Comparatively speaking, right. Yeah, so that, they never experienced the
hard core racism, and Savannah has always been laid back like that. A
lot of covert racism, which still exists today. The way you find out,
you go down to these banks, and you try to borrow some big money. It's
like—what kind of collateral do you have? I've got a business that's
been going on for eighty-eight years. That's not good enough. I mean,
I've got the property that the building sits on. The whole thing's worth
three hundred some thousand dollars. I'm asking you for a hundred.
That's not good enough, you see. It's still well, you look at the South
and you look at Savannah, Georgia, the progressive black folks just
aren't here. Progressive, aggressive, they go hand in hand. It doesn't
exist in Savannah. Savannah is, it's like sectioned off. We have some
schoolteachers here or just knocked off all the lawyers just about. We
have a few black attorneys left. We've got your black physicians, and
never do they come together. I'm trying to think how many black
physicians patronize me in terms of sending their clients here, I mean,
their patients here. You've got one upstairs where the people can't help
but come down. One around on Trade and Henry. That's about it. Two black
physicians that will say go around to Savannah Pharmacy, but they'll
pick up the phone just as quick and call CVS or Eckerd's. See that's
what I miss, and I guess all the physicians that are here, and I
shouldn't say all because there are a few native Savannahians, not many
maybe two or three, are people that as the old folks used to say, come
heres. They don't seem to understand that we still have black businesses
in Savannah. It's like they relate to CVS and Eckerd's and that's it.
Then somebody says Savannah Pharmacy. Where is that? What is that? I
mean, if you live here for ten years and you don't know where the black
pharmacy is, then you're out of touch. I lived in Detroit, Michigan for
eight years. I went twenty-five miles to a black pharmacy because I
wanted to trade black, and the guy was so nice. I mean, there were other
black pharmacies that I could have stopped along the way, and he used to
say you come all the way from East Detroit over here. I said, "When I
come over here, I sit down. We usually talk an hour." So that type of
loyalty doesn't exist. I don't even know, have you seen that black
business directory?