Category: Appalachian

  • The Mountain That Blooms Like Fire

    High atop the Smoky Mountains, far from the bustling roads and visitor centers, lies a summit where summer unfurls in rare, blazing colors. Gregory Bald, a rounded, grassy knob standing at 4,949 feet, remains one of the few places in the world where a natural garden bursts to life with fiery azaleas in hues so…

  • Appalachia’s About to Get Hit Hard—Here’s Why They’ll Survive

    By any modern measure, the latest sweeping legislation to roll through Washington has inspired hope in some corners and dread in others. Many media outlets focus on the shiny parts—stimulus promises, clean energy projects, and lofty ambitions. Yet in the ridges and hollers of Appalachia, a much different story brews. While others cheer, many mountain…

  • This New Bill Could Starve Appalachia

    The “Big Beautiful Bill” is being celebrated by some in Washington as a win, while for people in Appalachia, it feels like a quiet attack. Hidden in the details are changes that could take food off tables, cut off internet access, and make life even harder for families already living on the edge. Most people…

  • He Got Rich Off Appalachia’s Pain, Then Voted to Make It Worse

    J.D. Vance became a household name by selling a story of struggle from Appalachia. A self-made man who rose from poverty and chaos to political power, his memoir Hillbilly Elegy turned into a bestseller, a Netflix movie, and the foundation of his political career. But for many who come from the same hills and hollers…

  • The ‘Beautiful’ Bill That’s Killing Appalachia

    Today, the Senate passed what it has dubbed The One Big Beautiful Bill, sending it back to Congress for final approval. While the bill is being hailed by some as a landmark achievement, the reality for many Appalachians is far less optimistic. Underneath the glossy rhetoric, the legislation threatens to deepen existing hardships for rural…

  • Is Appalachia Being Sacrificed?

    A healthcare catastrophe is quietly unfolding, and Appalachia may soon be one of the hardest-hit regions in America. The so-called “Big Beautiful Bill,” now moving rapidly through Congress, is expected to eliminate Medicaid coverage for a staggering 12.8 million people. While backers of the bill claim it targets undocumented immigrants and welfare abuse, the numbers…

  • How the Big Beautiful Bill Will Hurt Appalachia

    The “Big Beautiful Bill” has been promoted as a bold step toward economic revival, promising new jobs, improved infrastructure, and prosperity for struggling regions like Appalachia. But beneath these shiny promises lies a troubling reality: this legislation largely caters to wealthy corporations and investors while cutting critical support systems that millions of Appalachian families depend…

  • Why Billionaires Are Quietly Buying Land in Appalachia

    The road into one Appalachian County winds through dense forest and past old mining sites now covered in second-growth poplar. Land that once belonged to small farmers and coal families is changing hands, and the buyers aren’t from nearby. Signs are going up along familiar paths: private property, no trespassing, access by permit only. People…

  • Logging Push Threatens Remote Appalachian Forests Trump-Era Plan Would Open 80,000 Acres in Virginia and Tennessee to Industrial Access. How do you feel about this?

    The Trump administration has moved to open 80,000 acres of public land in Virginia and Tennessee to logging and road construction. This land includes parts of North Fork Pound and Seng Mountain in Virginia, along with Flint Mill and Rogers Ridge in Tennessee. These areas lie within the George Washington, Jefferson, and Cherokee National Forests.…

  • The Lie of ‘Self-Reliance’ in Appalachia: How It’s Used to Keep Us Down

    There’s a story passed around about the people of Appalachia. It gets told by outsiders with a crooked smile, by policymakers with no stake in the outcome, and even by folks here who’ve heard it long enough to believe it. The story says we like to take care of our own. That we don’t want…