I asked you a simple question, as I was traveling and wondered if it would be worth trying to watch the video. Then I merely stated that statistics can be compared in various ways, so I was curious about that. Mrzz DID in fact question those guys, as he had several countries in mind that would be ahead of the US in murder rate. (And he's right.) Then you blew a gasket at me. I'm not "monitoring" you, I asked you a question about something you posted.
I got home, and watched the video and tried to look into it. I told you it's really hard to see where they've come up with these statistics, meaning I DID look into it.
Those guys ARE being hyperbolic. I think the point they're trying to make is that cities with more tight gun control laws still have high murder rates. Their methodology is both mostly opaque (unless they fleshed it out in a longer clip of that episode,) and flawed in what can be gleaned. Not all murders are committed with guns. But probably most are, in the US, so let's just go with that. But they also didn't pick the Top 5 cities in the US with the highest murder rates per 100,000 pop. They cherry-picked them for very blue states, though they threw in St. Louis, because it's #2 on the list, and is a blue city in a red state. Note that Philadelphia is #23 on the list. (I'm using this list from Wikipedia because it's the clearest, with a good chart
en.wikipedia.org
So let's leave them aside, and just explore the questions within that we find interesting. I'm down with that. Mrzz says that the problem in general is with the giant megalopolis. (Except that the top cities on the US list tend to the more medium-sized cities. New York City is #127 on that list, for example.) Or, we could ask What happens if you extract the Top 5 murder capitals of the US, what happens to the US on the list of murder rates in the world? Personally, as far as the US goes, I'm curious about the rise in crime in smaller towns and rural areas. In the area of NH where I have a family home, (and I know that area for my whole life,) there has been a huge uptick in violent crime since the beginning of the opioid crisis, which I think starts with Oxicodone, and includes fentanyl. An example:
This is a chart ranking countries by murder rate:
A global ranking of countries by murder rate, based on the latest international data on intentional homicides per 100,000 people.
factsinstitute.com