Blacks in Memphis Feeling Unfamiliar Pinch of Economic Struggle

Blacks in Memphis are feeling the economic pinch. In the excerpt below, the New York Times looks into the changing economic landscape on the banks of the Mississippi: Suggested Reading A List of Black Hollywood Celebs Backing Donald Trump Florida Venue Allegedly Keeps Bride’s $7,600 Wedding Deposit After Her Fiancé Dies, You Won’t Believe Their…

Blacks in Memphis are feeling the economic pinch. In the excerpt below, the New York Times looks into the changing economic landscape on the banks of the Mississippi:

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For two decades, Tyrone Banks was one of many African-Americans who saw his economic prospects brightening in this Mississippi River city.

A single father, he worked for FedEx and also as a custodian, built a handsome brick home, had a retirement account and put his eldest daughter through college.

Then the Great Recession rolled in like a fog bank. He refinanced his mortgage at a rate that adjusted sharply upward, and afterward he lost one of his jobs. Now Mr. Banks faces bankruptcy and foreclosure.

“I’m going to tell you the deal, plain-spoken: I’m a black man from the projects and I clean toilets and mop up for a living,” said Mr. Banks, a trim man who looks at least a decade younger than his 50 years. “I’m proud of what I’ve accomplished. But my whole life is backfiring.”

Continue reading at the New York Times

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