Literally none of these cities are "red" cities...
They all have decades of Dem leadership and large populations of blacks...which of course is the perfect recipe for gang violence
So you acknowledge you're racist. That's a start. Perhaps Donald will follow your lead someday.
How about Nashville (#18 most violent in the U.S.)? You good with the National Guard invading it, or is it "different" since its population is not mostly black?
### Top 25 Most Dangerous US Cities Ranked by Violent Crime Rate per 100,000 Residents (2024 Data with 2025 Trends)
"Dangerous" cities are typically ranked by violent crime rates (murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault) per 100,000 residents, as this metric best captures personal safety risks compared to property crimes. The list below compiles the top 25 from 2024 FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) data, focusing on cities with populations over 50,000 for comparability. Smaller cities often dominate due to concentrated incidents, but I've included notable larger ones. 2025 mid-year trends (from Council on Criminal Justice and local reports) show overall violent crime down 4-15% nationally, with homicides dropping 15-33% in many cities, though rates remain elevated here.
Data sources include FBI UCR 2024, Security.org, SafeHome.org, Council on Criminal Justice, and analyses from USAFacts and Axios. Rates are per 100,000; note variations due to reporting differences (e.g., underreporting in some areas).
| Rank | City, State | Violent Crime Rate per 100,000 | Key Notes (2024-2025 Trends) |
|------|-------------|--------------------------------|------------------------------|
| 1 | Anniston, AL | 3,434 | Highest overall; small city with extreme assault and robbery rates. Homicides ~50; 2025 data limited but stable. |
| 2 | Memphis, TN | 2,501 | Tops large cities; 40.6 homicides per 100k. 25% homicide drop in early 2025, but aggravated assaults dominate. |
| 3 | St. Louis, MO | 2,082 | Murder capital (48.6 homicides per 100k in 2024); 33% homicide decline to 2025, lowest since 1960s. |
| 4 | Detroit, MI | 2,007 | 20.59 per 1,000 (2,059); fewest homicides in 60 years (203 in 2024). 25% drop in 2025. |
| 5 | Birmingham, AL | 1,746 | 58.8 homicides per 100k; second-highest murder rate. Slight uptick in assaults early 2025. |
| 6 | Oakland, CA | 1,789 | Gang-related; 3,640 total crimes per 100k in 2023 (2024 similar). Robberies down 43% in targeted areas. |
| 7 | Little Rock, AR | 1,825 | Assault-heavy (18.25 per 1,000); economic factors persist. Stable into 2025. |
| 8 | Cleveland, OH | 1,557 | ~40 homicides per 100k; 43% homicide drop in 2024. Vehicle thefts rising. |
| 9 | Stockton, CA | 1,397 | Robbery and assault focus; property crimes add to danger. 2025 trends downward. |
| 10 | Kansas City, MO | 1,547 | 144 homicides in 2024; nonfatal shootings up 12%. 2025 homicides down 20%. |
| 11 | Baltimore, MD | 1,600 | Highest large-city murder rate (40.9 per 100k); 18% decline in 2025 to 58.1 rate. |
| 12 | Milwaukee, WI | 1,597 | 15.1 per 1,000; homicides down to 132 in 2024 from 214 peak. |
| 13 | New Orleans, LA | 1,345 | 52.3 homicides per 100k; 15% drop in 2025. Truck attack highlighted risks. |
| 14 | Indianapolis, IN | 1,334 | Gun violence and robberies; community programs showing 10% improvement. |
| 15 | Washington, DC | 1,123 | 25.5 homicides per 100k (30-year low); 35% violent crime drop in 2024. Federal intervention in 2025. |
| 16 | Atlanta, GA | 1,379 | 24.63 homicides; 35% drop early 2025. Gang activity in growth areas. |
| 17 | Philadelphia, PA | 1,021 | 22.5 homicides; 16% decline to 26.4 rate in 2025. 86% firearm-related. |
| 18 | Nashville, TN | 1,124 | 104 homicides in 2024; 10% overall drop in 2025. Officer shortages. |
| 19 | Chicago, IL | 939 | 17.5 homicides; ranks 14th for >100k pop. 60-year low projected for 2025. |
| 20 | Minneapolis, MN | 1,245 | Post-2020 spikes; homicides down 25% in 2025. Community distrust issues. |
| 21 | Jacksonville, FL | 744 | Limited 2024 data; violent rate up from prior years. Stable property crimes. |
| 22 | Tulsa, OK | 1,180 | 15 homicides early 2025 (down from 17); clearance rate ~55%. |
| 23 | Pittsburgh, PA | 406 | 18.4 homicides; 9 in Q1 2025 (down). Firearm dominance. |
| 24 | Phoenix, AZ | 1,483 | Growth-related; 14.83 per 1,000. Slight decline in 2025. |
| 25 | Portland, OR | 498 | Violent low but property high (4,205); overall danger from thefts. Homicides 8.71. |
### Additional Insights
- **National Context**: US violent crime hit 359.1 per 100,000 in 2024 (lowest in 20 years), with 2025 mid-year showing further declines (e.g., 25% fewer motor vehicle thefts, 19% fewer burglaries). Homicides fell to ~5 per 100,000 nationally.
- **Trends and Factors**: Southern and Midwestern cities dominate due to poverty, gun access, and gang activity. Red states host 13 of top 20 homicide cities. Improvements stem from community policing, federal aid, and violence interruption programs.
- **Caveats**: Excludes tiniest cities (<50k) like Jackson, MS (78 homicides per 100k). Total crime (violent + property) rankings differ—e.g., Memphis leads at 9,764 total per 100k. FBI warns against over-reliance on rankings due to methodology changes. For 2025 full data, check FBI updates expected in fall.