It’s an interesting conversation…as a native Atlantan I see it kinda the opposite way though. I think for people from Atlanta who don’t have skills or the ability to navigate how the city is changing, they’re missing out on the prosperity, wealth building and access that has plagued black people in Atlanta for generations. I know alotta natives who have to work menial jobs, can’t afford to live in the city and either don’t have a plan for how to change it or are oblivious to what’s happening around them. They either were failed by the public school system, didn’t go to college or never got serious about how to better themselves
And shyt at this point if you don’t have a clue on how to fix it, you’ll be living in Douglasville or Lawrenceville or Marietta or Clayton County with minimal skills and very few opportunities to get out of the class you find yourself in. Income disparity in Atlanta is the worst in the nation and children born into a particular class have less opportunity to get out of that class than anywhere in the US. It’s sad but I can’t feel sorry for people who haven’t chosen to invest in themselves b/c the money is here (tech, music, real estate, healthcare, Fortune 500 corporate money, etc). Folks who move here and are from here just gotta move smarter