Super Interesting Maps Of The U.S. That You Need To See
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- Опубликовано: 12 июн 2024
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▶ In this video I go through a few interesting maps of the United States, such as house prices, salary comparisons, forest area, deforestation, animal predators, extracted resources, main and most profitable industries, popular restaurant cuisines, tax percentages, county sizes, population density, and female representation in congress.
▶TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 Intro
00:50 House Prices
01:53 Salaries Needed To Afford Homes
03:05 Forest Area
04:05 Masterworks Sponsorship
05:51 Largest Predator
06:38 Resources (1942)
07:20 Most Profitable Industries
08:09 Most Popular Restaurant Type
09:07 Sales Tax
10:11 County Sizes
10:37 Population Density
11:29 Women In Congress
11:59 Summary
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*Which other countries should I look at maps of?*
New Hampshire has no sales or income tax. Property tax is a bit high to compensate.
Uk 🇬🇧
Northern Europe - Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Baltics, Åland, Faroese Islands, Iceland, (maybe) Greenland
There's alot of interesting things like finland being the worlds most happy country and also the one with the most suicides in europe.
That of the actual real world. The very first map in your video (0:03)is that of the mercator projection. Its plain wrong. Greenland isn't the size of Africa, Africa is easily like 12x as big. Canada is also half its size, as are many other countries from the north end of the world. I could explain why this was done, but i think you get a much better video out of it if you figure it out on your own. (hint, have a look at the peters projection)
The middle of the U.S. is not desert or forest. It is the Great Plains, arable grasslands where we grow food. The Plains stretch all the way deep into Canada. California is largely agricultural outside of the coast.
And in the desert where I live in Arizona we have a lot of arable land where we have the 5C's of the economy where Cattle, Cotton and Citrus are king followed by Copper Climate
At the rate they are using and running out of water it will soon be desert as it was in the thirties
Until modern forms of farming were developed in the mid to late 1800s, it was actually considered desert. It was referred to as the "Great American Desert".
There are actually 4 deserts in the U.S., and they take up a lot of that white space. But so do mountains. A topographical map could give a better understanding of what is where and why.
Hence why it is surprising the area has no trees. The farmlands of England were previously a dense forest. You’d think the same of the US.
In the forest map, you missed that the vast inland is mostly Great Plains rather than desert. The Great Plains are a naturally occurring grassland and savanna, and much as been used for grazing and agriculture.
This is correct! My mistake, thank you.
@@General.Knowledge Sad fact. Less than 4% of virgin grassland exist in the USA despite The Great Plains being one of largest natural Praries/Savanas/grasslands. This has actually been a greater destruction of biodiversity and nature than the Deforisting of virgin forrest.
@@General.Knowledge Actually you're not wrong until the late 1800s it was known as the Great American Desert as the plains were mostly devoid of forests and major rivers. We changed that by killing off the buffalo and much of the Plains Indians and ripped deep into the topsoil to change it into arable farmlands thanks to the Industrial Revolution. We over cultivated the land and caused the Great Dustbowl. Since then, we have kept pumping the soil with Monsanto's products i.e. nitrogen and other fertilizers to force the plains to produce all our agricultural products, but scientists predict that the deserts will grow as the quality of soil is not recovering faster than we can exploit it. Also we are digging deeper to get to the groundwater, but that's running out... Some areas due to droughts and overuse are now dangerously close to environmental collapse. Most people in the middle part of the country refuse to believe otherwise...
@@jalicea1650 Where do you get your information? Your post is one of the most absurd things I've read. Here, in Iowa the average yearly precipitation is 34 inches. Even Nebraska averages 23.6 inches. Most experts agree that a desert is an area of land that receives no more than 10 inches (25 centimeters) of precipitation a year. Major rivers? Ever heard of the Missouri River, or the Mississippi?
@@jalicea1650 Bruh, you might want to relearn geography and history.
Not a lack of data, those states do not have sales taxes. I live in Washington and have met many people who travel or have things sent to friends from out of state to avoid sales tax. From my understanding those states typically make up for the lack of sales tax with a higher property tax. Interesting that it appears several counties in Montana near the eastern border have taken up sales tax. Possibly in an effort to maximize profits from people who cross state lines to avoid taxation.
From a European perspective not having ANY tax is very strange!
