Appalachia
Related: About this forumEast Liverpool and the Unforgiving Economy of Rural Appalachia
This article illustrates one of the points I have been drum beating for years -- there is no one party responsible for the dire conditions that exist in the Appalachian region. If anything, the fracking boom has only increased the misery created and exploitation by the corporate powers, not the political parties, who really run this country.
http://rustwire.com/2014/10/23/east-liverpool-and-the-unforgiving-economy-of-rural-appalachia/
Rust Wire
East Liverpool and the Unforgiving Economy of Rural Appalachia
23 October 2014
About 100 miles Southeast of Cleveland, nestled in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, along the Ohio River sits the small city of East Liverpool, Ohio. Once known as the pottery capitol of the world, many of the China and glassware factories have closed, as have the steel mills where many East Liverpool residents once worked. In its heyday during World War II, almost 50,000 people lived in East Liverpool. Today the citys population tops off at just above 10,000.
Nearly 30 percent of all residents live below the poverty level. The per capita income is just more than $16,000. The unemployment rate is 13 percent. Its a city where almost every second or third house seems to be abandoned, and not just abandoned. Some are burnt out. Some are falling down. The locals talk about the incessant and merciless drug traffic. They say dealers have come up to the city from the east coast having found a robust market for heroin and other opiates. The drug trade wreaks constant havoc on the streets. In late September, five people were shot there in a single night...
...East Liverpool and the tiny towns and villages that surround it are part of the forgotten rural poor in America. Devoid of all economic opportunity, theyve become a dumping ground for the detritus of the global economy while simultaneously fueling it by providing coal, oil and natural gas...
...The common notion is that Democrats are environmentalists and Republicans are not. But the Clinton family and administration had a hand in constructing and protecting the incinerator. Friends and former colleagues of President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were the incinerators initial investors. Despite countless violations on its permit, the Clinton administration allowed the incinerator to be constructed 1100 feet from an elementary school, in the middle of an African American neighborhood, on a flood plane along the Ohio River.... MORE at the link provided above.
A Little Weird
(1,754 posts)I especially liked the last paragraph:
In poor neighborhoods across America, rural and urban alike, we must return to investing in our people. Without the New Deal, there would be no Caitlin Johnson of this I am certain. Its time to realize that dream for all Americans. And its time to move to a new economy one based on investing in people, not investing in resource extraction and waste disposal. The areas riches in natural resources should not be the areas most plagued by crippling poverty. It doesnt add up. The patterns are far too clear for us to continue blaming individual behavior when the game appears to be rigged in favor of nameless, faceless corporations.
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)Not just Appalachia but our entire nation.