Inside North Carolina's Tragic Rot Belt. Can These Places Be Saved??

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • Wow! A loss of agriculture jobs have decimated many communities in North Carolina.
    Dr. Paul Cleveland's website is here: www.boundarystone.org
    If you drive around the state of North Carolina these days, you might be a little baffled. Sure, there’s a lot of talk about how fast the Raleigh area is growing, and how much money is flowing into Charlotte. The coast might be the best coast in the country. But as you drive around many of the rural areas of this state, you’ll see some communities falling apart. Entire counties in some parts of the state have gone from prosperous to poverty in a manner of decades. It’s estimated that 6% of the entire state of North Carolina lives in a distressed community just like this.
    The midwest and parts of the northeast have the rust belt - you know - places like Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo that have fallen on hard times since the auto industry left. In this video, we’re going to drive through what has been called the Rot Belt. They are places in the south that were former agriculture hubs, but have been decimated now that farming isn’t as profitable and as a result, so many of these small communities are, well, rotting away.
    Aww the Rot Belt. You could draw up a rough approximation as to where the economic decline of North Carolina is the worst and people could argue about where the exact boundaries are. But for the sake of perspective, the area we’ll be focusing on is here - an area in the north central part of the state along the Virginia state line and here in the southwestern part of the state along the south carolina border. The area I’ll drive through is the latter - and I’ll specifically focus on Robeson County. But we’ll see footage of other rot belt hubs in this state. All of the areas we’re driving through are still surrounded by farmland just like this.
    Robeson County has some of the poorest and forsaken communities in North Carolina. Right now, we’re in the community of Parkton, population 435. There are abandoned homes all over the place and other streets that look like they’ll be all but wiped away at some point. It’s a patchwork of homes, empty and overgrown lots, abandoned streets and empty storefronts.
    About 1 in 4 people here in Parkton lives at or below the poverty line, and that number’s going up as time goes on. A whopping 75% of kids live in poverty here. There’s a bunch of houses that have sold here for well under $25,000.
    Parkton is decaying right before our eyes. Like many other towns in eastern North Carolina, it’s a shadow of its former bustling self. The biggest reasons for the decay are a loss of textile mill jobs and a dramatic downtown in tobacco farming.
    Then all these big corporations have moved in and THEY handle all the farming needs now. Of course, they don’t have a connection to the land or the community -they just want to make a profit.
    The decline of the economic fortunes in places like Parkton have also impacted the region’s health outcomes. The average life expectancy for people here is about 73 years, while 100 miles away in Wake County, where Raleigh is, folks live to be about 81 years. A real big difference.
    Young people here in Robeson County experience a death rate that’s 60% higher than the state average, and the homicide rate here is more than triple the state average.
    Leaders who manage these communities always try the same things to turn things around here - you know - asking the state for more money for the struggling schools, more money to attract new businesses, and more money to boost agriculture production. Sometimes they get the money, sometimes they don’t. But it doesn’t seem to matter WHAT money comes in. The Rot Belt further rots. Sure, there are non profits and government programs in place to help the remaining small time farmers with grants and marketing their goods. But the fact is so many people in this area have just turned their backs on farming. Many forever.
    And they’re not transitioning to white collar jobs either. Only 12% of the population in this part of the state has a college degree. It’s just generational here.
    Some communities like this have to resort to volunteer firefighters and some will go months without a police officer until one can be lured in take the badge.
    Two other distressed communities I visited in north Carolina’s rot belt were Lumberton and Kinston.
    #northcarolina #moving
    Email me: Robikmarketing1@gmail.com
    I have a Patreon if you love it so much! Here's the link to donate to the channel: www.patreon.com/NickJohnsonYo...
    You can buy my music here:
    iTunes: / state-songs-an-album
    More places to get my music:
    -Google Play: play.google.com/store/music/a...
    -Amazon Music: music.amazon.com/albums/B08D3...
    This channel is about America!
    The best video on this topic!

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @nc4tn
    @nc4tn Před 2 lety +257

    There were once many of these little “Mill towns” in the Piedmont, and they once thrived. If you worked at one, you’d never get rich, but they paid the bills and paid enough to raise a family. When textile production moved to China and Southeast Asia, they died out. A rotten shame.

    • @michaeltutty1540
      @michaeltutty1540 Před 2 lety +28

      What companies forget is that if the popular does not earn enough they will be forced to stop buying your product. And again, what does make these companies look good on the stock market is a disaster for the local economy. The economic health of a region or country is inverse to the health of the stock market. Time for a new yardstick to determine economic health

    • @pyellard3013
      @pyellard3013 Před 2 lety +9

      Japan once made cheap rubbish.. Now it concentrates on high value high tech.. Should Japan have put up tariffs against the likes of China and continued to make cheap tack? I understand people thinking its own rich national market is to be protected but Argentina made that mistake at the turn of the ce tory. . Tarriffs against imports led Argentina from being a first world country in 1900 to becoming a third world one.

    • @JoeSmith-gn1ki
      @JoeSmith-gn1ki Před 2 lety

      @@pyellard3013 now japan makes much of their rubbish in china.

    • @bobmarlowe3390
      @bobmarlowe3390 Před 2 lety +18

      I grew up just outside Thomasville and went to high school in Lexington, so I've seen it. Thankfully, I got out, joined the Navy, and learned a trade that supported me quite well.

    • @johannaallen3687
      @johannaallen3687 Před 2 lety +14

      My grandparents worked at Thomasville furniture. 30+ years and they screwed her. Now my grandma runs the sporting good secetion at her NOT SO close Walmart

  • @shannonderosa9187
    @shannonderosa9187 Před 2 lety +21

    I'm from Columbus County, NC but i've lived in Robeson County for the last 6 years in Fairmont. I can tell you right now, getting people to move here is not going to help. It is absolutely generational and these people are so used to poverty that they will never do anything to change their situation. I genuinely think there is no hope for this place. I only moved here because i met and married a man from here but now that we're separated, i'm working on getting the hell out.

  • @radioactive_angel
    @radioactive_angel Před 2 lety +66

    I visit NC every week (I'm South Carolinian) and its so so rare to see someone talk about the Carolinas in this way. This is how my family lives, this is how pain thrives, and it hurts my heart but I feel so seen. Thanks for covering this side of the country

  • @Memeposting
    @Memeposting Před 2 lety +228

    I live in this area and it is accurate. The loss of the textile Mills has completely devastated the area

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety +13

      Just imagine one design house making textiles, the difference it could make in the economy. Just one or two, not all of them. We could be making amazing, beautiful, pollution free sustainable textiles.

    • @paulturner6556
      @paulturner6556 Před 2 lety +10

      That’s such a shame ,I worked in a textile mill for years,I live in the uk ,they was loads of mills employing over 300 people each ,they’ve all gone now .

    • @wsjustice
      @wsjustice Před 2 lety +37

      Thank NAFTA for that. Why not cut labor costs by relocating to Mexico and shipping the product cheaply back to America? That's how the corporations think. That's why a lot of the low jobs are provided by Walmart and dollar stores.

    • @njl51
      @njl51 Před 2 lety +5

      I don't live there but did snd worked at a few mills. I kinda suspect they and other businesses have produced a lot of pollution so maybe it's not all bad news.

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety

      @@njl51 Oh they definitely were polluters. If they reopen it's got to be in state of the art non-polluting factories. Like I say, we don't need all the manufacturing, just a fraction of what's being done in China and India and other places. You're right though, it's definitely helped the environment in the US that all the dirty work is done in China. They have decimated their environment in the last few decades, probably beyond repair.

  • @stevejohnson6541
    @stevejohnson6541 Před 2 lety +186

    The Bypasses hurt the small towns as well. Convenience of saving 5 minutes to skirt around smaller towns has greatly hurt rural towns.

    • @t.p.9232
      @t.p.9232 Před 2 lety +9

      Exactly. Now Rocky Mount mayor wants to do the same with a bypass. That won't help them at all.

    • @ericsmith1801
      @ericsmith1801 Před 2 lety +6

      Shady characters walking around the twilight hours makes you want to bypass the town.

    • @midcenturymodern9330
      @midcenturymodern9330 Před 2 lety +9

      Just look at what happened to the towns along Route 66 when I-40 bypassed them. So sad.

    • @rarecandy3445
      @rarecandy3445 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ericsmith1801 the characters wouldnt be shady if the economy where they lived wasnt tanked because of the bypass

    • @ericsmith1801
      @ericsmith1801 Před 2 lety +3

      @@rarecandy3445 I think Eastern North Carolina has been behind the 8th ball for a long time. No bypass might help attract more customers into the stores, but the number one job for the region is minimum wage. That's the problem.

  • @bobmarlowe3390
    @bobmarlowe3390 Před 2 lety +127

    The loss of farming, textile, and furniture jobs has been hard on a large part of NC.

    • @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr
      @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr Před 2 lety +13

      The whole country.

    • @dottyjyoung
      @dottyjyoung Před 2 lety +4

      Absolutely. I grew up in the mountains there.

    • @richardvazquez7035
      @richardvazquez7035 Před 2 lety +1

      Deregulation really killed that area of the country...

    • @gaymalewitch
      @gaymalewitch Před 2 lety

      Oh well. When Regan and both bushes have tax breaks to companies taking jobs overseas... You vote Republican you get rot.

