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Showing posts with label News and Views. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News and Views. Show all posts

Saturday, July 5, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | July 6, 2025


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Ode to a Loser

By James Thomas Shell

I do not present this as a plea for recognition, nor as a confession. It is a ledger entry—an honest account of a life that has unfolded along the edges, not out of aimlessness, but because the center never opened its doors.

Throughout my life, I have experienced a persistent sense of dislocation. Not disorientation—I understand the world around me—but disconnection. From a young age, I felt the weight of being out of place. My grandparents, all products of the Great Depression, were my refuge. They did not preach values; they lived them. Resilience, duty, and quiet endurance were their grammar of love. Through them, I was given a glimpse of steadiness. That steadiness did not last.

When they were gone—or overshadowed by the presence of those who lacked their depth—I came to understand what it meant to be truly alone. My mother and stepfather were not friendly. They were emotionally absent and controlling. They did not guide; they dominated. They did not care to understand; they imposed. From them, I learned early that survival often requires silence and adaptation.

I have carried that survival instinct into adulthood. I have sought connection—especially love—but repeatedly found myself misread, overlooked, or rejected. I offered sincerity, but sincerity, it seems, is not a currency many accept. I have not been respected or treated as respectable, and thus I did not have wealth or status to offer. I had honesty. And that, in most cases, is not enough.

There is a particular pain in being seen clearly by so few. I am not mysterious. I am not difficult to understand. But in a world preoccupied with surfaces, depth is often mistaken for distance. My intelligence has either not been accepted or it has been ignored or dismissed. By many, I have been, for no reason, reviled. My quietness is not apathy. My reserve is not arrogance. It is simply the consequence of years spent not being met where I stand.

Still, I remain committed to the work. Maybe these words I write will mean more when I am no longer here. I write. I document. I observe. There is rarely applause. Completion is followed not by celebration but by silence. The effort is real; the recognition, rare.

And yet, I continue. Not out of delusion or vanity, but out of principle. I do not believe in performance. I believe in memory. In bearing witness. In naming things as they are.

This is not a declaration of defeat, nor a call to arms. It is an acknowledgment: I exist in this middle place—shot, shattered, jaded, never triumphant. Simply present. Still moving forward.

If no one else will say it, I will: This, too, is a life. And it deserves to be recorded.

It is what it is.

And I am still here.

Reason in an Unreasonable World.

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I won’t be voicing the above. It’s too personal, and it is not meant for performance. That piece isn’t written to provoke sympathy or invite commentary—it is simply something I needed to put out there, a quiet truth, while I still can, to remove some of the darkness of my heart I have always had to hide.  A clearing. A personal ledger. Just laying it out there so I can move forward with clarity. It is where I come from and who I am.

With that said, the mission continues.

This week, we return to the core mission: documenting the truth of Hickory’s condition and tracing the systems that shape daily life here—whether seen or ignored. Below are two major additions to the record:

 

Hickory 2025: 15 Segments That Tell the Whole Story (from the Compendium) - July 1, 2025 - This structured visual summary presents the full scope of Hickory’s current condition, drawn from the Compendium of Socio-Economic and Cultural Intelligence. Fifteen short segments trace the breakdown of systems across infrastructure, housing, public services, cultural identity, and more. Together, they form a civic mirror—one that speaks not just to where Hickory stands today, but to how it got here.

 Deep Dive: Health Security in Hickory and Catawba County: Access, Aging, and the Health System - July 3, 2025 - This investigation examines the health care landscape across Hickory and Catawba County, with a focus on access, affordability, aging populations, and system strain. From ER bottlenecks to the realities of an under-supported elder care system, this deep dive exposes the quiet crisis shaping the region’s health security—and how close it is to the breaking point. ----------------------------------------  

⚾ Hickory: This Is How Far You Are from Keeping the Crawdads

Before assuming everything’s fine, take a few minutes to watch this:
πŸŽ₯ America’s Best Minor League Stadium?! | Stadium Wonders | Sports Illustrated

It features the Quad Cities River Bandits—a Class A franchise like our Hickory Crawdads. Their riverside ballpark was spared during MLB’s 2020 contraction effort and has since become a civic beacon. Their success wasn’t luck—it was intentional investment and community belief.

