Rural America Is The New Inner City

Imissbush

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Feb 16, 2014
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Rural America Is the New ‘Inner City’


For more than a century, rural towns sustained themselves, and often thrived, through a mix of agriculture and light manufacturing. Until recently, programs funded by counties and townships, combined with the charitable efforts of churches and community groups, provided a viable social safety net in lean times.

Starting in the 1980s, the nation’s basket cases were its urban areas—where a toxic stew of crime, drugs and suburban flight conspired to make large cities the slowest-growing and most troubled places.

Today, however, a Wall Street Journal analysis shows that by many key measures of socioeconomic well-being, those charts have flipped. In terms of poverty, college attainment, teenage births, divorce, death rates from heart disease and cancer, reliance on federal disability insurance and male labor-force participation, rural counties now rank the worst among the four major U.S. population groupings (the others are big cities, suburbs and medium or small metro areas).

In fact, the total rural population—accounting for births, deaths and migration—has declined for five straight years.


Read the whole thing. The Democratic areas of the country are booming, while poor rural America falls behind
 
Rural areas have always been behind big cities on issues of health and wealth, nothing new and it's been a problem since the agricultural revolution....These areas are usually always republican strongholds..I live in rural McDonald county Missouri and they be po here..Takes 9 months to get a visit to see the local dentist, 3-4 months to see a doc...Housing is usually dilapidated even the cops have to drive Impalas...
 

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