So, if the state capital were to be moved to, say, Tupelo…..all the poor, uneducated, destitute citizens of Jackson are somehow going to come up with the means to move 180 miles….to a new location where they won’t be able to afford housing, etc.? Not buying it.
With the possible exception of homeless migrants, larger cities don’t just inherently attract poor people. Jackson’s problems aren’t that its a city that attracted poor / uneducated folks, they were caused because they always had a much larger percentage of those people than other similarly sized cities, due to local demographics, then the money left. So now that’s all there is.
Moving the state capital would, in the short term, be very expensive and complicated. But there are arguments to be made that it could, long term, be the right move for the state. It’s certainly a radical idea, but its going to take nothing short of radical ideas to solve the Jackson problem.
Of course, Mississippi doesn’t have - and will never have - elected officials at any level that are intelligent enough to weigh the pros / cons argue either side of such a radical proposition. So, it will never happen. But its an interesting thought experiment nonetheless.