Meanwhile, the Crawdads are owned by Diamond Baseball Holdings, not the city or a local owner, meaning the team can be relocated if it remains undervalued mlb.com+15ballparkdigest.com+15en.wikipedia.org+15pitchbook.com+8milb.com+8baseball-reference.com+8. Because DBH is here for shareholder interest more than community interest.

Hickory, we’re behind. The stadium holds together, but we haven’t asked if Crawdads baseball still matters—or what we’re willing to do to keep it. And here’s the truth:

Hickory, you’re gonna need some Wow!!! factor.
You don’t need a glitzy waterfront complex. You need visible, consistent civic intent—something that says, this team isn’t expendable.

This isn’t about outdoing the River Bandits. It’s about understanding the gulf between a city that acted and one that’s still hesitant.

πŸ“˜ Read more:
Keep the Crawdads: Strategic Intelligence Report
🎞️ Watch the series:
The Crawdad Reality – YouTube Shorts

No fireworks. No spin. Just a question:

Will Hickory decide the Crawdads stay—or quietly let them leave?

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Promotional:

πŸ› ️ Services Offered – Strategic Assistance, AI Tutoring, and Civic Intelligence

By James Thomas Shell | Contact: hickoryhoundfeedback@gmail.com

I provide grounded, one-on-one support for individuals, small business owners, researchers, writers, and civic professionals who need help navigating today’s tools, content demands, or complex problems. My approach is practical, private, and built on real experience.


πŸ“ Primary Services Available

πŸ€– AI Tutoring – Your ChatGPT

Learn how to use ChatGPT to improve productivity, generate ideas, conduct research, write more effectively, or run smarter businesses.
You get:

  • One-on-one, in-person tutoring sessions

  • Tailored walkthroughs for your personal or business use case

  • A printed beginner’s notebook with step-by-step examples

  • One free 10-minute follow-up call

  • Optional ongoing support (email or phone check-ins)

Pricing:

  • $30 for 30 minutes

  • $50 for 1 hour

  • Ongoing support packages available on request


✍️ Writer's Assistant + Editorial Services

I help writers, thinkers, and professionals sharpen their message and finish what they started.

I can assist with: 

  • Book or blog development

  • Personal narrative writing (bios, legacy essays, professional statements)

  • Editing for tone, logic, clarity, and structure

  • Adaptive writing for older, existing content

      


🧠 Civic + Strategic Consulting

For nonprofits, community leaders, and small organizations that need straight talk and clear research—no fluff.

I offer:

  • Strategic intelligence reports

  • Research briefs on local and regional issues

  • Content planning for civic platforms or advocacy groups

  • Private background analysis on economic, educational, or infrastructure questions


πŸ“ˆ Additional Possibilities

I can help with:

  • Starting and maintaining a blog or content platform

  • Training older or non-technical users on modern tools

  • Repurposing physical records or notes into usable content

  • Strategic document drafting for proposals or briefings

  • Helping people reclaim their voice in a noisy digital world


πŸ“¨ How to Move Forward

  1. Reach out by email: hickoryhoundfeedback@gmail.com

  2. Briefly explain what you need or want to learn.

  3. I’ll respond with a short intake and availability.

  4. We'll meet in-person (in Hickory or nearby), or arrange another secure contact method.

All services are direct, private, and built for real-world use—no gimmicks, no upsells.

If you're tired of being talked down to, lost in the noise, or simply need a reliable co-pilot for part of the journey, I’m here to help.


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And to wrap things up this week I want to post my promotional platforms. These are the outlets where I post and promote articles and content related to this community and this region.

🐾 The Hickory Hound

thehickoryhound.blogspot.com (<<< Linked)
Main platform for longform reports, civic commentary, strategic briefs, and deep research on Hickory and Catawba County.


πŸ“‘ The Hound’s Signal (Substack)

thehoundsignal.substack.com (<<< Linked)
Regional Substack blog expanding local content to the broader 20-county Foothills Corridor—published weekly with essays and signal reports.


