On Tuesday, October 7th, All In America: Coal Country explores the link between coal and tobacco: Two powerful and profitable industries that fight regulation and are linked to health problems. All In travels from the mountain top mining operations in West Virginia to the coal ash river clean-up in North Carolina, and talks to everyone from politicians to activists to Duke Energy, as Chris Hayes examines the similarities between big tobacco and big coal.
You can learn more here:
“Federal Court Backs EPA’s Veto Of One Of The Largest Surface Mines Ever Proposed In Appalachia,” ThinkProgress
- “According to the EPA, the proposed mine would have dumped 110 million cubic yards of coal mine waste into streams, dynamited of over 2,200 acres of mountains and forestlands, buried more than 35,000 feet of high-quality streams under mining waste, and polluted downstream waters.”
“Black Lung Disease Makes Comeback, Study Shows,” The Wall Street Journal
- “The prevalence of severe black lung disease among coal miners in Central Appalachia has hit levels not seen since coal dust was first regulated in mines about 40 years ago, according to federal researchers.”
“Army Corps denies request for public hearing on coal trains,” WDSU News