    • @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr
      @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr Před 2 lety +5

      @@gaymalewitch Don't forget to throw ole Bill in that mix too. He is the one that pushed Nafta through

  • @rbrindle1
    @rbrindle1 Před 2 lety +189

    I'm curious about why you chose a professor from a small private college in Alabama to explain the economic history of NC? I would think that you could have found any number of economics professors right here in NC who could have given a more complete view of our very complex NC economic situation and history than, "It was all going great until the federal government ruined it in the 1940's." That left out so, SO much.

    • @jodyparrish637
      @jodyparrish637 Před 2 lety +35

      Yeah how did the good professor leave out mention of the Nixon Administration’s Earl Butz? That’s an egregious omission in the story which I’d be surprised if it wasn’t an ideological one.

    • @pmscalisi
      @pmscalisi Před 2 lety +16

      Alabama has mill towns just like NC. It’s been 30 years since they left and most have literally collapsed nothing left.
      Charlotte and Raleigh have people moving in that are making them just like where they come from. They’ll be crap holes eventually.

    • @kaythegardener
      @kaythegardener Před 2 lety +29

      NC didn't have many FOOD farms, just non-edible tobacco & cotton... The taking out of production was mainly for food crops, so the govt regulations didn't affect them directly. The professor is missing the nub of the problem...

    • @rbrindle1
      @rbrindle1 Před 2 lety +33

      @@kaythegardener Also, NC never had the highly fertile soil that it's neighbors VA and SC had. That's why it was always considered to be the poor state stuck between two rich ones. Poor agricultural practices like over-planting of cotton exacerbated the problems. There were many other problems that were and are mostly unique to NC. The professor used in this video has an obviously right-wing slant that ignores all of the other major forces at play that have hamstrung NC's economy since long before the twentieth century.

    • @mikeoveli1028
      @mikeoveli1028 Před 2 lety

      Sue Bridle
      Thank you Sue.
      This professor sounds more like a spokesman for Milton Friedman. It is all FDRs fault?
      America's leadership (R & D) for the past 40 years has done everything in its power to protect the corporate class and ship every American job to China.
      They are still sending every job and dollar they can find to China while at the same time complaining that China has to much power.
      We have a deficit of leadership is the real problem.

  • @fallingiguanas6015
    @fallingiguanas6015 Před 2 lety +54

    People don't realize the Eastern part of NC got hit by major hurricanes and floods and many of those areas never came back. Actually NC gets worse floods and damage from big hurricanes then here in Florida. Other factors for sure but many forget the weather events.

    • @jackwyatt1218
      @jackwyatt1218 Před 2 lety +1

      Major demopublican govcrims, like Biden, gave their jobs to the CCP, etc back in the '90's! L G B !

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 Před 2 lety +9

      Yeah, that's something I noticed while living in both states. Even though Florida is surrounded by the ocean much of the state doesn't get flooded. I was amazed how the city of Jacksonville can withstand hurricane despite being near the ocean while towns in NC 2 hrs west of the ocean gets hit pretty hard.

    • @matthewdar886285
      @matthewdar886285 Před rokem

      True

    • @felynia
      @felynia Před rokem +2

      @@mariowalker9048 Yeah, flooding can be a huge issue in NC. Our coasts aren't as insanely developed as Florida's, and the coasts on the sounds are oftentimes just outright rural. There's no real boundary between the land and the sea except for the Outer Banks, and that natural protection is quickly and literally being washed away.

    • @Mel-ce2ry
      @Mel-ce2ry Před 3 dny

      Nah, Florida gets hammered all the time

  • @bill4639
    @bill4639 Před 2 lety +21

    I would love to buy into one of these declining areas, but the real estate industry makes up these ridiculous prices. 20,000 for a shack in a GHOST TOWN?! That is insane.

  • @Ellenslife851
    @Ellenslife851 Před 2 lety +13

    If I was a multimillionaire I would start buying up places like this and fixing up the town and creating a job opportunity for everyone in it. Restoring all the storefronts and preserving their originality and fixing up all the homes so people can live in them and any place where there is a mobile home I would give them a actual house to live in that would be built right on site for them. And bring the luster back into these communities and the healthy food choices it would be mostly a diners A few five and dime stores may be an antique store and furniture place and a hardware. Just like the olden days and old time full service gas stations because if I was a multimillionaire I could afford to put money into these towns

  • @hlriiiviiiv
    @hlriiiviiiv Před 2 lety +101

    This looks a lot like the entire Mississippi delta. Apparently what I thought was a local rot is actually nationwide.

    • @Christian-vq8rd
      @Christian-vq8rd Před 2 lety +17

      Oh yeah. 8ve been in Mississippi a lot and live in SC. It's not just a problem in the Delta.

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Před 2 lety +12

      I'll be in the delta in June

    • @hlriiiviiiv
      @hlriiiviiiv Před 2 lety +6

      Awesome Nick, make sure you see Clarksdale and Greenville. Indianola if you’ve got time. There’s plenty of footage good and bad, I’ll see it from afar when you post it though as I have moved away lol.

    • @NO-co4pu
      @NO-co4pu Před 2 lety +8

      From NC and lived in MS for 2 years recently. It looks very very similar as long as you're not near the Appalachian trail.

    • @drinkingpoolwater
      @drinkingpoolwater Před 2 lety +11

      a lot of the midwest looks like this too. manufacturing was decimated in the late 90s because of NAFTA and the rise of hedge funds.

  • @rockroc1
    @rockroc1 Před 2 lety +63

    The warmth and sense of community back home in Robeson County is undefeated. I sure do love my Lumbee people and want to see Rob Co come up.

    • @user-if2vi3hb8l
      @user-if2vi3hb8l Před 2 lety +9

      Amen brother. All the bad remarks on here about Robeson, seems they leave out the sense of community. I also wondered why the video changed when he turned down the streets where the homes were well cared for. Kinda a let down for me. I tell people all the time that Robeson is no different from most areas, they just dont hide what they do. I love my home. I left for many years and come back. I was glad I did.

    • @PimpDaddyDisco
      @PimpDaddyDisco Před 2 lety +7

      Locklears and Chavis's and Oxendines oh my

    • @rockroc1
      @rockroc1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@PimpDaddyDisco Yep, Don't forget about the Brayboys and Hunts 👍🏾

    • @gurrolagotgas
      @gurrolagotgas Před 2 lety +5

      @@rockroc1 Dont forget the Bullards lol, i went to UNCP and i love the community. I really want to see that area WIN

    • @klmullins65
      @klmullins65 Před 2 lety +5

      But would non- Lumbee folks feel welcome in Robeson Co? I had a friend that went to Pembroke, and felt there was a sense of being an outsider if one wasn't a part of the tribe. Btw, my Bell family ancestors were indigenous folks that came out of Robeson Co, and ended up in Hancock County, TN, which is another rural county with a large indigenous, and multi-racial population, only they called our folks "Melungeons"...the Bells fit in nicely. Most of the people on Newman's Ridge are Mullins, Collins, Gibson, and Goins

  • @movingintherightdirection6100

    I grew up in Lumberton and the area where I lived was middle class. It was clean, safe and the schools were decent. It was a good place to grow up. The community was filled with upstanding citizens. I rode through the area recently and it looks the same in some areas, others not so much. Definitely missing the manufacturers that used to line I-95.

  • @sheilas.6170
    @sheilas.6170 Před 2 lety +10

    I live here in NC and it make me very sad to see abandoned houses and towns. Near my home Ralph Lauren purchased some land for their building and surrounding land near their facility. Now when I go down the highway all I see is eight empty houses rotting and weeds taking over from neglect. Thanks Ralph Lauren

  • @piercarlotalenti4044
    @piercarlotalenti4044 Před 2 lety +78

    I've been living in NC for four years now and when the pandemic started, I hatched a plan to visit all 100 of the state's county seats. I'm up to 77, including some of the counties you traveled in this video, and plan to hit the remaining 23 possibly by year's end. I have two important (to me) points to make. I cannot overemphasize how many economists would have a wildly different viewpoint from your guest. To blame the decline of rural communities entirely on federal policy starting with the New Deal is... well, I want to say mind-boggling, but I'll be polite and say it's one opinion out of thousands of others. These towns didn't start falling apart in the 1940s; they fell apart when working-class jobs moved overseas, and that's a much, much more recent development. Which is all to say, I was enjoying your video and hearing your own reporting until you devoted most of it to a non-NC-based professor with a very particular bone to pick with the federal government. If you're going to turn to experts, I'd really encourage you to hear from a variety of opinions, particularly those with which you yourself might personally disagree! You know, there are probably several policy experts who grew up in these very communities who'd love to share their insights with you! I know it's more work, but you're making videos about a really difficult topic, entrenched poverty in this state and in this country, and it's a topic that deserves being cracked open both gingerly and thoroughly.
    Secondly, I'm really, really surprised you don't mention race at all in this video. I can unequivocally say that, having visited 77% of this state, those communities that have been the most "forgotten" are Black communities. There are of course, especially in the South, historical reasons why this is the case and why Black farmers never had an opportunity to thrive in the state's agricultural region (and in this case, sure, I'd be happy to blame the federal government!). There are of course so many white families struggling with poverty in this state, but it has been so glaringly obvious to me which communities the state has just turned its back on. Those are majority-Black communities without fail. Might I suggest you speak with an expert who could address the inescapable factor of race in this topic?
    I think my suggestions would make Mappy happy! And thanks for remaining curious about this beautiful state and making your videos!