▶️ YouTube Channel

Hickory Hound on YouTube (<<< Linked)
Multimedia content, including narrated shorts, series like The Crawdad Reality, and video briefings tied to the Compendium and civic reports. I get many video views here that aren’t reflected in the numbers, because when you open a video outside of Youtube’s ecosystem it does not count in the video totals listed on Youtube.


🧭 Nextdoor (<<< linked)

Targeted local engagement—used to post weekly articles, start civic discussions, and track feedback from inside the Hickory-area neighborhoods. Join Nextdoor to keep up with what is going on in the local area among your neighbors


πŸ“˜ Facebook

Used for broader post sharing, cross-posted alerts, and direct conversation with longtime readers. Below are the Facebook groups for the Hickory Hound.
The Hickory Hound Facebook Group

Hickory NC Town Talk

Hickory NC: the Good, the Bad, the Ugly

Hickory Community Action Group

What's Up? Catawba County

Let's Really Talk Burke County

Hickory NC: Events, News and Local Business Promotions



✉️ Direct Circulation

E-mail to:
hickoryhoundfeedback@gmail.com

Sign to E-mail distribution through Google Groups in the upper left hand corner.

Sign up to the Substack page on the upper right.

I update the content list under the Problems and Solutions section to the right.

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | June 15, 2025

 


 

This week I did a three deep dives into issues that truly impact the Economic Social and cultural dynamics of our region. Below is a quick summary of each, along with a 500 word synopsis and a link to the full deep dive if you have not already read it.


 The Forgotten Grid: Towns That Industry Left Behind - June 10, 2025 - 
Drexel, Hildebran, and Valdese once thrived on industry—but global shifts left them behind. Now marked by aging populations, empty mills, and stalled growth, these towns embody the human cost of economic abandonment. This report examines their rise, fall, and quiet resilience—asking whether modern planning will continue to ignore them, or finally bring them back into the fold.

 500 word summary of this article

 

The Center Cannot Hold: Hickory’s Uneven Growth in a Fractured County
- June 10, 2025: Hickory’s downtown revival masks deeper fractures in Catawba County. While new trails and tech jobs signal progress, aging infrastructure, school disparities, and uneven investment reveal a region divided. From Mountain View to Maiden, the foundation is straining. This report examines whether Hickory’s growth story can truly hold—before the cracks at the edges pull the center apart.
500 word summary of this article

 

Keep the Crawdads: Strategic Intelligence Report on Hickory’s Baseball Future - June 12, 2025:  Hickory’s Crawdads face uncertain ownership, regional neglect, and mounting pressure from MLB contraction trends. This strategic report lays out the stakes, from economic impact to civic identity, calling for proactive local action. Lose the Crawdads, and Hickory risks more than a team—it risks surrendering its place in America’s baseball fabric. The time to act is now.
500 word summary of this article.


You Don't Lose Baseball in a Day

Hickory, Don't let the Dads be the next Oakland A's

Hickory, You’re Gonna Lose the Crawdads

 
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 Rachel A.I. on the Hound's message since the reboot - Three Months In: What the Hickory Hound Has Exposed Since Its Return

 

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Not Broken. Not Bought. Not Theirs.
A Field Manual for the Self-Educated Builder

1. You Weren’t the Problem

There are people who were never meant to thrive in the system they were born into. Not because they lacked intelligence or will—but because the structure around them was never designed to cultivate either. If you didn’t fall in line, if you didn’t flatter the right gatekeepers, if your questions cut too deep—you were labeled. Disruptive. Difficult. Broken.

I wasn’t broken. I just wasn’t theirs.

Public school was a machine that punished difference. It rewarded submission and left little room for the curious, the restless, or the strategic. It wasn’t about mastery. It was about conformity. I didn’t evolve into who I am through their system. I have survived it, despite everything it took from me. My education started the moment I stopped seeking their approval.

I live in a cold war with the society that thought it could diagnose me into silence.

2. The System Was Working Exactly As Intended

If it ever seemed like the system failed people like us, it’s because it was never built to serve us in the first place. Its purpose isn’t enlightenment. It’s hierarchy. The goal isn’t to teach—it’s to sort.

