Disabled and disdained: In rural America, towns are divided between those who work, those who don't
In rural America, some towns are divided between those who work and those who dont
Story by Terrence McCoy
[email protected]
Photos by Linda Davidson
Published on July 21, 2017
GRUNDY, Va. Five days earlier, his mother had spent the last of her disability check on bologna, cheese, bread and Pepsi. Two days earlier, he had gone outside and looked at the train tracks that wind between the coal mines and said, I dont know how Im going to get out of this. One day earlier, the family dog had collapsed from an unnamed illness, and, without money for a veterinarian, he had watched her die on the porch. And now it was Monday morning, and Tyler McGlothlin, 19, had a plan.
About time to go, said his mother, Sheila McGlothlin, 57, stamping out a cigarette. ... Im ready, Tyler said, walking across a small, decaying house wedged against a mountain and strewn with dirty dishes, soda cans and ashtrays. They went outside, stepping past bottles of vodka his father had discarded before disappearing into another jail cell, and climbed a dirt path toward a housemates car.
He knew his plan was not a good one. But what choice did he have? He had looked inside the refrigerator that morning, and the math didnt add up. Five people were living in the house, none of whom worked. It would be 17 days before his mother received another disability check and more food stamps. And the refrigerator contained only seven eggs, two pieces of bologna, 24 slices of Kraft American cheese, some sliced ham and one pork chop.
It had to be done. ... Tyler would hold a sign on the side of the road and beg for money. He would go to a town 30 miles down the road and stand at one of the regions busiest intersections, where he prayed no one would recognize him, to plead for help from people whose lives seemed so far removed from his own.
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Disabled America: Between 1996 and 2015, the number of working-age adults receiving federal disability payments increased significantly across the country but nowhere more so than in rural America. In this series, The Washington Post explores how disability is shaping the culture, economy and politics of these small communities.
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Scott Clement and Jennifer Jenkins contributed to this report.
Part 1: Disabled, or just desperate? Rural Americans turn to disability as jobs dry up
Part 2: Generations, disabled One family. Four generations of disability benefits. Will it continue?
Before you tell me how bad ***** is, what's your plan? How will you get them back on their feet?
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We just published this story, and I have a few thoughts on it.
Link to tweet
LakeArenal
(28,673 posts)He would have to be. The cruel critics outnumber the constructive critics.
Personally, there should be no criticism anyway. Walk that 30 miles in his shoes.
Talk to me then.
It doesn't take a bible to know, judge not lest ye be judged..
Skittles
(152,918 posts)the lack of jobs and opportunities is causing SSDI to replace welfare......just like welfare, we are now starting to see generation after generation not finding their way.....because AMERICA has lost its way
LakeArenal
(28,673 posts)I didn't just see it as only a discussion of welfare or sociological problems of AMERICA. With that picture, it hurt me what these parents did to the boy and the laughter it ensued.
Aristus
(65,985 posts)But if you're having difficulty stretching your food dollar, maybe cut out the vodka, soda, and cigarettes?...
Day after day, year after year, I see people insisting on being the authors of all, or at least most, of their misery. And nothing I do can talk them out of it.
Skittles
(152,918 posts)people who cannot afford mental health care will very often self-medicate
Aristus
(65,985 posts)One more reasons among millions why we need comprehensive mental and emotional health care...
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)development of the social safety net.
Not that some sorts didn't, and don't, always despise the less fortunate. But this time last century serious reverses could happen to anyone and did reduce a normal working person or family from comfort to destitution. People saw that, and even gut-reactors understood that others could be destitute and still be good people.
That changed as income that was taxed away disappeared into vast public "pots" meant to serve millions of unknowns. A big part of what makes conservatives be conservative is a dark view of humanity, and most conservatives want to give only to people they feel are deserving and vastly, vastly overestimate the amount of cheating by those they don't know.
I'm a lifelong liberal, but seeing what this dynamic among half our population has done to our nation, the divisive, destructive sociopolitical costs of public programs have to be counted as huge problems arising in significant part from them. Conservatives are NOT going away. They are us. We have to find ways to help ourselves that don't tear society apart.
mahatmakanejeeves
(56,712 posts)The best story Ive read on this phenomenon was this Alec MacGillis piece.
Link to tweet
Why poor areas vote for politicians
who want to slash the safety net.
By ALEC MacGILLIS NOV. 20, 2015
IT is one of the central political puzzles of our time: Parts of the country that depend on the safety-net programs supported by Democrats are increasingly voting for Republicans who favor shredding that net.
In his successful bid for the Senate in 2010, the libertarian Rand Paul railed against intergenerational welfare and said that the culture of dependency on government destroys peoples spirits, yet racked up winning margins in eastern Kentucky, a former Democratic stronghold that is heavily dependent on public benefits. Last year, Paul R. LePage, the fiercely anti-welfare Republican governor of Maine, was re-elected despite a highly erratic first term with strong support in struggling towns where many rely on public assistance. And earlier this month, Kentucky elected as governor a conservative Republican who had vowed to largely undo the Medicaid expansion that had given the state the countrys largest decrease in the uninsured under Obamacare, with roughly one in 10 residents gaining coverage.
Its enough to give Democrats the willies as they contemplate a map where the red keeps seeping outward, confining them to ever narrower redoubts of blue. (1) The temptation for coastal liberals is to shake their heads over those godforsaken white-working-class provincials who are voting against their own interests.
But this reaction misses the complexity of the political dynamic thats taken hold in these parts of the country. It misdiagnoses the Democratic Partys growing conundrum with working-class white voters. And it also keeps us from fully grasping whats going on in communities where conditions have deteriorated to the point where researchers have detected alarming trends in their mortality rates. ... In eastern Kentucky and other former Democratic bastions that have swung Republican in the past several decades, the people who most rely on the safety-net programs secured by Democrats are, by and large, not voting against their own interests by electing Republicans. Rather, they are not voting, period. They have, as voting data, surveys and my own reporting suggest, become profoundly disconnected from the political process. ... The people in these communities who are voting Republican in larger proportions are those who are a notch or two up the economic ladder the sheriffs deputy, the teacher, the highway worker, the motel clerk, the gas station owner and the coal miner. And their growing allegiance to the Republicans is, in part, a reaction against what they perceive, among those below them on the economic ladder, as a growing dependency on the safety net, the most visible manifestation of downward mobility in their declining towns.
(1)