    • @jackwyatt1218
      @jackwyatt1218 Před 2 lety

      and it was run and done by democrats ...failed then, failure now. and gonna get much worae

    • @nothingbutmilk6576
      @nothingbutmilk6576 Před 2 lety +17

      Yes, that professor was just spouting the typical liberatarian party line of blaming the government for everything and pushing free market capitalism as our salvation. Although in this case, the Federal government is responsible because they negiotiated one sided international trade agreements. No rules, free market capitalism is nothing more survival of fittest through finding and exploiting the cheapest labor. It's very difficult for American "entrepreneurship" to overcome the advantage of cheap labor in the 3rd world.

    • @JustinVillarreal
      @JustinVillarreal Před 2 lety +7

      Yes. Pretty much the main hit was taken during the 80s. much of Chicago was thriving until Reagan and bush senior pushed operations over seas. Ever since, these are largely the ghettos of Chicago now.

    • @douglasdea637
      @douglasdea637 Před 2 lety +6

      @@JustinVillarreal About a year or two ago I read an article in Harper's Magazine that described the Soy Bean industry in the mid-west. Farmers there, mostly conservative, are still angry at Ronald Reagan for his farm policies.

    • @marcsylvestre3637
      @marcsylvestre3637 Před rokem +8

      The guy clearly did not understand our government has a policy of cheap food with stable prices, which is what all the subsidies etc. are about.
      Having been here more than 30 years, you're largely correct - the low skill jobs got sent overseas or down south.
      In my experience, the low skill manufacturing jobs were their own trap. In one town where I lived the tradition was you could drop out of public education at the end of 10th grade, get your job at the towel factory, inside a couple of years you have your own 2 acres and a trailer. 10 more years and you've built a house on that land.
      That's a great plan till the factory leaves and the only jobs are at Walmart.

  • @joelex7966
    @joelex7966 Před 2 lety +36

    Not the farming jobs that left. The textile industry is what heeled NC flourish and when the political class decided to ship all the jobs overseas poverty began to creep in

    • @scottstempmail9045
      @scottstempmail9045 Před 2 lety +1

      Nothin' personal it was just a business decision.

    • @joelex7966
      @joelex7966 Před 2 lety

      @@scottstempmail9045 that's more accurate than you realize. Erskine Bowled ran for the Senate in the early 2000's. Part of his platform was protecting American jobs. As it turned out his wife's family was in the process of building a textile plant in China. Fortunately he didn't win but that didn't really matter because the whole system is corrupt.

    • @tarheelpatch3386
      @tarheelpatch3386 Před 2 lety +2

      Well NAFTA and regulations for brown lung,helped kill the textile industry faster than anything,. As for farm jobs cut my farming crews from 15 during tobacco after the buyout
      I went to three employees growing corn and beans.I rent the farm out now and guys renting uses migrant help no residents of the state

    • @paulascott5701
      @paulascott5701 Před měsícem

      @@scottstempmail9045 There is a name for people who completely destroy the lives of their fellow countrymen to make a bit more money.

  • @fredfolson5355
    @fredfolson5355 Před 2 lety +16

    "People have become less entrepreneurial." That's deep.
    I would say that many of the government regulations are necessary to fight corruption and greed. Left unchecked, we'd still have children working in factories and 6-day work weeks and no limits on what a full work day constitutes.

    • @herbescentorganics
      @herbescentorganics Před 9 měsíci +1

      Its all about balance when it comes to gov't regulation.Too much regulation stifles progress and entrepreneurs. He is specifically speaking of farming. Small boutique farms can not make a living in towns like these due to bureaucracy and rules to comply with as a small business that really should only apply to large farms selling a certain $ amount. Very stifling, so these communities will stay poor. Small boutique farmers are looking for places just like this and it would boos the local economy. Need parameters for big corps as they get greedy, but leave the small guy alone big government!

  • @emppowersportsandmarine6270

    Left the big city for a small city in 2017, then moved into a rural small mountain town in 2018. Your comments about the lands history and people in your business is spot on and the only downside besides lack of opportunities. We own a small business and don’t rely on local business. In truth, we like the simple life and I would never move back into a city. My wife’s grandfather was right “all cites are the same”.

    • @JBlazeCalifornia
      @JBlazeCalifornia Před 2 lety +9

      All cities are Not the same!

    • @jmd1743
      @jmd1743 Před 2 lety

      Your kids will dump you into a retirement home once you lose your car independence. There are perks of being able to walk or bike to a local store and pharmacy. Sorry but your kids aren't your baby sitters.

    • @Prodigi50
      @Prodigi50 Před 2 lety

      I would say that “all American* cities are the same”.

    • @douglasdea637
      @douglasdea637 Před 2 lety

      Meh, depends on the size. Boston is not New York. Concord, New Hampshire, is not Boston. Yet all three are relatively close to each other.

  • @worldnomad2301
    @worldnomad2301 Před 2 lety +46

    It’s the same story wherever you go. In rural towns it’s because the jobs left, so you have extreme poverty. The only reason these people aren’t homeless is due to the cheap housing because no one wants to live there. In the big towns you have extreme income disparities, which have made rent/housing unaffordable for the unskilled labor force, and that results in homelessness.

    • @mikeoveli1028
      @mikeoveli1028 Před 2 lety +7

      @@standunitedorfall1863
      No it is poverty.
      When you have no hope people turn to drugs.

    • @tonyherdina9142
      @tonyherdina9142 Před rokem

      NC isn't unique. I see this in Ohio. The old foundries and glass industry in the small rural towns are gone. So you relocate to where the jobs are.

    • @debrak3594
      @debrak3594 Před rokem

      thanks for this interesting analysis. This seems to make sense

    • @herbescentorganics
      @herbescentorganics Před 9 měsíci

      @@mikeoveli1028 they can turn to spirituality and other resources. There is ALWAYS a choice. How do some escape poverty and some do not? Well it is a choices coupled with determination, education (from people,internet etc) and willingness. Now mental illness is another issue and there needs to be more support for that and to help those with mental illness programs and education

  • @sams3015
    @sams3015 Před 2 lety +55

    I’m from rural Ireland and it’s so through about the nosey neighbours. I had to move a couple of years ago (pandemic and family reasons) and honestly being from here I know how to handle nosey people. Be friendly but private and have a good come back ready when nosey Bridget makes some comment. You get use to it

    • @lbelton8886
      @lbelton8886 Před 2 lety +3

      Still offensive to ladies with either name.

    • @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon
      @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon Před 2 lety +2

      At least Bridget sound better than Karen

    • @lbelton8886
      @lbelton8886 Před 2 lety +2

      @@BeigeEyesCroissantDragon
      Not if your name's Bridget, lol.

    • @sams3015
      @sams3015 Před 2 lety +2

      @@bl1429 Karen is more suburban mom type, Bridget is her nosey rural cousin. More passive aggressive & smiley. Fun fact Karen is just Catherine in Danish, the Karen thing was starting before I moved. It was interesting

  • @Peachcreekmedia
    @Peachcreekmedia Před 2 lety +43

    These counties could start their own businesses and factories to replace what has left. At some point a community has to realize that the private sector isn't coming back and counties need to start their own.

    • @david-lt9wj
      @david-lt9wj Před 2 lety +7

      But you need start up money....

    • @scottstempmail9045
      @scottstempmail9045 Před 2 lety +3

      I know. What ever happened to boot straps and the American Can Do Attitude? Are we supposedly exceptional?

    • @zuzuspetals9281
      @zuzuspetals9281 Před 2 lety +11

      What business do you start when no one in the community has money to spend? What factory do you run if there’s nothing to make and no one to buy your product? These were small farmers who sold to big businesses and the business went overseas because the government made it cheaper to use labor in Mexico and China, and outlawed the product they farmed here in the US. How do you overcome that? The government ruined these people, made them poor, and keeps them poor.

    • @scottstempmail9045
      @scottstempmail9045 Před 2 lety

      @@zuzuspetals9281 Point of order, The Government didn't do this. Most of America's decline can be laid at the feet of the Wall Street Crowd, along with their whores in Congress. If your Congressman is taking "campaign contributions" from banks or billionaires; they need to be kicked out of office.

    • @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr
      @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr Před 2 lety +6

      That is true. But in alot of cases there are to many government regulations that keeps new businesses from starting

  • @gimcrack555
    @gimcrack555 Před 2 lety +6

    I love small communities. I'm living in one now. Actually bought my first home at age 56 in cash. Been renting all my life, because I love to move around. I settle down near my parents, so I now can take care of them. I'm about 30 minutes away from my parents home. I found my home in the outskirts in a town with only 3 churches and that's it. Not many homes here, maybe 30 homes. Quiet and secluded, the way I like it.

  • @neonsamus
    @neonsamus Před 2 lety +62

    I grew up in robeson county for 20 years. If anyone has any questions feel free to ask. Very high crime and very poor, I'm a nerd who avoid dangerous areas and people but i STILL have been in very close proximity to horrible crimes. My neighbor was murdered and i was a hundred feet away from a woman who was shot in the neck in an alleyway while working. Terrible place and I'm glad i moved away.

