mindstalk: (atheist)
https://qz.com/1167671/the-100-year-capitalist-experiment-that-keeps-appalachia-poor-sick-and-stuck-on-coal/

A 2017 longform article that I just got around to reading, on the economic abuse of West Virginia/central Appalachia. Outcomes: high poverty, low income, low education, higher mortality, higher opioids...

It's an absentee extractive regime, like many colonies. Mines are owned by outside companies, coal wasn't taxed by the state until the 1970s, tons of profit simply exported. Quintessential company towns: workers living in company housing, paid in script, stuff with overpriced company stores. (Maybe less so now, but significant history.) Classist and underfunded schools. Public pays in pollution and land degradation, and now subsidizes the coal companies with outright money.

'Mullins made the National Honors Society. But in eighth grade, an administrator had talked him out of taking the advanced-track classes, telling him his course load looked like too much work for him to handle. Not that he needed much of a push—those classes were filled with the coal-boss kids, who bullied anyone whose dad actually entered a mine.'

'She told her mother she would go anywhere that had at least one stoplight.'

'They come from where even a community college is mostly unheard of. Especially thinking you could move away to a university—that’s not even in the realm of possibility.'

Date: 2020-07-15 03:32 (UTC)From: [personal profile] ndrosen
I know an old man, Walter Rybeck, who grew up West Virginia, together with his brother Arthur, whom I also knew. Arthur was a dentist, and until shortly before his death at an advanced age was providing dental care cheaply to people who couldn’t otherwise afford it.

Walter Rybeck was a journalist, and a long-term Georgist, the author of “Resolving the Economic Puzzle.” He saw the way wealth was being extracted from West Virginia, and based on that and other things he has seen in his long life (he’s one of our few surviving World War Two veterans), he advocates land value taxation, as do I, and as Arthur Rybeck did. That would relive people of taxes on their wages, and in the things they buy, and instead charge the landowners for the use of what they did nothing to create.

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