Death rates correlate with education levels, urbanization rate, alcohol consumption, car size, driving laws, speed cameras, and road design.
Death rates correlate with education levels, urbanization rate, alcohol consumption, car size, driving laws, speed cameras, and road design.
What makes you say that?
It doesn’t have 50 american states, 10 provinces 3 territories, and 8 Australian states (sorry I don’t know if they are classed otherwise)
Where does it say it was supposed to? I don’t say anything about all states anywhere in the title or in the graphic.
It says that it is for the 3 countries then breaks it down by region. It then doesn’t have all regions. The graph or OP doesn’t mention the exclusions.
Putting it behind a link seems like building a narrative.
No it says it’s for major states and provinces.
Major is subjective. If you are going to use terms like that and only give a graph you should define the term.
And that’s completely legitimate argument to make, though I think you’d have trouble arguing that any of the ones left off this graph constitute major. However you’ll note that it’s a completely different argument.