2018, by far the highest rape rate of any state. Crime can tend to concentrate in areas that lack economic opportunity. In Alaska, 6.6% of the population was out of a job in 2018, the highest annual unemployment rate among states.