@@General.Knowledge it is made up for by those states with Income and/or Property taxes. Income and Sales tax tend to be inversely related from state to state. The obvious exception to that rule being Florida who has all taxes low, largely due to the high number of retirees
I lived for quite a while not far from the border between Pennsylvania and Delaware. (I was on the PA side.) Not only does Delaware not have sales tax, they brag about it with signs just over the border. But PA had a law (rarely enforced, but still) that if you bought anything in DE, you were liable for PA's state sales tax.
There is no sales tax in the grey states.
Minnesota has variable sales tax. We have a 0% sales tax on clothing so a lot of people come here to shop from border states.
It is incredible that the US has more forest area than whole Europe.
It has more climate types, too.
Of course its bigger than europe
I've been a tree trimmer my whole life. I've paid a little attention here and there. Very little, really, but, anyway....
I've heard tell that, in Germany, most trees are, like, numbered and cataloged and , like, cared for on an individual basis.
Sure, trees in city parks. That makes sense, right?
But I understand they mark all trees. In the forests and mountains and shit
I live in Colorado. That idea just blows me away.
A lack of forest doesn't necessarily mean desert 😁 These are mostly the Great plains you're looking at :)
Great maps! But a few comments on the map of forest cover in the US:
1. The middle part of the US is definitely not desert, though a lot of it is technically semiarid, or close to it.. It is the Great Plains and is mostly all agricultural (either cropland or grazing).
2. Much of the Eastern US may be heavily forested on paper, but its highly fragmented by houses, roads - not exactly wilderness. The East coast especially has little farmland, and is either built up or covered in trees.
Thanks for the info!
Take a trip to maine or nh it will change your mind, probably more deer and black bears than anywhere in the country
@@luiskross6454 Oh yes! I’ve been to Maine though back in the 90s. And went to school in northern Michigan. Yes, there are a LOT of exceptions to what I said regarding eastern forest cover. I was just pointing out to General how a lot of areas are both densely populated and at the same time heavily wooded.
Yeah, as someone who lives Eastside, there's not many real forests, just a ridiculous amount of trees. You go outside and look in any direction and you see a tree. Only exception is if you're in a big city, and even then some of them have trees lining the sidewalks.
@Bob's - You are certainly correct regarding the definition of "forest" not meaning wilderness, but most of the east coast is still considered forested. It's easier to see when in an airplane flying above the eastern states. Even though many trees have been cleared for various reasons, much of it is still covered. My spouse and I have marveled at how large cities like Atlanta and Charlotte look like the downtown areas appear to be springing up out of the forest when flying over them. Not dense, for sure, but tree covered.
I live in Washington state and am from New Jersey. The sales tax map is interesting, but you have to consider other localized taxes. Sales tax may look relatively high for Washington, but we have no state income tax. New Jersey's sales tax is relatively low, especially compared with New York, but property taxes are very high. Each jurisdiction decides how it'll get its money through a variety of taxes-it might be interesting to compare the different kinds of taxes in each state, since it is such a weird hodge-podge.
It's the same with Tennessee. We pay the most in sales tax out of almost anywhere, but the state has no income tax and property tax rates are either low or at least reasonable in most areas.
WA resident here. Regarding sales tax, some consideration should be made for groceries (food) and pharmaceuticals for which there is no WA sales tax, and I think that is how it should be. Of course food in restaurants is taxed and our liquor taxes are probably the highest in the country, but beer and wine is relatively inexpensive.
People tend to underestimate the sheer size of the US and the diversity of landscapes and cultures within the same state. It’s a 7 hour drive from one corner of Pennsylvania to the other, most of which is uninhabited with cities and towns sprinkled throughout.
We have beaches, mountain ski resorts, rural farmlands, “Amish country”, and New York City all within a 90 minute drive from Philadelphia. Each area has its own distinct subculture and way of life. The biggest political divide (and most consistent) is actually urban vs. rural, which makes sense when you look at population distribution.
There indeed are 5 states with no sales tax
Forests in the eastern part of the US tend to be more fragmented, so while they count as "forest" they may not be suitable for various forms of wildlife because each section of contiguous forest is relatively small. The Shawnee National Forest in southern Illinois is a good example of that.
Same here in Europe but nature always finds a way 💚
I live next to part of that forest.
TOTALLY with you on maps. I cannot help but be transfixed by almost any map. I get a lot out of a visual manifestation of information. Great channel, by the way, thank you for all the great content.
