I lived for a year in Chestnut Hill in Philadelphia, right on the edge. Across the street was Montgomery County, and a mile or so down that street was a Pathmark supermarket. It was the nearest/only supermarket in the immediate area. The clientele was 90% plus black, but these were not ghetto blacks, these were solidly middle class blacks in intact families who were employed and owned their own homes, AND THAT STORE was a disgrace.
Now, Pathmark is by no means a high end market, but I'd shopped in several others, all of which were spacious and clean. This one was crowded and unkempt and clearly not tended to, because they could.
OP, it's not that article that's stirring up the race pot, it's real life stuff like this that reminds all too many black folk that even when they do right and climb the ladder to the middle class, they can still be served the shit end of the stick.