    • @djack915
      @djack915 Před 2 lety +7

      Holy canoli !!!! I thought nyc was bad ! Sooo nobody grows hemp/ weed or food ? 🤔 I also heard there was gold in NC

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Před 2 lety +5

      Tell us more Samus!

    • @JBlazeCalifornia
      @JBlazeCalifornia Před 2 lety +2

      Yes Samus Do tell us more.. 🇺🇸

    • @gregorycyr9272
      @gregorycyr9272 Před 2 lety +9

      I worked with some Lumbee Indians back in the 90s in Raleigh and they said the area was bad.

    • @breakingthechainusa1007
      @breakingthechainusa1007 Před 2 lety +11

      Robeson co.had like 70 murders last year

  • @linmatthews3539
    @linmatthews3539 Před 2 lety +74

    True! When I lived in the Rocky Mount area of NC, I was absolutely horrified & outraged when the pastor of a predominantly black Baptist church directed his congregation, from the pulpit, to vote Democratic because “they give our people stuff”! Good grief!! What empowerment and hope is there in that mentality?😡

    • @christopherburleigh9171
      @christopherburleigh9171 Před 2 lety +5

      Vote for the immaculate Democrats.

    • @sorongana5346
      @sorongana5346 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah I've seen Rocky Mount, Halifax, Enfield & Roanoke rapids just nearly fade away.

    • @gregorycyr9272
      @gregorycyr9272 Před 2 lety +1

      Rocky Mount has a lot of poverty.I live in Raleigh and worked on a solar panel farm in Whitakers,I made good money 2015.

    • @wsjustice
      @wsjustice Před 2 lety

      The government created the trade agreements that sucked all those good paying jobs away. Now nobody trusts the government.

    • @steeleru7burgh903
      @steeleru7burgh903 Před 2 lety

      I call BS on this comment. The Democrats do not give out "free stuff" any more than the Republicans do! Do research for God's sake!!!

  • @tomfields3682
    @tomfields3682 Před 2 lety +36

    Clarification: I am from the Rust Belt. The term describes NE and Midwest citties that not just produced automobiles, but all sorts of manufacturing. "Rust" describes the idle, abandoned crumbling factories, and other industrial infrastructure that used to dominate the economies of those cities. It was about more than just the auto industry.

    • @brentsummers7377
      @brentsummers7377 Před 2 lety +4

      Clinton & Obama's legacy...

    • @eedgerton769
      @eedgerton769 Před 2 lety +3

      Try Reagan, dude

    • @DyreStraits
      @DyreStraits Před 2 lety

      @@eedgerton769 Right. How's that trickle down economics working for ya in NC?

    • @debrak3594
      @debrak3594 Před rokem

      @@DyreStraits Yeah, trickle down ha ha. When things go to hell, where are all the proponents of trickle down?

    • @skylarsartnphotography3450
      @skylarsartnphotography3450 Před 10 měsíci

      @@eedgerton769 Try ever single one of em :(

  • @F_C...
    @F_C... Před 2 lety +62

    The name rust belt comes from the decline of the steel industry. It used to be called the steel belt.

    • @richardmycroft5336
      @richardmycroft5336 Před 2 lety +3

      It actually applied to the loss of heavy industry across the board. I lived in Dayton Ohio just as the economy of that started to collapse and worked for the local power company. Number one on their agenda was getting of as many employees as they could so that the rich shareholders could get even richer no matter what it did to the local economy. So many jobs in other companies moved first to Mexico and then China and Ohio was left to rot. The professor might need to be reminded that much of the research and innovation that goes on in this country takes place in government funded universities.

  • @Tonymanero1960
    @Tonymanero1960 Před 2 lety +58

    The one thing that MIGHT be positive about the pandemic, remote work, automation..housing bubble etc,etc is that it MIGHT breathe new life into some of these smaller towns that are down on their luck,.....as there are no affordable places left to go. Of course,..drugs, crime,....and despair will scare most people (myself included) away.

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety +15

      I've looked everywhere, and there are really very few affordable places left to go. I lucked out and got a subsidized apartment (disabled) but I don't know what normal people are going to do!

    • @hezmydaddyo2722
      @hezmydaddyo2722 Před 2 lety +4

      @@daveyrogers7336 very very few

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety +3

      @@brendamcondliffe476 I was at the point where that was becoming an option. If I were 55 instead of 65 and did not have a terminal illness, I probably would be living out of a Subaru.

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety +3

      @@hezmydaddyo2722 It's scary.

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety +2

      @@andrewseaman97 Crime. The chance to own acreage and be somewhat self-sufficient. There are old downtowns just waiting to be revitalized. All they need is people spending money. If you build it they will come as they say. In my hometown of Houston they have created areas like "The New Heights" out of neighborhoods I wouldn't have even driven through in broad daylight. If people will do that in a city (Houston no less) why not do it in rural areas?

  • @deetlenroy
    @deetlenroy Před 2 lety +33

    The loss of tobacco and cotton has killed the Carolina’s

    • @EricaL2024
      @EricaL2024 Před 2 lety +6

      Yep! I live in rural NC. It doesn’t look this bad though. It’s very pretty.

    • @christinebutler7630
      @christinebutler7630 Před 2 lety +5

      The loss of textiles and furniture was really bad. We can get small tech factories here but you usually need at least a high school diploma and and clean drug test..

    • @rulerofomicronpersei8
      @rulerofomicronpersei8 Před 2 lety

      @Big Dick Black so has knives, cars, people, maybe we should ban those too.
      Gangbangers are murdering people on a daily basis, shouldn’t we ban them too?

    • @jackwyatt1218
      @jackwyatt1218 Před 2 lety +5

      Textiles, Furniture mfg,.!!!!

    • @jackwyatt1218
      @jackwyatt1218 Před 2 lety

      @Big Dick Black living has killed billions!

  • @rebeccacarter1914
    @rebeccacarter1914 Před 2 lety +13

    I was shocked to see Parkton as it is today. I lived there in the early 90's and it was friendly and safe. Yes, it wasn't affluent, but we knew everyone and there was a real sense of community. We had some stores, a post office, a bank, three churches. I belonged to the Garden Club and we did community projects. We had a wonderful 4th of July parade every year. My husband and I bought a home and completely remodeled it. It was wonderful. I taught at Lumberton High School and Flora McDonald Academy. My husband was in the Green Berets.

  • @babyjuggernaught8203
    @babyjuggernaught8203 Před 2 lety +6

    N.C. gained about a million new adult residents in last decade. I'm in very small town of Pilot Mt. Housing is hard to come by. Not much for sale here. Winston Salem is rehabbing old r j reynolds buildings into studio Apts and more. I think this generation of young people see the value in these unique locations. I have faith they will invest, and fix some of these great old places.

  • @scottcoleman2876
    @scottcoleman2876 Před 2 lety +45

    Many rural areas would be attractive to retirees if decent healthcare was available.

    • @jmd1743
      @jmd1743 Před 2 lety +7

      Not at all. Eventually they lose their car independence and have to sell their house & move into a retirement home that only exists to suck their life's work out of their bank account. The ideal location for an aging couple is a urban community where a couple can walk to pick up their Meds from the local pharmacy and their staples. Not only that but you don't want an ambulance to take 20 minutes to get the house when your parents get injured.

    • @MrKillswitch88
      @MrKillswitch88 Před 2 lety +6

      Up goes the taxes where ever this happens as the same happened to my area where before there was hardly no one around then over the past two decades it got populated only for the taxes go way up. Plus such can sometimes bring some real fear in the form of property developers who buy everything up to turn it all into ticky tacky and drive everyone who's been there for decades out.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Před 2 lety +1

      Scotland Neck doesn't have a doctor.

    • @ricosuave5120
      @ricosuave5120 Před 2 lety +4

      Maybe there could be a student loan payoff for newer doctors who spent x amount of years in these communities?

    • @kathrynmauro8673
      @kathrynmauro8673 Před 2 lety +7

      There are some places that build self contained communities. A small post office, a strip mall with medical, dental, optical and auditory offices. A clinic or Urgent Care. A small grocery store, coffee shop, barber shop, nail place and hairdresser. Donut shop and some small eateries. Pet stores and vets. It can be done. They can have bungalows type homes for the independent and more of a multi-level condo style building for people that may need a little assistance. They also offer shuttle vans for the community. My former in-laws lived in a planned community. It was multi aged but plenty of seniors. They also had pools and activities. They even did outings at a minimal cost to everyone that went.

  • @ryanbaldy8828
    @ryanbaldy8828 Před 2 lety +21

    100% agree with the "people look to the government as a provider and that has caused people to be less entrepreneurial" comment. Its a problem across America, not just rural NC

    • @mikeoveli1028
      @mikeoveli1028 Před 2 lety +5

      Ryan
      That was a little over simplified.
      Welfare is not the reason people are poor.
      There is no work.
      People in small towns go to college and never come back.
      The entrepreneurs have gone off to college.
      Welfare helps old people and sick people.
      The part of government that is bad is not the part that hands out welfare checks.
      The part of the government that is bad is the part that spends 772 billion dollars for the military. The part that helps businesses move off shore.
      Our government has some serious problems but it is not Social Services.

