On Thursday, I reviewed Arthur Brooks's book Who Really Cares: The Surprising Truth About Compassionate Conservatism. The basic summary of Brook's findings is:
…imagine two people: One goes to church every week and strongly rejects the idea that it is government’s responsibility to redistribute income between people who have a lot of money and people who don’t. The other person never attends a house of worship, and strongly believes that the government should reduce income differences. Knowing only these things, the data tell us that the first person will be roughly twice as likely as the second to give money to charities in a given year, and will give away more than one hundred times as much money per year (as well as fifty times more to explicitly nonreligious causes). (10)
Regular readers know my love of graphs and maps. Brooks provides two fascinating maps on page 23, which I have recreated below. The first is the electoral map for the 2004 presidential election. The second map divides the nation into the 25 states above average in per capita charitable giving and the 25 below average. Notice any similarities?


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