Opinion Living in red America can be life-threatening - (((Jennifer Rubin))) is a true and honest conservative

It should come as no surprise that the highest rates for covid-19 deaths and murders are found mainly in red states. A political mind-set that prioritizes racial resentment, anti-science zealotry and manufactured cultural wedge issues is not likely to be conducive to long, healthy lives. Indeed, antagonism toward “elites” (e.g., experts) often impedes common-sense measures that save lives.

Steven H. Woolf, a professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, writes in the Journal of American Medicine: “Disparities in health across the 50 states are growing, a trend that began in the 1990s. For example, in 1990, life expectancy in New York was lower than in Oklahoma, but the trajectories separated sharply in the 1990s and, by 2016, New York ranked third in life expectancy, whereas Oklahoma ranked 45th.” Moreover, “the widening gap cannot be explained by changes in the racial and ethnic composition of states, because the same trend occurred within racial and ethnic groups.”

Instead, Woolf says the politics of red states is killing their residents. “Conservative governors increasingly use preemption, the authority to override local governments, to block liberal health policies (e.g., indoor smoking bans),” he notes. “States have preempted local regulations on nutrition (e.g., menu labeling, food deserts) and, as of 2013, 45 states had enacted statutes to limit local firearm regulations.”

This is also true of public health measures to address covid-19, making residents in red states more likely to die of the disease than others:
Some elected officials made a political issue out of challenging scientific evidence, embracing dubious theories, and labeling public health safeguards as infringements on personal freedom. Conservative governors used preemption to reverse efforts by mayors and school districts to control local transmission rates.
These policy choices may have been associated with increased COVID-19–related morbidity and mortality. States that rushed to curtail lockdowns in the spring of 2020 experienced more protracted surges in infections and disruptions to their economies. In 2021, excess deaths were disproportionately concentrated in states where resistance to COVID-19 vaccination was prevalent. For example, excess death rates in Florida and Georgia (more than 200 deaths per 100 000) were much higher than in states with largely vaccinated populations such as New York (112 per 100 000), New Jersey (73 deaths per 100 000), and Massachusetts (50 per 100 000). States that resisted public health protections experienced higher numbers of excess deaths during the Delta variant surge in the fall of 2021. Between August and December 2021, Florida experienced more than triple the number of excess deaths (29 252) as New York (8786), despite both states having similar population counts (21.7 million and 19.3 million, respectively).

Eight of the 10 states with the highest covid death rates adjusted for age have Republican governors: Mississippi, Oklahoma, Alabama, Texas, Tennessee, Arizona, Arkansas and Indiana. (Nevada and Kentucky are the exceptions, coming in 6th and 10th, respectively.) Similarly, nine of the 10 states with the worst vaccination rates — Wyoming, Mississippi, Louisiana, Idaho, Indiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Ohio, West Virginia and North Dakota — have GOP governors. Of these, only Louisiana is led by a Democrat, and all of them voted for defeated former president Donald Trump in both 2016 and 2020.

The same divergence between red and blue states exists with respect to murder rates, as well. The center-left think tank Third Way reports: “In 2020, per capita murder rates were 40% higher in states won by Donald Trump than those won by Joe Biden.” Even more dramatically, “8 of the 10 states with the highest murder rates in 2020 voted for the Republican presidential nominee in every election this century.” (Blaming red states for the crimes committed in blue counties/municipalities is the highest tier of cope)

The right-wing media racket would have you believe this is a problem of blue cities, but, as Third Way reports: “Beyond the top 10, we looked at the 2020 murder rates in the 25 states that voted for Donald Trump and compared it with the murder rates in the 25 states that voted for Joe Biden. The 8.20 murders per 100,000 residents rate in Trump states was 40% higher than the 5.78 murders per 100,000 residents in Biden states.” (ignore evidence against our argument and you'll plainly see that we are right!)

The difference between red and blue states might be related to gun laws, higher levels of poverty (where red states also predominate), low education levels (also worse in red states), cruddy health care (same) or relatively low economic opportunity (again, red states dominate the worst states). (Claiming that poverty causes crime is a slander against the poor. What was Bernie Madoff's excuse?)

Whatever the specific reason, it’s clear the governing philosophy of right-wing states (e.g., low spending; prioritization of cultural wedge issues; anti-elitism) leads to deadly results. Maybe it’s time they stop spending their political energy persecuting gay kids, banning books, outlawing abortion and fanning culture wars. They have plenty of systemic problems they’ve failed to address while busying themselves with MAGA crusades. Red-state voters should look around and see why their states have fallen so far behind in so many categories.

 
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Conservative governors increasingly use preemption, the authority to override local governments, to block liberal health policies (e.g., indoor smoking bans),” he notes. “States have preempted local regulations on nutrition (e.g., menu labeling, food deserts) and, as of 2013, 45 states had enacted statutes to limit local firearm regulations.”
Imagine if you will the liberal shitstorm if a gay couple were rasing a kid and if they cross into a small town suddenly their child is no longer theirs...

Their is a reason why we limit the ability of towns and cities to make their own regulations on matters concerning the Constitution.