It was interesting to see my county, in a relatively less populated state of Kansas, showing up. My hometown, Wichita, is actually known as the "Air Capital" (as identified by the industry map) because of all of the aircraft manufacturing plants in the city.
My cat always bugs me about moving to Hawaii so she can be a badass monster predator.
Great video as always, I knew that Oregon had no sales tax but wasn't aware that Montana had no tax as well. The western USA high cost is mostly due to more people moving there then housing is available and the technology companies that pay really big salary to support that rise in price even more. However some cities have limited land available like San Francisco and Seattle so they have high prices due to geography but most areas also have much cheaper housing mixed usually smaller or older houses can in some areas be found for much lower than average price. Also some states just have larger families so the average home size is just larger so I think it just costs more perhaps.
Thanks! The limited land logic makes sense!
Yea
California has a big problem with housing development environmental lawsuits that really slows down house building as a demand is still there. A friend there told me that it can take several years for a subdivision to even break ground as the court case wait times often exceed a year or two…self inflicted…artificial shortage…
I live in SF and I can verify that the house my parents got is a 2 story and was 3 mil, but if we were in Texas, it may have only been 200k or something.
That area that you circled in Tennessee is Williamson County. It's a suburb of Nashville, and it's where most of the music label executives, music stars, NFL players, NHL players, and Nissan executives live. It is one of America's top ten wealthiest counties (by net worth). The other counties in the Nashville area with a little lighter shade of purple used to be relatively inexpensive to purchase a house in, but that all changed two years ago when America experienced its second Great Migration. Five years ago, it was relatively easy to purchase a starter home for less than $150,000. Now, even as the housing market is experiencing a slow down, it is very difficult to find a starter home for less than $300,000.
Oregon having Pub as most common restaurant cuisine could be due to the fact that every establishment that sells alcohol must offer 5 or 6 hot dishes to sell as well. So every bar in Oregon is also a restaurant. And there are a lot of bars in Oregon. That isn't to say that some of them just offer a menu of 5 or 6 microwavable frozen snacks, but it also encourages bars to compete with delicious food.
For the sales tax, I live in Oregon and we have no sales tax whatsoever.
Regarding the maps showing forested areas of the U.S., I noticed the lower peninsula of Michigan in particular the Thumb region did not show much forest. There were devastating forest fires occurring in 1871 and more so in 1881 that swept across that area and wiped out much of the forests. One of nine children, my father was born on a farm in 1922 near Cass City in the Thumb and recalled hearing the older folks talk about those fires. I was born in 1949. We would visit the many relatives I had there from the early 1950s, and I recall the open farm land at my grandparents' farm and my uncles' farms. Today, about 70 years later, the area looks different. It took me a while to put my finger on it, but I finally figured it out. It's different because the trees are much larger and there are more of them. Farming is still prevalent, but it is not the sole means of support for everyone living there which puts less pressure on the trees. Yes, this is certainly anecdotal information, but I'm sure both the number of trees and their size are increasing steadily in many places.
Additionally, the Thumb area of Michigan was one of the great lumber producing areas in and around the Civil War era. Not only was raw lumber exported, but a large industry based on building wood product thrived. This is one of the few places that once the lumber was removed, the land was flat enough, and fertile enough to be converted to agriculture. The fires mentioned were devastating, but only accelerated the conversion of this land to agriculture from forests.
for the sales tax map at 9:28, the grey ones are 0% sales tax. Stores in New Hampshire frequently mention in their ads that there's no sales tax in the entire state.
No sales tax or income tax in New Hampshire. I know, I live there.
Thanks for the share
Congrats, great video.
Super cool map ideas :)
Asm gk❤Content getting better every vid, love watching .This is certified rich classic । Lv the way u represent this vdo❤❤❤
Yes the grey states of the Sales Tax map mean that there is no sales tax. Even though there is no sales tax in Oregon, that does not mean that living there is cheap, and yes the property taxes are much higher. Specifically in Portland which has some of the highest property taxes in the USA. Excellent video, that first map was indeed interesting.
Someone probably already pointed this out, but Cindy Hyde-Smith has been serving as the junior Senator from Mississippi since 2018. Vermont elected a woman to congress for the first time in November, 2022, so pretty recent from the publication of this video
That was very interesting😎
Yes, some of those states such as Oregon have no sales tax (0%).