What they call "education" is often credential inflation and cultural grooming. They train managers, not builders. Repeaters, not originators. The deeper you think, the harder you fall through their cracks. People stopped learning because the system trained them to believe their degree was the finish line.

The "educated" class talks a lot, but listens little. They confuse resume polish for insight. Meanwhile, the world changes beneath their feet, and they don’t even notice until their institutions start to collapse.

They didn't outgrow the old world. They ignored the new one. And now they think their failure to evolve is your failure.

3. The Tools Finally Came

For most of my life, I could see more than I could say. I had ideas that didn’t fit into their formats, questions they wouldn't tolerate, insights no one had a place for. Then the tools arrived. AI. Open platforms. Self-publishing. The collapse of gatekeepers.

I didn't suddenly become smarter. The world just finally offered tools sharp enough to match my mind. I didn’t get louder. The noise around me finally cracked enough for my voice to get through.

Now I write the truths I was punished for asking. I build frameworks the planners never considered. I analyze the local economy, the cultural decay, the civic breakdown—and I don’t need anyone's permission to do it.

You can call it journalism. You can call it strategy. I call it survival.


4. What I’m Building

The Hickory Hound isn’t a blog. It’s a navigation system. A decoded map for people who know something’s wrong but can't get the signal through the noise. I’m tracking water conflicts, minor league team relocations, collapsing infrastructure, and regional economic patterns because those things matter. Not in theory—in day-to-day life.

Our civic class doesn’t want to confront reality. They want applause for incrementalism while the floorboards rot underneath. But I don’t write to flatter the officials. I write to warn the people.

Every story is a pressure point. Every data point is a clue. Every article is a piece of the map for people who still believe in rebuilding, even if they’ve been pushed to the margins.

I’m not here to entertain. I’m here to equip.

5. We Are Not Broken

If you’ve ever been told you ask too many questions, that you care too much, that you expect too much clarity—you’re not alone.

You’re not broken. You’re just not theirs.

The world is changing. The gatekeepers are slipping. The Normies who've always mocked the idea of collapse now live in its early chapters. And those of us who were forced to figure things out the hard way—we're not the problem.

We’re the blueprint.

And we’re not waiting for permission to keep building.

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Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | March 29, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | April 5, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | April 13, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | April 20, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | April 26, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | May 4, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | May 10, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | May 17, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | May 25, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | June 1, 2025 

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | June 8, 2025

 

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Sunday, June 8, 2025

Hickory, NC News & Views | Hickory Hound | June 8 2025

  




 

 HICKORY HOUND INTELLIGENCE REPORT

Title:
Reading the Signals: How to Spot Real Change Before It Becomes Obvious

Audience:
The Hickory Hound readership.

Overview:
This report gives a working system for identifying the first signs of real change in a region. Not hype. Not noise. Not press releases. These are the early markers—ideas, efforts, and small wins—that show whether we’re moving forward or just spinning our wheels. Every real comeback starts small. The key is learning to spot it early, support it wisely, and separate momentum from distraction.

I. Three Kinds of Signals That Matter

1. Woo Signals – These are just ideas—early-stage thoughts tossed around in conversations, meetings, or back porches.
Example: A teacher wonders aloud if an old storefront could be a tech lab.
Why it matters: Even the best projects start with “what if.” Don’t laugh these off. Track who’s saying what and how often it comes up.

2. Faint Signals – These are ideas with legs. Somebody’s filled out a grant form, started a committee, or lined up a meeting.
Example: A community college designs a course but hasn’t enrolled students yet.
Why it matters: These efforts are in motion. They might fizzle, or they might catch. These are the inflection points.

3. Weak Signals – These are projects that have launched—maybe just barely, but they’re running.
Example: A food hub distributes local produce. A trail opens. A broadband pilot begins.
Why it matters: This is proof-of-concept territory. These efforts deserve real support and follow-up. If they work, they can be scaled. If they fail, we learn.

 

II. How to Read the Ground

To spot signals, you have to know what to watch for. Here’s the short list:

· Look at the gaps – Progress isn’t even. A new park doesn’t mean the town’s fixed. Watch the contrast. What’s improving? What’s still busted?

