Continuing to look at where SteveSailer.Net subscribers (free and paid) are found, here are the 50 states plus DC in terms of raw numbers of total subscribers:
Not surprisingly, the most subscribers are found in the most populous states. But that’s useful for planning my fall book tour and the like.
More interesting is the per capita by states map graph:
Subscribers are pretty widespread, being found in all 50 states. But, the biggest concentration per capita is along the Acela Corridor from Washington DC to Boston, Chicago, in content-generating Minneapolis, and the West Coast, especially rainy Seattle, where people like to read. Idaho also stands out. Perhaps the Southern California diaspora?
By far, the most subscribers per capita are in DC:
That’s long been my general impression from walking down the street in Washington’s northwest quadrant: Georgetown pedestrians hold interesting conversations.
What about paid subscribers? Here are paid subscriber per capita rates relative to the national average.
Basically, states with affluent metro areas like New York, Maryland, Virginia, Illinois, Washington, and California are more likely to have more people pony up my $100 per year subscription fee.
The paid subscriber map is like the total subscriber map only more so, EXCEPT Vermont suddenly jumps from the lightest shade to the darkest shade.
Vermonters don't take anything without paying, apparently, which confirms the experience of anyone who has run an honor-system farm-stand in the Green Mountain State.
I’m curious about the numbers coming from the blue states. I can’t imagine the education community in Seattle being big fans. Most of your readers are escapees from that intolerant town. Just shows that there is an underground movement everywhere who notice. The $100 is well worth it.