Correct! I’m from VT and go shopping in NH for bigger purchases. It’s great paying no sales tax!!
Property taxes are very high in Oreeegone.
You said that none beat California for house prices, but Hawaii does. It makes total sense.
I've always loved maps. Interesting about house prices. Since the majority of people live in the East, I assumed generally higher prices. Colorado is easy, Aspen and Vail. The people who actually work in Aspen all live in a a separate community a few miles out of town.
They used to say that a squirrel could travel through unbroken forest from the East Coast to the Mississippi River. The Area between the Mississippi and the Rocky Mountains has always been treeless.
Nevada has a lot of Mountain lions, we have a resident population of at least 20 wild Mountain lions living within a half hour drive of Las Vegas, but bear are restricted to a handful in the Sierra near Reno.
A pub is essentially a bar(tavern/pub) and restaurant combined. Often catering towards the restaurant clientele during meal certain hours, other days/hours service is geared towards unwinding or gathering for televised sporting events that also involve drinking.
So the virgin forest vs. forest thing is very accurate. My state (Michigan) has lots of forests. However it has very few virgin forests left. They were basically all cut down. Believe it or not the Great Lakes region used to be the area hit hardest by forest fires because of all of the logging.
It's both sad and amazing that almost all of the parks and forests that I visit, hike, camp, etc., were all made by humans.
The US was hit really hard by the Great Depression. There were lots of unemployed people (especially young people). The US also had tons of logged wasteland, eroded flood plains, and dried out plains (dustbowl). To "kill two birds with one stone" the government created the Civilian Conservation Corps, in which young people were hired for conservation work. They planted over 3 billion trees. So there were a lot more trees in the 1950s then there were in the 1920s. Although the original CCC ended during WW2, the forest and conservation work has expanded and lived on.
One thing you might want to look at, is sales tax and income tax combined. I'm a Maryland expat living in Florida: Florida has no state income tax, but Maryland does. It's not insignificant.
Maryland withholds state income taxes, so they already get first dibs on your money before you even make it; then when you go to spend it, they want yet another cut.
So, yes, sales tax is higher here in Florida, but Tallahassee doesn't care how much I make. It's a whole different modus vivendi. I no longer have to (metaphorically) bring the first fruits of my labor before the General Assembly, so they can take their portion, only to have to give them even more money later, when I spend what they deigned to let me keep in the first place.
Liked the band playing national emblem in the background. Also the Sousa march.
I live in northeast arkansas. It's interesting and I think accurate. The area I live in is the Mississippi River delta. It was flooded swamplands before America. It has now been GPS flattened for farming. There are very few trees today. You can see all along the Mississippi River where the farmland is.
Do something like this for Canada please
Okay!
That large forestless section in the middle of the country isn’t dessert, it’s steppe. It’s all grassland. However, right next to it is a massive dessert.
Kansas, The Dakotas and Nebraska is just a massive farmstead
*desert.
Okay! Thank you
Go back a bit, though, and early settlers used to refer to the Great Plains as "The Great American Desert"
@@General.Knowledge yea bro u gotta make sure ur info is correct before you start sharing…
The central isn't "desert" it is the great plains
By the mid 1800s, 75% of New England forests had been cut down for farms and lumber. Today, most has grown back but it is with fast growing trees, like maples, not the original hardwood species like chestnut and oak. Turkey and deer were almost extinct in those days since their habitats had been cut and there were no hunting limits. Today they are everywhere again.
Re: county sizes. I learned that county borders were drawn based on one day of travel (or a certain number of hours) from anywhere to the county seat. So in the east, counties were formed earlier in time when travel was slower. By the time we made counties in the west, we could travel faster because of technology. While that might not be entirely accurate for all county lines, I think that's a better reason than fewer people live there. Counties are not drawn based on population, or metropolitan areas would have multiple counties splitting up the cities.
I rarely comment but i noticed something on 'most popular restaurant type' pub is most popular in the north. It makes sense for alot of that is rural small towns which even the smallest town. Has at least a pub! Not enough bigger cities in those states to offset rural pubs
I went to college in Louisiana and the university kept a little swamp ecosystem in the middle of campus which included a small cypress lake and turtles and 3 alligators which they would change out for younger ones when they got big enough to climb observation barriers.