· Follow infrastructure – Where are they putting money? Fiber lines, permits, trails, job centers—these are signals in plain sight.

· Watch the young and the old – If a town is holding on to both, it’s stable. If either group is drifting out, pay attention. Losing young people means the future is leaking out. Losing elders often means a loss of roots, memory, and care. If both are leaving, that’s a full-system warning.

· Listen to how people talk – Are folks talking about what’s possible, or only what’s broken? Mindset shifts show up in everyday language.

· Track the connectors – Some people operate in multiple circles at once—pastors, coaches, teachers, civic volunteers. They help move ideas, resources, and energy from one part of the community to another. Watch what roles they’re playing and which projects they’re involved in—they’re often the glue that makes progress possible.

· Measure impact, not noise – Activity doesn’t mean progress. Ask: who benefits? Can it last? Does it spread? Is it connected to other efforts?

 

III. What to Do With What You See

· Keep a list – Track Woo, Faint, and Weak signals in your town. Update it. Share it.

· Ask follow-up questions – What happened to that pilot program? Did that grant get awarded?

· Connect the dots – Don’t let wins sit in silos. A new trail is good. A trail that connects to housing, jobs, and small business? That’s a signal moving up the chain.

 

Final Word

The Foothills won’t be rebuilt overnight. But that doesn’t mean nothing’s happening. The signs are there—you just have to know what you’re looking for. This framework isn’t theory. It’s a tool for people who are paying attention, who care about where this region is going, and who aren’t fooled by flash.

Look for the real work. Support the early steps. And don’t let small wins go unnoticed.

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GROUND LEVEL REPORT

These are active, confirmed developments already visible in the region:

  1. Juice Apothecary opens brick-and-mortar store in Harris Arcade
    → Storefront is open and operating. This is not an idea, it’s an active retail shift.

  2. Apprenticeship and training programs by Sonoco, CVMC, and City of Hickory
    → Job listings are live. Partnerships are in motion. These are already formalized and publicly available.

  3. Grassroots environmental cleanups in Burke and Valdese
    → Events have already occurred. Volunteer activity is documented and measurable. 

 

EARLY SIGNAL REPORT

These are real, but either subtle, emergent, or quietly gaining ground. They suggest larger shifts if they grow.

  1. E-bike adoption among older residents
    → Anecdotal chatter + light observational data. Not yet a dominant trend, but points to a shift in how older adults engage with mobility and greenways.

  2. Hickory Hangout (Millennial/Gen Z Meetup) social traction
    → The group exists and is growing quickly. It hasn’t yet transformed the local social landscape, but the growth rate and demographic interest signal a potential cultural inflection.

     Link to Google Document of Ground Level, Early Signal, and Cited references 



Underreported Regional Report – June 7, 2025

Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton-Marion MSA
(Link to Google Doc)

This analysis highlights four critical, underreported developments in the Hickory MSA between May 8 and June 7, 2025. First, a string of shootings in Morganton and Hickory has raised public safety concerns. A Morganton incident on May 31 left one dead and two injured, followed by a mass shooting in Hickory on June 1. Despite growing online discussion and speculation of connections between these events, broader media coverage has been minimal.

Second, the Humane Society of Catawba County terminated its executive director following an independent investigation into misconduct. Although covered locally, this accountability shift in a vital nonprofit has not received attention beyond the region.

Third, local authorities report a spike in scams targeting residents—ranging from fake DMV texts to calls impersonating law enforcement. These fraud attempts threaten public trust, yet remain absent from state or national headlines.

Finally, multiple infrastructure projects, including the U.S. 321 road project, signal upcoming investment in regional mobility and connectivity. Despite their long-term economic significance, these developments remain under the radar.

Together, these stories reveal a community managing crisis, reform, and growth simultaneously—largely unnoticed by broader media or policy institutions. Each deserves scrutiny, support, and continued local follow-through.

 


 

 The Index of Hickory Hound Stories from 2025 onward

This list will permanently remain under the Problems & Solutions forum to your right.
Look directly above and that is how you sign up for the e-mail list of the Hickory Hound to get updates.