3/11/26

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In America, Blacks kill three to five times more people than terrorists do—and that count only includes White victims of Blacks, but all terrorist victims.

I sat down at my computer, intent on doing my nightly search of black-on-white (and white-on-black) homicides, when I came across a meme that read, "White men with guns are America's biggest terrorists." The image included contradicting statistics and an inset photo of Stefan Molyneux. Not that I would dare question Molyneux, I still wanted to fact check the meme. 

I discovered that Blacks commit 13.75 firearm homicides for every one committed by Whites per 100,000. That prompted digging deaper and the outcome is below.

Summary: Black Americans face homicide victimization rates over six times higher than White Americans, according to recent federal statistics.

Similar patterns hold for homicide perpetrators. 

In 2023, the overall U.S. homicide rate was 5.9 per 100,000 residents, but Black individuals experienced 21.3 per 100,000—compared to 3.2 for Whites—while firearm homicides showed even starker gaps in prior CDC data. 

If only Whites lived in America, the homicide rate would almost be cut in half, from 5.9 to 3.2 per 100,000 residents. The violent crime rate would likely reflect that cut. Allow East Asians and Pacific Islanders to live among us, and the violent crime rate would nudge a bit lower.

Black victims accounted for over half of known cases in recent years, despite comprising about 14% of the population. Most incidents remain intra-racial, yet public views often misalign with these realities due to media focus on the small number of white-on-black homicides. 

Homicides rose sharply during the pandemic but have since declined notably through 2024, reports say.

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Victim rates

Stark racial disparities persist in U.S. homicide victimization and perpetration rates, with Black Americans experiencing risks several times higher than those of White Americans, federal data indicates, underscoring a gap between actual threats and common public views on crime dangers.

According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the overall homicide victimization rate stood at 5.9 per 100,000 U.S. residents in 2023. Black individuals faced a rate of 21.3 per 100,000, more than six times the 3.2 rate for White individuals. Rates for other groups included 1.4 for Asians, 4.2 for American Indians or Alaska Natives, and 6.5 for Native Hawaiians or Other Pacific Islanders.

Perpetrator rates

Similar patterns hold for homicide perpetrators. FBI data for 2023 shows that, among murder offenders where race was known (15,708 cases), 56.3% were White (8,842), 40.8% were Black (6,405), and 2.9% were of other races (461). However, due to incomplete reporting from some law enforcement agencies during the transition to a new crime reporting system, these figures may not fully represent national trends. Consistent with the intra-racial nature of most homicides, offending rates largely mirror victimization rates, with Black Americans approximately six times more likely to be arrested for homicide than White Americans based on 2020 analyses (the most recent detailed comparison available).

Black offenders outnumber White offenders by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention figures for 2022 firearm homicides, which account for about 80% of all homicides, showed even sharper contrasts. Age-adjusted rates reached 27.5 per 100,000 for non-Hispanic Black people, 9.3 for American Indians or Alaska Natives, 5.5 for Hispanics of any race, 2.0 for non-Hispanic Whites, and 1.1 for Asians or Pacific Islanders.

Blacks commit 27.5 firearm homicides for every two committed by Whites, or 13.75 firearm homicides to one committed by Whites.

These patterns have evolved over recent years. Homicide rates climbed sharply from 2019 to 2021 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, peaking at levels not seen in decades, the CDC reported. For Black Americans, the firearm homicide rate jumped from 20.5 per 100,000 in 2019 to 30.4 in 2021 before easing to 27.5 in 2022. Similar upticks occurred across other groups, though at lower levels.

Declines followed in subsequent years. Federal Bureau of Investigation data revealed a 11.6% drop in murders from 2022 to 2023, with a further 14.9% decrease in 2024. In 2024, among murder victims where race was known, 51.6% were Black and 42.8% were White, despite Black Americans comprising just 13.6% of the population.

Experts note that most homicides are intra-racial, meaning victims and offenders typically share the same racial background, per FBI analyses. Yet, public perceptions often exaggerate threats from other racial groups, fueling misconceptions.

Research from the Sentencing Project highlights how racial biases in crime perceptions drive support for harsher criminal justice measures. Media coverage tends to amplify stories of interracial crimes, particularly those with White victims, while underplaying the higher victimization burdens on communities of color, according to studies on news representations.

Misperception is reality

Pew Research Center analyses confirm widespread misperceptions about crime trends, with many Americans believing rates are rising even as data shows declines. This disconnect, I would say, stems partly from selective exposure to sensationalized reports that do not reflect statistical realities.

Violence Policy Center data for 2022 emphasized that Black male victimization rates hit 50.5 per 100,000, over eight times the White male rate. The woke left point to underlying factors like socioeconomic inequalities, urban density, and firearm access, rather than inherent group differences. I would point to the global ubiquitous Black behavior and tag the phenomenon as genetically inherent. 

As rates continue to fall post-pandemic, public health officials stress the need for targeted (not a pun) interventions in high-risk areas to address these enduring gaps.

For perspective

I prompted Grok with the query, "How many black-on-white homicides have been recorded by the BJS since 2001."

The response was, "Summing approximate annual figures from 2001 to 2025 (roughly 25 years) yields an estimated range of 10,000–15,000 black-on-white homicides in known cases, but this is not an official BJS figure—it's a rough extrapolation from patterns in FBI data."

I then asked Grok, "How many Americans have been killed by terrorists since 2000?" 

The response was, "Overall rough total since 2000: Approximately 3,500–3,600 Americans killed in terrorist attacks (overwhelmingly driven by 9/11, with several hundred more from subsequent domestic and Islamist-inspired incidents on U.S. soil or involving U.S. citizens)."

As you can see, for every American killed by terrorists on American soil (including 9/11), three to five White people have been killed by Blacks.

Conclusion: Black males with guns are deadlier than terrorists, and that only includes their White victims.  

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Sources:  

FBI Releases 2024 Reported Crimes in the Nation Statistics Notes from the Field: Firearm Homicide Rates, by Race and Ethnicity — United States, 2019–2022 Homicide Victimization in the United States, 2023 What the data says about gun deaths in the US Race and Punishment: Racial Perceptions of Crime and Support for Punitive Policies


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