so with that in mind, it s the worth remembering that one hundred years ago, memphis a boom was one of the richest, best organized cities in the country. it ha hadd a booming economy. it had beautiful municipalhan parks, a lot of them more than a hundred. it had one of the most modern te sanitation systems in worle take something w for granted now. but when yellow fever was real, no one took it for granted. memphis was such a bigwas th deal that in fact, was the mis the informal capital of an entire american region. the mississippi deltanot an,t not anymore. in fact, by last year, i f b you went to memphis, it was hard to believe that any of that had ever been true at any point. because by that point and nowa memphis had become a husk and a highly threatening one in 2020si one , according to federal, statistics, memphis, tennessee, was the most dangerous city in the united states . talast year.w much it recorded a total of three hundred and forty two murders. no?w, how
more horrible. but here s what may be the scariest part. e didn tsome people didn t seems particularly shocked or horrified by it. in the hours after eliza fletcher s disappearance, biden voters and social medisociala so dismiss the crime on racial grounds. why are we paying so muchmis attention to kidnapping of annt attractive, privileged white woman that s racist? todnappingf an others seem toe fletcher for the atrocity committed against her. t why was she jogging at that hour anyway in memphis? come on n., the point they re making was clear . everyone knows the rules. if fletcher violated those rules, you can t go outside a certain hours. ein certain places in america,ts obviously. and if you do, iff you violate the rules, you run the risk of being and murdered.ped an adat s how things work in this country. so adapt, acceptcc it,ept, a mo. to some extent for beingwhether honest. all of us feel that way,we whether articulated or not. we know what the rules are.ne we know what we