@JLeslie That is the same link I provided in my first response. Those are Shelby County numbers, not Memphis numbers.
@Yellowdog “It is a regular, ongoing story that 68 percent of the COVID cases in “Memphis’ are African American.”
Prove it. All of the stories anyone can find are about Shelby County, not Memphis.
“This question never had anything to do with what the nationwide stats are.”
But then you said that “the stats actually show that COVID affects everyone equally.” You said everyone. Not everyone in Memphis. Not everyone in Shelby County. Everyone. And that’s not true, which is where nationwide and worldwide stats become relevant.
“That could be why the African American stats are lower than the national average here.”
If you’re talking about Memphis, you have no evidence that the stats are lower than the national average because there are no stats available for just Memphis. If you’re talking about Shelby County, the stats aren’t lower than the national average when you control for testing and confirmed cases.
“In any case, it is deceptive to say they are exceptionally high.”
The claim you started with was about disproportionate numbers, not exceptionally high numbers. And now that it has been shown over and over again that you cannot provide numbers to support your claim, you are retreating to a different position and pretending it’s what you were saying all along.
Furthermore, the only claims that have been made about black Americans being effected in numbers that are exceptionally high relative to the overall population are about… wait for it… the nationwide numbers. So once again you are taking claims that are made about different things and making a hash of things by pretending they are all about the same data set.