recently,
the geography department at kansas state university decided to take a
look at the seven deadly sins in relation to the united states. how,
they asked, do the sins play themselves out geographically? where,
geographically speaking, are people the most lustful. where are people
most full of wrath and so on and so forth?
how
do you quantify these things? well, i'm not too sure if their modes of
quantification are the best, but they're probably as good as anything i
could come up with. so, here's how they did it.
greed was calculated by comparing average incomes with the total number of inhabitants living beneath the poverty line.
envy was calculated using the total number of thefts—robbery, burglary, larceny and stolen cars.
wrath was calculated by comparing the total number of violent crimes—murder, assault and rape—reported to the fbi per capita.
lust
was calculated by compiling the number of sexually transmitted
diseases—HIV, AIDS, syphilis, chlamydia and gonorrhea (my personal
favorite of the group...)—reported per capita.
gluttony was calculated by counting the number of fast food restaurants per capita.
sloth was calculated by comparing expenditures on arts, entertainment and recreation with the rate of employment.
pride,
lastly, is most important. the root of all sins, in this study, is the
aggregate of all data. the researchers combined all data from the six
other sins and averaged it into an overview of all evil.
so,
the maps i'm showing here show the "hotspots" for the sins. in other
words, the overall data is a little more distributed, but this shows
where these things are especially prevalent. for example, on the greed
map, the red shows the highest concentrations (southern california, for
example), whereas blue shows the lowest concentrations (west central
mississippi).
so, a couple observations:
1.
don't sleep with anybody in this region (southern arkansas,
mississippi, louisiana, alabama, etc.). std rates are the highest here
than any other part of the country. in other words, we've got more clap
than an audience. we've got more crabs than a beach. ok, enough with me
offering these classy gems... point is, high percentage of std's.
2. as a connecting point to my post concerning safety in little rock, notice the wrath map. there's a giant ring of murder, rape & assault around little rock, but not including
little rock. now, very famously documented, little rock has a
relatively high crime rate. but, i think what this helps to illustrate
is that violence happens in many places and not just the big, bad city.
sure, people get killed here, but they also get killed in small town
america.
3. oh, the bible belt. you know,
heaven on earth. where everybody loves jesus and goes to church and
lives in perfect harmony. oh wait, no, i'm sorry, i meant to say that
place that, when all sins are calculated (pride map), is the most red of
any place in the country. southern california—you know, the land of
gays and fornicators—gives us a run for our money, but in the end,
southern baptist land wins!
all joking aside, i
could make a lot of sweeping generalizations, but i think there are a
couple reasons for this (among many, i'm sure). first, poverty plays a
big part. when people are poor and desperate, crime and "lax" morality
is prevalent. when people feel hopeless because of their financial dire
straits, they turn to sex and drugs and food and violence to take the
place of hope. secondly, when "everybody's a christian" (like here in
the bible belt), i think, like i've argued for a long time, that more
"stuff" goes down. when we've got our heaven card punched "cuz me and
mama and daddy all go down to the baptist church every week and praise
jesus", i think that also means, for many people, that their
"do-whatever-i-want" card is punched. maybe i'm making too broad
assumptions and generalizations here, but i think there's plenty of
truth in this evaluation.
so, i just thought
that was an interesting piece of research—even if, quite frankly, it
serves little functional purpose (or maybe it serves a very needed
purpose, i don't know...).
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