Thursday
Aug262004
Thursday, August 26, 2004 at 06:16PM
South Carolina Bears Excessive Share of War Burden - Disproportionate Number of Dead Soldiers
- State is 26th in population but 8th in deaths per resident
- 11 of the 20 soldiers Killed from South Carolina were Black
While the whole nation is at war, troops from small
towns in South Carolina -- such as Allendale and Orangeburg --
disproportionately are doing the dying. An analysis by The State of
Iraq casualties shows the war's death rate for South Carolina -- the
26th-largest state -- is eighth in the United States at almost one death
per 200,000 residents. That's 50 percent above the national average.
More populous states in the North and even the South rank in the bottom
half in deaths per resident. Florida, the nation's fourth-largest
state, ranks 42nd; North Carolina, the 11th-largest state, is 40th. The
war's death rate for California, the nation's largest state, ranks
27th. Sixteen of the 20 killed from South Carolina came from hometowns with populations of less than 20,000. Eleven of the 20 service members from South Carolina were black.The
State's analysis mirrors other studies of Iraq war casualties. Those
have found that service members killed came disproportionately from
small hometowns and counties with low education and income levels, like
most of rural South Carolina. [more ]
- Another study found 44.3 percent of all soldiers killed
in Iraq came from hometowns with a population of less than 20,000. In a different
study for the Austin American-Statesman newspaper, University of Texas
sociologist Robert Cushing reported those killed in Iraq were 16
percent more likely to live in a county with lower-than-average levels
of college education and below-average incomes. Those killed who came
from the nation's large cities disproportionately were black or
Hispanic, Cushing found. [more ]