    • @whtwolf100
      @whtwolf100 Před 2 lety +1

      Kinda wrong. While there are plenty here in north carolina who abuse the welfare system, and work just enough to stay on unemployment, there are even more who are on welfare simply because the mean and median wages are so low. A lack of cashflow makes transportation difficult as well, which further shrinks opportunities. There really are people here who work 2+jobs and still qualify for assistance. Its not a mythical what if, its just shit. And the same businesses pay like 3-4$ an hour more....if you can afford to quit your second job and commute an hour or more twice a day.

    • @samuelglover7685
      @samuelglover7685 Před rokem +3

      Day in and day out, as regular as the tides and the seasons, nobody leans on the awful, horrible, parasitic government more than business and our heroic entrepreneurs. Nobody.

  • @scwaty180
    @scwaty180 Před 2 lety +35

    Living in rural areas and working online sounds great, but until someone busts up these pathetic internet companies that have a stranglehold on services. Some of these companies charging 70 to 100 a month and they're lucky to get 1.5 mbps speeds. 3rd world countries have faster internet than rural America

    • @brianmatthews4149
      @brianmatthews4149 Před 2 lety +1

      If India had a more reliable source trust me they would have it all..meaning a lot of these internet jobs people do here.

    • @geod3589
      @geod3589 Před 11 měsíci +1

      LOL I returned to Vietnam in 2019 and had faster internet in a small town that I had in my rural area at home.

  • @F3arle55wr3tch
    @F3arle55wr3tch Před 2 lety +14

    I moved from England to GA 6 months ago and I have been around a bunch of these places and I notice a few things 1, a lot of the homes that are falling down have really nice cars parked outside 2, a lot of them have a scrap yard worth of cars parked in the yard 3, nobody looks after the places they live even if you are broke you can clean up your living space … however the jobs situation is crazy having no jobs leads to all kinds of poverty

    • @merrifieldgalos6248
      @merrifieldgalos6248 Před 2 lety

      So, what are you doing their? Living on your savings money. What color of people their? Are you welcomed their? As some people commented here, local people didn't like them or welcome them. What is the reason?

    • @F3arle55wr3tch
      @F3arle55wr3tch Před 2 lety +1

      @@merrifieldgalos6248 everyone I have met was actually pretty welcoming to be honest as you probably well know English people are some of the rudest on this planet so I’m not about to say people are horrible because nobody gave me a welcoming parade lol …I don’t think the people are bad in those places and most of the places I have been are actually pretty mixed in terms of race too … and I’m here because my wife is originally from here and we decided to move closer to her family

    • @nathanielovaughn2145
      @nathanielovaughn2145 Před 2 lety

      They have a hopeless and hick mentality to an extent that explains a fair bit of that.

    • @pyellard3013
      @pyellard3013 Před 2 lety

      @@F3arle55wr3tch "English people are the rudest".... Are u really English? The English may not be the most polite but they are far from the rudest... Complete nonsense..

    • @F3arle55wr3tch
      @F3arle55wr3tch Před 2 lety

      @@pyellard3013 north of England people are really nice … London way ? Not so much and yes I’m as English as they come
      In your opinion it’s complete nonsense however in mine I think English people are pretty rude probably not the worst in the world but we have our moments

  • @catholiccrusader5328
    @catholiccrusader5328 Před 2 lety +9

    Small towns are great places ON PAPER; however those places are ruled by one or two personality types: the town founder and or the two bully. I found that out when I left Chicago for a year and moved in what I thought was the ideal community. I told Nick the entire story on a separate video. Fellow posters I wish you all the very best of success in whatever you all decide. GOD bless.

    • @JDHendrickChiliDogTags
      @JDHendrickChiliDogTags Před rokem +1

      You make an excellent point. Although, I feel the same thing about some big cities. They vote for one political party (Usually Democrats) that have a inner hierarchy of people to step up to the next position as the older leaders retire. Nothing ever changes. These people elected have no backbone to do the right thing. They just follow the leader and do whatever the "Will of the Party" tells them to do.

    • @JDHendrickChiliDogTags
      @JDHendrickChiliDogTags Před rokem

      I live in Richmond, Va. Which is improving very rapidly when it comes to population increases and skyrocketing housing prices. Some of that is attributed to people living here and working in Northern Virginia and D.C. In the local government, the Democrat candidate wins every time. In fact, I can hardly recall any incumbent losing (even in a Dem primary) in many years. Once a politician gets a position, and follows the script, they can count on being in that job forever. However, Richmond still has horrible schools and high crime in certain neighborhoods (which none of these politicians has the courage to stand up against the mob to change). All the new residential construction for the newcomers are built like castles in Mid evil times. They have security gates, private security officers, cameras, etc

    • @briankelly1240
      @briankelly1240 Před 8 měsíci

      Can you explain these 2 personalities you found a bit more? Town founder and bully in context of what you found?

    • @catholiccrusader5328
      @catholiccrusader5328 Před 8 měsíci

      @@JDHendrickChiliDogTags you are so right!

  • @dirkh.44
    @dirkh.44 Před 2 lety

    Discovered your channel a few months ago.
    For me one of the best on YT.
    Great videos,very nice recorded,and most important for me,very informative.
    And last but not least,your humor!
    Keep up the good work.

  • @harambeboy
    @harambeboy Před 2 lety +14

    16:00
    The “moving back in bc it’s cheap” theory is likely not going to happen bc of a critical mass problem. Where do the workers come from to build the mansion on the cheap 50 acres? Is there a Home Depot nearby? There isn’t enough underlying support to promote this behavior. Everyone knows you don’t want to be the nicest house in the worst neighborhood.

    • @daveyrogers7336
      @daveyrogers7336 Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly. Is there even a supermarket or a gas station within 50 miles? Let alone the shops and restaurants etc., that someone with that kind of spending power would want.

  • @mariestruthers965
    @mariestruthers965 Před 2 lety +3

    At one time, I lived in Bladen County and worked in Lumberton. 600 people worked in the factory I worked in; the jobs went south to Mexico. We were very highly paid, we averaged $15 an hour in the early eighties. Those jobs were never replaced. The house I once lived in was destroyed by a hurricane.

    • @geod3589
      @geod3589 Před 11 měsíci

      My uncle had a farm in Bladenboro and yes $15/hr in the 80's was decent money.

  • @efogg3
    @efogg3 Před 2 lety

    This channel is great! I like to read all the comments with the locals in these areas and what they have to say about where they live along with Nick's informative vid.

  • @theycallmemrfiggs
    @theycallmemrfiggs Před 2 lety +6

    I grew up in rural NE North Carolina. Lack of opportunity caused the younger generation to move to Raleigh or Charlotte. Then when the Boomer parents die the kids don't return home. Their parents house sit empty and eventually becomes dilapidated. That happened a lot where I'm from.

  • @ticktock2383
    @ticktock2383 Před 2 lety +31

    Everything goes in a circle. The coming food shortages may breathe new life into these devastated communities

    • @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon
      @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon Před 2 lety +5

      Doubtful, not many people interested in farming anymore. Given how little money it makes and the input required to do it.

    • @Cmizz1
      @Cmizz1 Před 2 lety

      Possibly. But it wouldn't be in the spirit of entrepreneurship. It would be a bigger entity that would come in, hire the locals to farm their land pay them sub par, and market their products back to their workers' community at inflated prices that they KNOW their community cannot afford. America is more greedy and corrupt than ever.

    • @pmscalisi
      @pmscalisi Před 2 lety +1

      @@BeigeEyesCroissantDragonmany think this work is beneath them. When they have no food some may reconsider

    • @MrKongatthegates
      @MrKongatthegates Před 2 lety +1

      Food shortages huh

    • @johnlarsen4455
      @johnlarsen4455 Před 2 lety

      @@MrKongatthegates try being awake not woke

  • @chumpchangeoutdoors1919
    @chumpchangeoutdoors1919 Před 2 lety +6

    Nick i like your honesty in your videos. I lived near Clinton and Warsaw NC in Sampson County off of NC 24. I worked at the hospital 2005 till 2008. Houses were cheap compared to Indiana where I grew up. Taxes and auto inspections were the worst thing's. Most of the people were really nice even though I was a outsider. A lot different than small town Indiana that's was clicky where I grew up. I miss my time there and often thought about moving back. I've been back in Indiana since 2008 and I still keep in touch with a lot of people from there even now.

  • @camd4648
    @camd4648 Před 2 lety +2

    My mothers family is based out of Laurel Hill, NC. My Fathers family is out of Lumberton, NC.
    A lot of my family still lives around those areas, but my mothers side is very prevalent in NC, and has been for many generations.(1800s and before.) My Uncle on my mother side, said the only place to find work in Laurel Hill is Cambell's. If you want to work anywhere else, you're 100 miles from Charlotte, a 100 miles from Raleigh, 100 miles from Wilmington, and 100 miles from Columbia.
    And yet, I still have the little nudge to move closer to my family.

  • @ndog2005
    @ndog2005 Před 2 lety

    Wow, You got me Addicted, to this channel, well at least to this video. Lots of info.... A Huge Thank You..

