I don't understand. When I look at the 'Homicide Rate by County' map that Boot posted and I focus in on Pa (which I know best), the counties with the highest rates are those that have urban centers...even my home county of Lycoming (which many from Philly consider to be rural) has a higher rate (because of the City of Williamsport) than the other surrounding counties which have no cities to speak of.Ken wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 1:29 pmCities are big places. The fact is that most people who live in big cities never go near the most dangerous neighborhoods, and neither do people who visit. You can live your entire lives in New York and never go near some dangerous neighborhood in the South Bronx. Or live your entire lives in Chicago and neve go near Englewood on the south side. And even if you did you'd likely to be perfectly safe since most of the violence in those neighborhoods is drug and gang related and not targeted towards outsiders.Josh wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 12:11 pmSorry, Boot, but the fact is I'm likely to get shot if I go to certain places in certain cities, which is what most normal people care about. If I stay put in my law-abiding region where nonetheless all of my neighbours seem to have a lot of guns and to go outside and target practice a lot... hardly anyone ever gets shot. There hasn't even been an accidental shooting here in years.
But statistically speaking Boot is right. Most big cities don't rate high on list of most dangerous places for gun violence. There are plenty of smaller towns and rural areas (especially in the south) where rates of gun violence are higher.
Looking at the rest of the map, the counties wherein lie cities like Pittsburgh, Erie, Harrisburg, York, Wilkes-Barre, Scranton, Reading, Allentown, Philadelphia and Chester all have higher homicide rates than those counties that are truly rural and have towns no bigger than Wellsboro, Renovo, Belleville, Somerset and Saint Mary's