No, thats why i say statistical representation matters. You are invoking the same rhetoric that antivaxxers use when debating Israel -- yes, surges in vaxed covid cases are rising, but the number of adults with the vaccine are significantly higher than unvaxed, ergo its not a statistical error, its a major component in Bernoulli Distribution. So if you want a cookie for saying the highest populated race is going to have the highest chance of overall cases in something, sure. However, that is also applied to a myriad of other variables as well: Number of white people shot by the police is higher than black, number of people in poverty, etc -- and right wingers will bring up that argument all the time, does that make it valid??
The point of using statistical ratios of what has a higher chance as a percentage is introduce logic beyond whole numbers -- in this case, if we had a room off hundred people, 50 black and 50 white randomly selected from each state which side would have more unnvaccinated?
Now if you said the US as a whole has an under vaccinated issue, id agree -- but remember, my original post was based on voter base, and the DEMS voter based is far likelier to be under vaccinated during a period of when vax passes are being more rolled out; and the subsequent blacklash they may face from that. Hence why Black Live Matter is injecting themselves into this.