  • @scottgebow6539
    @scottgebow6539 Před 2 lety +70

    I agree with your interviewee Nick. Government often does more harm than help.

    • @innedbynickjohnson8009
      @innedbynickjohnson8009 Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks~~for watching!!!
      ᴡʜᴀᴛꜱᴀᴘ➕❾❷❾❸❼❻❷❽❸❻👍👍

    • @nathanielovaughn2145
      @nathanielovaughn2145 Před 2 lety +3

      Often? Pretty much ALWAYS

    • @scottgebow6539
      @scottgebow6539 Před 2 lety +3

      @@nathanielovaughn2145 I stand corrected. I was being too diplomatic.

    • @cbbcbb6803
      @cbbcbb6803 Před 2 lety

      Especially to indigenous people.

    • @mikeoveli1028
      @mikeoveli1028 Před 2 lety +1

      You can't blame the government for tobacco, furniture, and textiles leaving.
      How about the hedge funds buying companies reselling of the China and then scrapping the plant.
      That has happened all over America.
      Basically corporations have gutted America and left the carcass to rot.
      It is true that the government didn't stop it and often helped.
      I don't think that is what you were talking about.

  • @FluffyButtFarms
    @FluffyButtFarms Před 2 lety +3

    I'm retired and disabled living on Social Security and some of those small towns with cheap housing would be perfect for me except for it just seems like the drug epidemic and crime just explodes in those kind of places.

  • @jerryweninger2303
    @jerryweninger2303 Před 2 lety +2

    If you move into a small town, USA, you are the "outsider", own it my friend, I moved from South Dakota to Tennessee, married local girl, raised a family, 50 years later I'm still not the in-sider, my son is, he grew up and works in the area, but me, i'm still no a "in" and I may never be but I good with that

  • @susanhawk8730
    @susanhawk8730 Před rokem +1

    My ancestors have been in the upper NC area since the 1700's. I grew up in Stokes county. My grandparents were tobacco farmers. Family members worked for Reynolds tobacco company. There is so much poverty and drug addiction.

  • @CCR-ew6ke
    @CCR-ew6ke Před 2 lety +28

    Compared to before January I, 1994 I have to ask how were these rural communities in NC, IL, GA and other states. That is, before NAFTA and American industries closing down in the US and moved overseas how many jobs were here. Are there ripple affects of NAFTA that is under reported as if it would be reported.
    These are the forgotten communities and it doesn’t seem to be a mistake. After 2020 no one is advancing the idea of reopening industries in these areas that seem to be forgotten.

    • @jackwyatt1218
      @jackwyatt1218 Před 2 lety

      Thanks to Schmoe Biteme!
      F J B ! and his sycophants

    • @wsjustice
      @wsjustice Před 2 lety +13

      Nobody ever talks about NAFTA these days. Remember when Ross Perot talked about that giant sucking sound of jobs going to Mexico? This is the reality we now live in. Those good paying factory jobs were replaced by minimum wage retail jobs.

    • @CCR-ew6ke
      @CCR-ew6ke Před 2 lety

      @@wsjustice yeah I remember that time, the media mocked him for saying that yet it was an obvious observation. Bush and Clinton kept to their globalist script and now we see Perot was right. Trump was the first president to address this and we know how that hat turned out.

    • @merrifieldgalos6248
      @merrifieldgalos6248 Před 2 lety +4

      @@wsjustice But now jobs are not going out side. Most American jobs taken by Indian Hindu. You walk in to Verizon Ashburn Virginia, 95% people are Indian Hindu. In early 2001 90% was white. One way or other Americans are loosing their ground. America targeted Muslims and Indian Hindu filled the gap.

    • @tarheelpatch3386
      @tarheelpatch3386 Před 2 lety

      NAFTA kill North Carolina.

  • @kushtalksrealtalk6681
    @kushtalksrealtalk6681 Před 2 lety +6

    Born and raised in nc and I can say that this is factual information. The loss of career opportunities and lack of resources has decimated the economy in the state 🤦🏿‍♂️

  • @Dancing_Alone_wRentals

    This was a great video. I've explored some of the areas you spoke about today. Bring on the Internet!

  • @robs531
    @robs531 Před rokem +2

    Nick as someone who moved to Western North Carolina 18 months ago I really enjoy your content. I know you talk about Raleigh and Charlotte as places people are flocking to but there are many others like myself that take the great employment offers given in Cherokee at the casino. It might be a tough ask but it was incredibly difficult to find information about the towns local like Sylva, Bryson City, Maggie Valley. You have spoken of Clyde in your videos. Many of us that come here are coming from at least 500 miles away. One of these days when you’re looking for content can you make something informational about Cherokee and the surrounding area. You’d be providing a great service to some of the newest neighbors.

  • @kyle-kelliher
    @kyle-kelliher Před 2 lety +8

    I live in Henderson, right in the middle of your northern section. I’ve been here for about 2.5 years. I’ve found my way into the local community by driving tow truck. I think there is good potential here if our local government steps up.

  • @RONMAYS71
    @RONMAYS71 Před 2 lety +28

    Very good video, the farmers need to be able to sell as they see fit to whomever wants to buy from them, perhaps customers can sign forms releasing farmers from liabilities, we need more Organic Small farms and Co Ops

  • @HisSweetheartRejectedOne

    Thanks for educating me. As a life-long resident of NC, I hadn't heard of this.

  • @caylee3277
    @caylee3277 Před 2 lety

    Great videos bro I love watching them, I've lived in Holly springs since 2011 moved here from Miami FL, love your videos

  • @dannyjizay
    @dannyjizay Před 2 lety +5

    I've been interested in this subject since I moved to NC back in 2015. Thank you for covering this, Nick!

  • @peewhocantbeaimed6954
    @peewhocantbeaimed6954 Před 2 lety +7

    It takes some setup work, especially building a large enough indoor grow facility, but hemp & its many products might save the area. My sister lives in the state, so I've been following news of that trend. 🤘😁🤘

  • @uncleschuck
    @uncleschuck Před 2 lety

    I'm actually doing this right now, three weeks in, from Portland to now in small town busted Pennsylvania, so far it's awesome.

  • @scottgray6058
    @scottgray6058 Před 2 lety

    You know Iam so glad you're talking about my child hood reminds me of spending summers with my grandma, uncle's, cousins and aunt

  • @dealy9268
    @dealy9268 Před 2 lety +20

    Another issue is small town councils not allowing the town to grow. You see that in other counties like Johnston with Clayton being the exception. Stagnant towns/Cities have the highest crime rates. They eventually lose the businesses they have and end up like these towns. Controlled growth is good. Needed even.

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 Před 2 lety +2

      My cousin lives in Clayton but he had to move because of the rising home prices, now he's moving to spring lake near Fayetteville.

    • @dealy9268
      @dealy9268 Před 2 lety +3

      @@mariowalker9048 Sorry to hear about that. As a home owner in the Clayton area the rising home prices are good. Not that I plan on selling anytime soon. A town must have controled growth or the crime shoots up (no pun intended) and the town goes to crap.

    • @pyellard3013
      @pyellard3013 Před 2 lety

      Eh? I don't understand you? The Vid is abt declining towns including where blocks of housing has been pulled down. Are u saying any prosperous towns in the area are not allowing growth? If that is happening (ie no growth allowed in prosperous towns) then wouldn't that help adjacent declining towns as the growth overspills?

    • @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon
      @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon Před 2 lety +1

      @@pyellard3013 Zoning boards tend to turn down people who want to try and make money with their property. Or tax them out of existence for trying to do so.

    • @pyellard3013
      @pyellard3013 Před 2 lety

      @@BeigeEyesCroissantDragon "Zonning" is a problem but I am not sure it equates with discouraging/refusing all applications for development? Even so, as I said, any banning of growth will encourage growth elsewhere.. In the UK, strict greenbelt policies (ie zero growth allowed) around London has helped declining cities elsewhere in the UK via overspill from London.

  • @garlandragland
    @garlandragland Před 2 lety +11

    I think there is hope for smaller broken struggling communities that aren't far from major metro areas along major highways. For example, Youngsville is right outside of Raleigh and the outgrowth has transformed that place. Now it's moving to Franklinton. That downtown has multiple modern restaurants, a brewery and a bakery now. Even Henderson is starting to see some improvements. The reason is US 1 runs through all three and that leads into Raleigh so people looking for less crowded places and who are being priced out of Raleigh are moving to these places. This trend will continue and will explode because Triangle housing prices and rent prices are Exploding. Oxford is another place seeing improvement but for there it's more because of HWY 85 and Durham.
    Kinston, though.... yikes! I used to go there a lot as a kid because I had relatives there and that place is just sad now.
    BTW, volunteer fire departments are very common in small communities and always have been. Too far from the biggest city with a public one but not big enough to afford or justify a taxpayer funded one

    • @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon
      @BeigeEyesCroissantDragon Před 2 lety +1

      Ehh, there's a limit to how long people will tolerate as a "Short" drive. One hour on the road is already a long time to waste each way back and home from work each day. Most people will get tired of that unless they're making bank. The people who are in these homes price point aren't making bank. Ultimately there's a line as far as distance per dollar an hour everyone will tolerate and it's shrinking more and more each year for people who cant work from home, and have no interest or ability to acquire the skills to do so.