Furthermore, we all know the murder rate is more associated with the percentage of blacks in a state.
 
Instead, Woolf says the politics of red states is killing their residents. “Conservative governors increasingly use preemption, the authority to override local governments, to block liberal health policies (e.g., indoor smoking bans),” he notes.
That is what the power of the Governor entails; they are literally a lesser President over the United Counties of [STATE NAME]. They have executive authority within their state, they have the power and ability to tell people inside their borders what to do. They have the power to deploy the military (National Guard), they have the ability to declare a crisis (bad water, hurricanes, fires, whatever). This includes Governor Fuckwad Newsom telling everyone how to behave, to include us in rural counties/locals who couldn't give two shits what the idiots in the cities say. You only want this dividing line because it goes against the values you have; you'd claim something like a Constitutional Crisis if it was a blue Governor telling people "Do what you want and be free." Now tell me how it's totally safe and cool that blue states want to go one step further and get the federal government to step in and issue commands from on high for everything they can't get their local/state government to agree on.

The difference between red and blue states might be related to gun laws, higher levels of poverty (where red states also predominate), low education levels (also worse in red states), cruddy health care (same) or relatively low economic opportunity (again, red states dominate the worst states). (Claiming that poverty causes crime is a slander against the poor. What was Bernie Madoff's excuse?)
She really wants to go there with stats. As much as I hear about healthcare, I'd like to see all the metrics at which they measure it; because bad healthcare could be anything from someone not liking a doctor at a hospital to one of those rural counties who can barely afford an EMT service. I'm not saying it's not true, because medical care is expensive and hard to attract qualified people if you're in the boonies; but just saying it's bad because it's in a red area is damn near slander (to me). As for Madoff's excuse, like most companies, too big to fail and the people holding the reigns let the power go to their head. Probably the same reason we see rich darkies being more ghetto than actual ghetto whites, if you want to pull those numbers up.

Whatever the specific reason, it’s clear the governing philosophy of right-wing states (e.g., low spending; prioritization of cultural wedge issues; anti-elitism) leads to deadly results. Maybe it’s time they stop spending their political energy persecuting gay kids, banning books, outlawing abortion and fanning culture wars.
The left pushing the sexual alphabet, trannies, kids in drag, etc. is somehow the right's prioritization of cultural wedge issues. And here we are with a (((banker))) thinking anti-elitism leads to deadly results. Gonna go full /pol/ and say her subversion is showing; as much as the lefties (which she is) love to scream about equality, here we are with one claiming elitism is a good thing. Elitism, that comes with things like a class system, two/multi-tiered justice system, and a whole host of other things (like 2% of the population being over-represented in a multitude of areas). What a nasty fucking subversive hook-nosed kike.

They have plenty of systemic problems they’ve failed to address while busying themselves with MAGA crusades. Red-state voters should look around and see why their states have fallen so far behind in so many categories.
Can't speak for all, but many people are content living in those red states; they know it's hard/miserable, but do their best, and have a keener sense to look out for themselves as well as others. Just because they don't have access to pizza delivery or an Amazon Fullfillment Center doesn't mean they've fallen behind; because one of the main problems with falling behind is population density/growth. If you don't have a large enough tax base, you don't exactly have what it takes to just pull yourself up by your bootstraps; you need money to attract talent and what-not. The problem with attracting talent and growth is the problems that come with it; where people buy a new house, move in, and decide they don't like the neighbors who've lived there all their life, and then work to over-turn everything. The red states (and counties) didn't fall behind, we're mostly fine; it's you judgy fucking blue city fuckwads who look at us like you're in fucking Starfleet and we're the uneducated proles on an under-developed planet.
 
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Beyond the top 10
Good grief, this she-goblin is the most potent mixture of stupid and dishonest.

I live in one of the deepest-red states in America, and almost every day, I am grateful that I can go outside without getting raped, murdered, or slipping on needles and human feces.

Rubin is a preacher to the already-converted NPC thralls.
 
Rubin was born in Camden before it was utterly ghetto (she's that old), and grew up in the Bay Area.
She hasn't ever seen Red America beyond the occasional layover in DFW, between visiting parents and heading home in the DC Beltway.
Her "conservative" credentials are based entirely on her cheerleading for GWOT. And nothing else.
 
Florida definitely was not near the lowest, it was in the upper echelon of the highest, but it was well behind NY, CA, etc
I'm pretty sure FL was solidly midpack, despite having one of the greatest proportions of people over 65 and advanced age being the single strongest correlation with COVID death rates.

All this happened while DeSantis was basically flying the double bird the whole time to all the Branch Covidians, which illustrated how fucking stupid all of their "but The Science©" theatrics were.
 
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Without doxing myself or power-leveling too much, I live in a mostly red town. Literally no gang-bangers to be seen, everyone has a gun, and I can actually walk around at night without worrying about being mugged. Next to no violent crime, and pedos get beaten up on the regular. Its super nice.
Hell. Yes.

Being able to watch the Summer of Love and the rest of Floydapalooza as a mostly disinterested third party and strictly for entertainment was pretty great.
 
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