Posted on 07/09/2026 8:09:27 AM PDT by MtnClimber
Conventional wisdom holds that the United States is the most violent and dangerous nation in the developed world. This dark view is frequently invoked by conservatives to demand stronger penalties for crimes and by progressives to argue for stronger gun laws.
At the same time, other nations point to crime as an Achilles heel of the American system. These include two peer nations with some of the most restrictive gun laws in the world – Australia and Canada. In 2025, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported that “the U.S. generally sees higher violent crime rates than many other countries.” Last year, the Canadian Press similarly reported that “the number of police-reported violent crimes for every 100,000 people continue to be higher in the United States than in Canada.”
The data, however, undercuts this narrative. While the United States still leads in some categories, on the whole it has significantly less violent crime per capita than those two nations.
Regarding homicide, the most heinous crime of all, it’s true that in 2025, the U.S. murder rate was about four per 100,000 people – roughly twice Australia’s and Canada’s 2024 homicide rate. Yet it’s also true that homicides account for only a tiny fraction of violent crime. In 2024, homicides represented just 0.21% of violent crimes in the U.S., based on National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) estimates of rape/sexual assault, robbery, aggravated assault, and simple assault. Murder comprises an even smaller fraction of crimes in Australia and Canada.

Murders in the U.S. are usually highly concentrated geographically, often connected to street gang activity, and threaten only a tiny fraction of Americans. Just 2% of counties account for approximately 54% of all murders, and within those counties roughly two-thirds of killings occur within areas covering only about ten city blocks.
(Excerpt) Read more at realclearinvestigations.com ...
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Canada and Australia have let in massive numbers of “migrants”. It is probably not long until their crime rates reach third-world levels.
The pattern is that while the US has more murders, it actually has less crime overall than several other Western countries. Another factor to consider is that murders in the US are not randomly distributed. They are instead highly concentrated among Black inner city drug gangs. 68% of all counties in the US experience 1 or fewer murders per year. I doubt either crime or murder is similarly concentrated like that in any other Western country.
I agree, except for your capitalization of the word "black".
I live in a rural area where "everybody" has a gun, but the only murder I've heard about in the 13 years I've lived here was the murder of a neighbor's horse.
You can largely avoid being murdered by staying away from them.
If you remove democrat-run cities, the USA has a crime rate comparable to the safest countries.
Crime can be discussed in terms of personal safety or in terms of policy effectiveness.
In both discussions the reality is local and not national.
Even in a locality, the reality changes over time. In Atlanta GA crime under Bottoms was high. Under Dickens it is low in comparison.
Crime also depends on how we define it. When a drunk white collar executive kills a pedestrian it is a tragedy. When a drunk illegal immigrant klls a pedestrian it is Murder 1.
When white collar fraud steals a $100 million of welfare mone it is not the same as when a Somali steals $10 million.
the graphs make no sense
The elites never have to live out their catchphrase, “Celebrate Diversity!”
I’m sitting here in the ghetto pondering what it would be like to finally get a Republican mayor.
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