3:15The centre of the U.S. isn't desert but rather the Great Plains: A massive swath of agricultural land
For the sales tax part, certain states have no state sales tax, such as New Hampshire, so when you buy something it's the flat rate cost that you see on the label
On the sales tax map, the grey states are known as duty-free states, where the tax burden is just calculated into the price. This makes the advertised prices seem higher, but also cuts down on the exchange of pennies.
Interesting
I would love if you included DC in your data analaysis!
That Souza background music slaps.
9:08 Food is actually the only thing that doesn't have a sales tax, at least in Iowa, where I live.
great
That's not missing data, those states do in fact not have any sales tax. In the USA states have 3 main ways to gain revenue. Sales tax, state (not federal) income tax, and property tax. States like New Hampshire might have no sales tax, but they have the 2nd highest property tax in the country. Washington has no income tax, and Oregon has no sales tax, therefore some people live and work in Washington and shop in Oregon.
Really enjoy your videos - thank you.
A couple of comments:
1) Oregon does not have any sales tax, so that why it is gray; I assume that is the case for all the gray areas on the sales tax map.
2) In the east, counties were created as an area that encompassed the maximum distance someone could travel by horse & buggy to the county seat (biggest town) in a day. So lots of small counties. But as the West was opened up, it needed organizing before there was much population, so other criteria were used (don't know details - I grew up in Mississippi = 82 counties).
Thanks! And thanks for watching :)
Connecticut doesn't use counties. We have 169 towns and some of the towns do unite for social services.
In 1960, Connecticut voters eliminated the 8 counties we had.
In Switzerland you can find different tax rates. And some zones in particular inside a country have exemptions for taxes like some Alpine Italian towns and Islands like Canary Islands which there is not VAT tax.
Congrats on 720k
Thank you!
Excellent band music
Yes. Some regions really do have 0% sales tax. They typically make up for it by having higher income and/or property taxes.
I do know that sales tax varies in parts of the state based on many variables. In wisconsin, they will sometimes implement a .5% sales tax in for upgrades to the packer stadium. Locally we’ve had sales tax increase to pay for road construction when previous governor reduced the amount of infrastructure funding available to finish projects that were out of money and unfinished.
Do one on best actors a departure from geography culture and politics/history
The highest house prices in Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah all correspond with ski resorts, Sun Valley, Jackson Hole, and Park City, respectively.
Here's my unsolicited 2 cents:
2:00 usually median house prices are used, instead of mean, otherwise the presence of $10M+ mansions/penthouses skews it. Its arguable whether it makes sense to include these or not, stats are always subjective in some ways.
7:30 aerospace probably includes military missile design/manufacture, and low population states are good for rocket engine testing. Washington has Boeing, Maryland has Lockheed, Arkansas has Aerojet/Rocketdyne and ULA, Georgia has Gulfstream, Kansas has various small aircraft stuff, no clue about Kentucky lol.
8:45 pub food probably comes from all the Irish farmers who settled the prairie there
Wichita was where Beechcraft, Cessna, Mooney and Stearman Aircraft all got their start, and continues to be significant for Textron Aviation, Learjet, Airbus, and Boeing/Spirit AeroSystems. Airbus and Bombardier also have a substantial presence there. Wichita often touts itself as the "air capital of the world" as a result.
2:20 "But none beat California"
Except for Hawaii by over 25% 😜
9:27 the grey areas represent zero sales tax!
This is the reason why its cheaper to buy stuff in different states.
On the matter of differential taxes: within the UK, Scotland certainly has different rates of Income Tax.
However, as far as I know, Sales Tax (Value Added Tax - VAT) remains the same throughout the UK, but at different rates for different products.
There is no sales tax in Montana and Oregon. That’s why everyone in the neighboring states shop there.
County size is relevant to travel time. Eastern states were developed when fastest travel was by horse.
In Michigan, counties were sized by how far you could travel in one day to reach the county seat.
*The best map I have seen recently is density of areas where poopin in the street is common. Portland was the brownest area of them all, 2nd was SF*
The areas without forest aren’t necessarily deserts. A lot of it is the Great Plains and the Sacramento/Central Valley which are our most fertile agricultural lands in the US.
When traveling to the eastern U.S. I was surprised by how little farm land they was. I'm in southern Minnesota and often travel west to the Rockies. Montana has no sales tax!
You should talk about sibling nations
German sales tax is the same everywhere as it is set by the federal government. There are however devolved topics that raise taxes and which can be different depending on where you live. For example taxes on real estate.