    • @garlandragland
      @garlandragland Před 2 lety

      @@BeigeEyesCroissantDragon I agree there is a limit, which means the areas Nick in particular laid out are in trouble. That said, for what houses are going for now, especially in the Triangle, people may not have no choice but to commute because they are being priced out of the market. You're talking about rent nearly doubling and housing prices up over 40% in just a year's time. Places like Franklinton, Oxford and even Henderson, which are now seeing a boom because of this impact, are close enough so that the commute is well worth the decreased housing and rent prices. Roxboro is starting to see a bit of it too. Now the further you get out the harder it will be because of the factors you mentioned. Warrenton is growing and improving, but is too far out for most commuters. The only way I see this resolved in the long term would be that areas people are now moving to so they can flee the Triangle prices (and growth if they're looking for a smaller town feel) becoming big enough that there's enough opportunity there that growth "spillage" begins to come about from those places. Basically, a ripple effect that spreads more and more. There was a time Wake Forest was where people were fleeting to, for example, and now that's basically indistinguishable from Raleigh

    • @t.p.9232
      @t.p.9232 Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly.
      They may be building more and new buildings, but they aren't building any more land.
      Growth is just that...growth.
      The more people coming to an area, the more land it will take. That also applies to businesses. They will also require land to set up shop. I have noticed the spread from 10 years ago to today in my area.
      I bought 55 acres. I couldn't buy that land in Wake county, but I could in Waren county.

  • @vincentperratore4395
    @vincentperratore4395 Před 2 lety +2

    Well! A most illuminating discussion! Lots of hitherto unexplored ideas and food for thought; considering how bad things have become in areas that only a short time ago were considered upscale neighborhoods.
    Put as you put it though, in cases like this, you're truly on your own!
    Great idea though, worth checking out.

  • @moonmunster
    @moonmunster Před 2 lety +2

    Large corporations owning everything seems to be a problem in most places of the US. We should not allow corporations to be so big and bring back more economic competition.

  • @jmd1743
    @jmd1743 Před 2 lety +11

    Those dead communities exist because they either were conceived as pre-industrial farming communities or were boom towns that had massive growth for a 19th century factory that closed down generations ago.
    It's like arguing that ghost silver mine town could be brought back from the dead. Yeah, you could but what's the point?

    • @neishmatorres6268
      @neishmatorres6268 Před 2 lety

      Normally people who live in those trailers are illegal in this country, look around these cities and you can see trailer neighborhoods that doesn't mean they're poor. they come and manipulate different government agencies while having their own business and at the same time sending money to their country and buying land etc. they are available to do this because the Cooper governments do not control these people. a citizen can not do anything the government is aware of every penny generated.

    • @jmd1743
      @jmd1743 Před 2 lety

      @@neishmatorres6268 People who have jobs and live in RVs are victims of central planning.
      If we had bright leadership they would be building rail viaducts like what NYC has for light rail. That way you can be part of a healthy job economy while not being forced to live in a RV.

  • @MrRoseandrc
    @MrRoseandrc Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for your videos

  • @jimstafford3419
    @jimstafford3419 Před 2 lety

    Thank You my friend Nick

  • @lesliecas2695
    @lesliecas2695 Před 2 lety

    Love the dial phone, Nick. Takes me back to preschool about 100 years ago.

  • @MrDportjoe
    @MrDportjoe Před 2 lety +4

    When you talk textiles in particular (and furniture a bit less), Walmart all on it's own was a major driver in that exodus. I mean first the mills int he NE closed as the those in SE offered lower cost, then Walmart as major buyer demanded lower cost per unit leading to a sudden boom in textiles from the Caribbean, lower prices were sought and those mills were shuttered and the equipment moved to China, Vietnam etc all to meet Walmart's demands. Heck even South Korea took a huge hit when the shoe industry that had landed there after the US plants closed could not meet the price point the entire industry relocated.

  • @gothguy6049
    @gothguy6049 Před 2 lety +10

    This has been happening to every state in the USA for the last 5 years or so finny thing is every state thinks they are alone but its in every state. California Florida new york texas Pennsylvania alabama Mississippi west Virginia Georgia every state its sad and too many are in denial for the problem to even beging to get fixed.

    • @mikeoveli1028
      @mikeoveli1028 Před 2 lety +5

      Goth Guy
      It has been happening since Reagan got in office 42 years ago.
      Ever since America's jobs have been going to China and Mexico we have been in a decline.
      All of the money is concentrated in the cities.

  • @k9man163
    @k9man163 Před 2 lety +1

    Found you from a guy in my class at university. Keep making the cool stuff man!

  • @donaldarthur3497
    @donaldarthur3497 Před 2 lety +2

    I live in New Bern N.C. born in 1963 lived here most of my life. Ive witness the decline of many towns. In 1900 97 percent of people worked in agriculture. Now only 3 percent. Those jobs where not replaced with other opportunity. Jobs went over seas. In eight's you could make a little money fishing, crabbing, and shrimping. regulation took those profits away. People retiring and moving to eastern N.C. spiked jobs from 1975 to 2010ish but now that building boom is coming to an end. Prices are forcing them to build elsewhere. We have to bring factories back home or build our own factories.

  • @heatherharrison264
    @heatherharrison264 Před 2 lety +16

    Small towns might work for some people, and if they revive, they could help relieve the population pressure on expensive cities and suburbs, but they come with plenty of downsides, some of which are noted in this video. I would have a few major problems if I tried to relocate to a small town. I'm a rather private person, and I don't like other people in my business. I would likely not fit in with the traditional culture of many small towns. The lack of urban amenities, such as high-end restaurants, bars, and performing arts would be a major downside. Many amenities cannot be supported by a small population. Some small towns that are in reasonably close proximity to large urban areas don't have so many of these problems, but they tend to be expensive due to the desirable location. I've been to towns that have better amenities than one would expect for their size, but these towns tend to have a combination of tourist traffic and affluent residents, often retirees from nearby cities. Since these towns attract city people, the infamous small town nosiness isn't as much in evidence. These towns are not cheap. Some of the towns in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains are like this, as are some of the towns along the water and on the islands and peninsulas west of Seattle.
    Places are inexpensive for a reason. They may be run down, too remote, have few amenities, have a lot of drug addicts, or have a culture not welcoming to outsiders. Make these places desirable, and they won't be inexpensive any longer. These places in North Carolina currently have very little going for them. Some people likely see opportunities in this situation, and I wish them success. Hopefully some of these places can be brought back. I won't be moving there, however. Although it costs me a fortune, I'll stay in the expensive urban area where there is a lot to do and the local culture, though not perfect, is generally compatible with me. The only small towns that look appealing to me are no less expensive than where I am now.

    • @weareorigin
      @weareorigin Před 2 lety +4

      Very valid points. If you order online goods, small town porch pirates can be an issue. Some towns have a few restaurants and locals don't have money to buy their own online goods.

    • @acefrm1593
      @acefrm1593 Před 2 lety +3

      The boom is coming! Its the only cheap place left on the east coast. Florida is to expensive and we know the northeast is expensive, so NC is in the middle.

    • @crystalbluewire3339
      @crystalbluewire3339 Před 2 lety

      @ Heather Harrison you super precious little princess.

    • @pmscalisi
      @pmscalisi Před 2 lety

      @@acefrm1593 the people from NY have beaten you to it.

    • @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr
      @BuckeyeFan-ty4vr Před 2 lety +1

      I agree. I hope more and more people agree with you and they all move to the bigger cities. So much more to do there. So yes please everyone move to the cities. And stay there.

  • @gawaineross6119
    @gawaineross6119 Před 2 lety +3

    I applaud your effort here, Nick. There are many sides to economic arguments, and this professor sounds like a Reagan ideologue. He does make some good points, but it would be useful to have an economics professor on your show from a different school of thought.

  • @liviakelly5691
    @liviakelly5691 Před 2 lety

    I live in "small town" Sharpsburg NC, Nash County side right off of 301. I love It's History and the people of this small community

  • @thepeoplesmorgantownindian8383

    I lived in Carolina and worked with a lot of men from there in the 90's. They were some of the best drywallers, finishers I ever seen.

  • @jabbarmuhammad8804
    @jabbarmuhammad8804 Před 2 lety +13

    This hits rural areas the hardest it's pretty awful and what about in the next ten years is this area still going to be like this

    • @merrifieldgalos6248
      @merrifieldgalos6248 Před 2 lety

      Nobody knows the future. Only Allah knows. Few things Allah control. Even economist from Harvard university couldn't predict what happening to housing market now. But in Quran probably said, popular city will be abandoned and other city will grow when Allah wants ( probably something like that meaning, you have to do a bit research).

  • @leonardpearlman4017
    @leonardpearlman4017 Před 2 lety +3

    I've visited some small towns in the Carolinas and in Western VA where I'd just get into a conversation with some old person on the street... and they'd tell you their life story and why they were in Staunton (say) in the first place, then start telling you that you should move there! And presently you find out about the local burger place or whatever, that's been just like that for fifty years, or the doughnut shop or whatever.... I would think about it! Nick, this could be a monster topic!

