02/16/2020
Earlier, by Steve Sailer (2005) : "Affordable Family Formation" — The Neglected Key To GOP’s Future
The Red State Living wage is a lot lower than the blue state rate.
From The Council for Community and Economic Research:
The higher the cost of living in a state, the harder it is for people of similar means with those in other states to make ends meet. The Council for Community and Economic Research measures cost of living based on a composite of price information from participating cities and metropolitan areas in each state. The most recent analysis is from 2018.
The following table ranks states, colored in accordance with their 2016 US presidential vote, in ascending order by their cost of living indices:
COL index |
1) Mississippi |
2) Oklahoma |
3) Arkansas |
4) Missouri |
5) Michigan |
6) Alabama |
7) Tennessee |
8) Kansas |
9) Indiana |
10) Wyoming |
11) Georgia |
12) Texas |
13) Iowa |
14) Kentucky |
15) New Mexico |
16) Ohio |
17) Louisiana |
18) Idaho |
19) North Carolina |
20) West Virginia |
21) Nebraska |
22) Wisconsin |
23) Illinois |
24) Utah |
25) South Carolina |
26) Arizona |
27) North Dakota |
28) Florida |
29) South Dakota |
30) Pennsylvania |
31) Minnesota |
32) Virginia |
33) Montana |
34) Colorado |
35) Delaware |
36) New Hampshire |
37) Washington |
38) Nevada |
39) Maine |
40) Vermont |
41) New Jersey |
42) Rhode Island |
43) Massachusetts |
44) Alaska |
45) Oregon |
46) Maryland |
47) Connecticut |
48) New York |
49) California |
50) Hawaii |
Fun presidential debate question no corporate media puppet will be permitted to ask: Why are Republican states so much more affordable than blue states are, especially for the poor?
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.