Of course you do, you emotional ass nikka. Let me put it in a way that coddles your insecurities. We have enough people championing causes to assist the poor. I'm not taking away from that. But no one champions the issues facing the black middle class for fear of being accused of being an elitist. The fact of the matter, if we don't have a strong robust middle class, the entire black community is in jeapardy.
Black middle class families are already in a tenuous position. Their net worths are tied up in their homes. Once real estate prices sink, there goes their collective net worths. We need safety nets in place to protect that and to protect families from falling out of the middle class. Whites Chicagoan had that in the form of redlining, which kept their neighborhoods home prices stable. Obviously, I'm not advocating for that but we need to think of solutions that are appropriate for our situation.
What doesn't work for black middle class neighborhoods are policies that allow inner city blacks equipped with section 8 vouchers to move into the neighborhood
in droves. This will:
1) Increase the number of rental units, which will then...
2) Increase the transient population, which will then...
3) Decrease the tax base from which the local schools are funded, which will then...
4) Drive down property prices...
Not too mention, as the population increasingly becomes low-income, they will not be able to sustain the businesses that cater to the middle-class in the area. Businesses are going to leave and be taken over by payday loan stores and other businesses that cater to a low income crowd, further depreciating property prices. This doesn't help black middle class families.
This doesn't help the black teachers, police officers, doctors, lawyers, and business owners, whom for the most part, service the black community. If they are not in a secure position, how can they be effective at upliftment and service to the rest of the community?
And what point is it to encourage the impoverished and the working poor to a middle-class lifestlye without any safeguards to prevent them from falling back when they arrive? That's my point. Take your emotions out of it.
Country Club Hills, Hazel Crest, Homewood, Flossmoor, Olympia Fields, Matteson, Richton Park, South Holland are becoming shytholes. This just happened.
Carson's Abruptly Shutters Matteson Store; Village Cries Foul
"Despite the recent closures of other major retailers, including Toys R Us and Sam’s Club..."
How the fukk does a Sam's Club close? You can add to that Target, Jewel, Dominicks, Best Buy, and all the rest of the stores along the Lincoln Highway corridor thats being replaced by payday loans stores, liquor stores, and discount retail stores.
There is literally a Walmart in Olympia Fields. Olympia Fields, along with Flossmoor, was ranked in the top 25 most affluent neighborhoods in Illinois back when my family was living there in the 80's and granted, those neighborhoods were about a quarter black then. But it makes no sense. Meanwhile, the other neighborhoods listed in the top 25 then are still listed in the top 25 in 2018.
We have to do something to preserve black middle-class wealth. And since this is tied up in their properties, we have to do something to preseve their neighborhoods from going under.