  • @carolchmielewski5313
    @carolchmielewski5313 Před 18 dny

    I was born and raised in North Carolina, returned in 2013 only because of my family. NC was ruined when furniture, textiles were sent out of the country to Mexico/overseas, and tobacco farming was basically stopped by the Federal government. I'm 68 years old. Seen a lot during these years. Thanks for the video. Know the places you covered.

  • @savannahl4581
    @savannahl4581 Před 2 lety +1

    I've lived in North Carolina and Wisconsin. One thing I've noticed is in Wisconsin, when buildings become desolate they are quickly removed. Not the case in NC. I feel as though buildings are rarely removed but simply left to rot as you said.

    • @ErickaWilliamsCC
      @ErickaWilliamsCC Před 2 lety +1

      Majority of the southeast is trying to "historic" preserve so many of these 100 year old buildings

  • @carolquinlan1709
    @carolquinlan1709 Před 2 lety +4

    Great video!! Sad situation but I think these small towns will come back to life. Houses on the coast and in large cities and suburbs too expensive for young people. I donor agree with everything the college professor said-too Libertarian. But I like the comments of the host!

  • @donaldprice9230
    @donaldprice9230 Před 2 lety +9

    What up Nick? NC has such a rich history. It is a beautiful state with very nice people. Sad to see the regression.

    • @margietucker1719
      @margietucker1719 Před 2 lety +4

      I think Nick is basically examining the "bad areas" of the state---and every state has those. Overall--he's not trashing the state of NC....after all, he himself chose to move there...from California. His opinion of NC in it's totality is good. This is what he does---points out the imperfect areas of every state. As you said--NC is a beautiful state. I have been there many times when we used to live in the mountains of S.W. Virginia. I would gladly live in that area again. Not the triangle area---rather the western mountain area. Very beautiful.

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 Před 2 lety +1

      NC does have a lot of good areas but many of the rural areas are in bad shape.

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 Před 2 lety +2

      North Carolina is beautiful. Its got the most variety of topography in the southern states, each with cultural differences.

  • @paulayala4816
    @paulayala4816 Před 2 lety +2

    There was a time when the city of Orange in California was in really bad shape, crime was up the old downtown section was vacant along with the old surrounding neighborhoods. I think what helped was rezoning some of the old vacant homes near the downtown circle (Chapman/Glassell) which allowed a small business to buy the property to fix them up and use them as a professional office. In moved dental, real estate, chiropractic, doctor's offices to these properties. The businesses restored these homes (now offices) to like new condition which had a domino effect on the community and downtown area.

  • @willasage23240
    @willasage23240 Před rokem

    You have the best channel ever! I love watching your videos!

  • @lightning9279
    @lightning9279 Před 2 lety +13

    I live in NC. Would love too move to a small town. Unfortunately subwoofers, high crime and unattended barking dogs make these towns unlivable. Small town peace has been replaced with big city problems.😢

    • @t.p.9232
      @t.p.9232 Před 2 lety

      Depends where you choose. I could say I would like to live in the city, but ghettos and endless noise of droning highway traffic, trains, and airports makes cities "unlivable".

    • @paulblichmann2791
      @paulblichmann2791 Před 2 lety +1

      Where ever you go, it just takes one bad neighbor and it's started to go down the toilet. "There goes the neighborhood" is entirely true. The only thing to defend you is high price...and then they'll just live 3 families to a house, cars parked in the yard blasting rap or ranchero music.

    • @lightning9279
      @lightning9279 Před 2 lety

      @@paulblichmann2791 Here in the Winston Salem NC area the cities and counties are quietly giving free money to business owners that have dilapidated buildings with businesses in them. The public has no clue. Even though the news reports on it.

  • @ConnorFutrell
    @ConnorFutrell Před 2 lety +9

    You should visit rich square it’s where my dad grew up it’s in Northampton county NC it’s an interesting place it once was a nice little town full of life but it’s sad to see what it’s become now it would be really cool to see you check it out in one of your vids

  • @REMBRANTTUBE
    @REMBRANTTUBE Před 2 lety +1

    GREAT JOB NICK!!!!!!!!

  • @NeverlandSystemAngel
    @NeverlandSystemAngel Před rokem +1

    Sadly there are places like this all over the US. So many once-vibrant rural areas are decaying...

  • @robryan751
    @robryan751 Před 2 lety +4

    Imagine that? Homelessness and whole towns without people living in them growing, at the same time.

  • @brendabraxton9175
    @brendabraxton9175 Před 2 lety +6

    You should have mentioned the failed Global Trans Park where millions of tax money built a huge airport that failed and when you drive down the huge highway to the GTP, it’s a ghost town

    • @DyreStraits
      @DyreStraits Před 2 lety

      Sounds like the GTP is a viable concern, not failing as you say.

  • @CLTaylor311
    @CLTaylor311 Před měsícem

    I grew up in Tarboro and I've seen this first hand. However, I will say the transformation of downtown over the last 10 years has been impressive, and I'm hearing more and more about people moving into town from out of state. The poverty is still there for sure, but it looks like people are starting to move into these small towns (at least Tarboro) with remote work being much more available than just 10 years ago.

  • @vladsnape6408
    @vladsnape6408 Před rokem +2

    Why does the US have regulations that stop small scale farmers from selling their product? why is it illegal to sell farm produce if you are a small farmer? Here in Australia, we have lots of small farmers that sell produce such as vegetables, fruit, milk products, etc. Some of them are doing ok financially, as far as I know, some have diversified and have focused on value-adding, such as running small shops selling their produce to locals and tourists, making jams, wine, etc.

  • @chortleboy
    @chortleboy Před 2 lety +10

    I live in a small rural mtn town in Colorado and if it wasn’t for skiing and Mtn biking we would be just like these towns in the Carolina’s….it used to be a ghost town here in the summer and it was hard to survive until winter and the tourist ski industry kicked in again…small towns just need a niche to attract tourism..build it and they get will come so they say and it’s true…my town started building more trails for biking and hiking and people amstarted showing up during summers and then more restaurants starting opening and then bakeries and them more tshirt shops and tourist places…it’s probably not as easy as it sounds when you’re talking about the Carolina’s because there’s no mountains amd the scenery isn’t as great as Colorado but all it takes is a spark from someone to get the ball going and a good idea to attract tourism

  • @krnpowr
    @krnpowr Před 2 lety +6

    The rust belt has been decimated by the loss of manufacturing jobs in general, not just the loss of automotive manufacturing jobs.

    • @zarach9459
      @zarach9459 Před 2 lety

      It is true, the automotive industry was just one of many manufacturing industries, tools, lighters, garden furniture, pans, forks and knives... thousands of small factories that directly provided jobs for hundreds of thousands of people who in turn provided jobs to millions of people... they sent everything to China and thanks to that China went from being an underdeveloped country to a superpower.

    • @kennethmoles4643
      @kennethmoles4643 Před 2 lety

      All manufacturing is interconnected and dependant in some way.

  • @milladreischer7987
    @milladreischer7987 Před 2 lety

    A very impressive dialog. Students are certainly very lucky to have such a wonderful teacher. You are talking about acquired helplessness as if caused by overwhelming governments. No matter if that is so or if it's the other way round, one thing that is never discussed in such context is how very envious people have come to power to now subjugate all others. It's a catastrophe that people can no longer produce, manufacture, and sell. I would have hoped that, at least in America, freedom of enterprise still subsisted. Having never set foot on American soil, I was obviously mistaken. How sad.

  • @pres4877
    @pres4877 Před 2 lety +1

    It’s the individuals in those higher up roles over the city and county who are corrupt and not put in the funds here there need to be but in their own pocket. I’m from Lumberton and it’s ridiculous, it’s a real struggle.

  • @user-vf3gf4xq3v
    @user-vf3gf4xq3v Před 2 lety +5

    This is what the current welfare system perpetuates. Payments should be tied to relocation to with assistance to cities and towns where labor is needed. It should also be for a limited period. Towns are established for a reason. It’s usually economic viability. Once that viability disappears the town loses its viability. Look at the mining towns out west that no longer exist. While sad it’s part of the natural process. New towns with better economic viability benefit from the loss of the economically non-viable towns.

  • @the_derpler
    @the_derpler Před 2 lety +6

    I wonder if there will be a business opportunity in remote doctors for these towns. I have to imagine if you move here you won't be able to find modern dentistry, doctors that know their stuff etc. So maybe you schedule your dental appointment, and a davinci robot gets shipped to your place in a big van, you go sit in that thing, the dentist does her work on you from their office remotely?

    • @tundealawal4398
      @tundealawal4398 Před 2 lety +2

      Futuristic that is. I am a non physician echocardiographer/vascular tech and this just sets me thinking. I will partner with physicians interested in rural health advancement.

    • @vetbcrazy
      @vetbcrazy Před 2 lety +1

      In Michigan, you better get south of Bay City to get competent medical help.

    • @t.p.9232
      @t.p.9232 Před 2 lety

      You can get what you need pretty much in a half hr drive. When you live in a congested city area, it takes 1/2 hr to go five miles.

  • @viorelmicu7498
    @viorelmicu7498 Před 2 lety +1

    Farmer in Europe
    We are living on 90 hectares of land , 60 property , 30 rent from the local village, and 60 cows. We are three family's, I think that medium farmers are the best for developing a community

  • @andrearenee7845
    @andrearenee7845 Před 2 lety

    Thank you!