Great video, very interesting! Think Oregon have no sales tax (0%)
Limit the press. Limit what journalists and reporters are allowed to do.
YES 👍🏼 The grey color does equal zero % tax on food.
9:20 Yes, there are some states and counties that charge a 0% sales tax.
Any interesting maps of oceans and seas?
3:05, the majority of the non forested land is not desert, it’s plains/grasslands only around 1/3 of it is desert
Yes, no sales tax in Montana
heyyy guy from new hampshire here, i’ll let you know that NH doesn’t have a sales tax and so the sales tax rate IS in fact 0%, though there is a modest 9% room and meals tax, which applies to hotel and restaurant purchases
Pub food is just bar food. Here in Wisconsin every bar/pub which is the most common restaurant serves Burgers of some variety, Cheese curds, and wings. There are other common foods but it all depends on the type of bar but I'd say these are the basics.
Precision instruments would be microscopes, binoculars, cameras, surveyor's tools, surgical tools, etc.
County's are smaller in the east because when they were formed, there small size allowed citizens to get to the county seat by horse in one day. By the time most of the west was populated, the train and car were becoming available and citizens could get to the county seat in one day from a greater distance.
For the Forest map, there's more than just forest and deserts. Most of what you call the desert is plains... y'know..... farmlands. The area of land that grows enough food to support the citizens and still have plenty left over for export. Or, I guess they grow their crops in the middle of forests or arid land?
I love maps I put em on my wall
No sales tax in Oregon they are really proud of that... When the cashier found out from out of of state they all mentioned it "no sales tax here"
I feel like it would be interesting if this guy created a Vlog channel
Lived in New Hampshire most of my life, no sales tax. Price you see for products in stores is what you pay.
Oregon doesn't have any sales tax, so the map showing 0% is correct, Oregon has a fairly high income tax (among others) to balance this. As an Oregonian, it's really nice to see the price of something listed and pay the amount. I'm not claiming that it's better nor perfect, to be clear. I believe the same (or similar) is true for the other two states as well.
The trick is to live in Vancouver to avoid state income tax, and shop in Portland to avoid state sales tax.
Vancouver, Washington, that is. Not as famous as the one in BC, but much closer to Oregon. BTW, namesake Capt. Vancouver was the one who gave the Union Jack to the Hawaiians; it's in their state flag.
You know, your little pfp reminds me of the eudimonia drawing style.
North western Wyoming housing prices should have peaked your interest.
That's why it's called the plains ..
I have 20acres that's classified as a forest, only benefit is a tax deduction. Kind of sucks because I can't cut any of the trees.
Can confirm that ppl living around Philly routinely travel to Delaware just to shop because of the lack of sales tax
Forests in New England - it is absolutely true that in the middle 19th Century, right up until the Civil War, 99%+ of all trees had been cut. But interestingly post Civil War, the cattle and milk industries all moved west as the Great Plains really opened up. Today the vast majority of New England is once again covered in forests, even in highly populated areas [except obviously the the major cities like NYC or Boston].
9:21 Grey does mean no sales tax. Oregon, NH, and most of Montana have no sales tax. I still remember buying a knife up in Montana while there for a Boy Scouts trip with no sales tax, my young brain was amazed.
In CT the MINIMUM power cost is $0.37/ KWh. TRIPLE that in a LOT of States.
New Hampshire, Oregon, Montana, Alaska, and Delaware do not impose a sales tax at the state level.
Outside the US, most countries impose “value added tax” at varying rates. Value added tax is essentially the same thing as sales tax, just a different name.
I could be wrong, but I believe the Sales Tax map was depicting County Sales Tax Rates--a separate tax from the State Sales Taxes. The Southern US states definitely do not have higher percentage sales taxes than the Northeastern states.
That could be. I know here in New Hampshire, we don't have a state sales tax or any country taxes, or income tax for that matter. We only have property taxes and room & board taxes.
There are 5 states where there's no sales tax: Oregon, New Hampshire, Montana, Alaska and Delaware
You might notice that Alaska does have some countries with sales tax... Those local municipalities can enact their own local sales tax rates :)
2:21 NOOOOO SECOND BARELY WHYYYYYYYYY
A lot of grassland or crop land in central US.
9:20, I’m sure NH doesn’t have sales tax, not sure abt OR or MT