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Council meeting in affluent San Francisco neighborhood descends into chaos as residents protest turning hotel into homes for 100 homeless people
San Mateo officials want to place 100 homeless people in La Quinta hotel
Hundreds of Millbrae residents packed out a meeting to protest the plans
They drowned out speakers with booing in scenes akin to a sports stadium
The controlled demolition of San Fransisco continues. A video clip making the rounds this weekend shows a San Fransisco woman who reported an unpleasant encounter with an unpleasant individual while shopping:
https://twitter.com/KyleKashuv/status/1688432633745666048
One can forgive her for asking her assailant the ridiculous Karenic question, “did you just spit in my face??” Although the type of person who will spit in your face is clearly unlikely to engage in a reasonable debate about it, she was shocked after all. A more compelling issue is that one wishes to ask whether she voted for the policies that created the environment where random men spit in her face in the first place.
One suspects that she did.
The thug’s threat to “rape” her constitutes the crime of assault, and spitting in her face is battery, both of which in normal times would have resulted in a arrest and prosecution. But note very well that the woman in the clip doesn’t even mention police. She never even called them. Why not?
Maybe because she knows that, after sixteen rounds of “defunding,” and after watching thousands of low-level criminals be not prosecuted, police won’t — or can’t — do anything about it?
Inside San Francisco’s Illegal Dumping Crisis: Buckets of Feces, Endless Trash
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12436929/Nordstrom-Rack-store-robbed-california-flash-rob.html
See above link. Not San Fran, but southern California again getting hit with thug flash mobs robbing stores like Nordstrom and Macys.
.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12436929/Nordstrom-Rack-store-robbed-california-flash-rob.html
See above link. Not San Fran, but southern California again getting hit with thug flash mobs robbing stores like Nordstrom and Macys.
.
The crackdown comes as the city grapples with high rates of car break-ins, with San Francisco seeing over 22,000 reported last year, according to SFPD data.
The crackdown comes as the city grapples with high rates of car break-ins, with San Francisco seeing over 22,000 reported last year, according to SFPD data.
That's 60 a day, and those are only the ones reported to the feckless polic
Wonder how much California car insurance rates have been affected by this.
https://t.me/gatewaypunditofficial/34806
This is as cowardly and disingenuous of a statement
Next, some news from the controlled demolition of San Fransisco, in two recent New York Post headlines.
First, from August 25th (last Friday):
Guess how many of the people who looted the San Fransisco Nordstrom location have been arrested? I’ll give you a hint: fewer people than were arrested for San Fransisco mask violations. Actually, it was zero. Zero arrests.
Next, four days later, yesterday’s headline (Monday):
A sad day indeed. And not just because the San Fransisco store was considered Nordstrom’s “flagship” store and had been operating for 35 years.
Why don’t they just rip off the band aid and go ahead and make shoplifting legal in California?
The good news is Nordstrom’s departure will depress real estate prices even more, allowing oligarchs a chance to buy the insanely-valuable downtown properties up for pennies on the dollar, after which the City can suddenly begin prosecuting its brownshirts, I mean criminals, again. It’s like Lahaina, except slower.
But wait! There’s a ready solution to all this crime that’s destroying our once-grand cities! Smart cities. Or Fifteen-minute cities, or whatever you call it. Where everything you need is located right where you live, right in your own high-rise prison, I mean skyscraper.
Who wants to bet we’ll be hearing about turning San Fransisco into a smart city soon?
The good news is Nordstrom’s departure will depress real estate prices even more, allowing oligarchs a chance to buy the insanely-valuable downtown properties up for pennies on the dollar,
I could believe the fire sale scam. However, how do the fire sale artists unlodge the faked election cycles and the moron apparatchiks, and then clean up the drug and homeless infestations? There has to be something to attract the business back to improve valuations.
There has to be something to attract the business back to improve valuations.
However, how do the fire sale artists unlodge the faked election cycles and the moron apparatchiks, and then clean up the drug and homeless infestations?
After an overheated pandemic peak, home sales and sales prices across all segments have dipped—but the city’s most expensive homes have taken an even steeper dive. ...
A property at 3410 Jackson St. in Presidio Heights was put on the market in February at $23.5 million before eventually selling at $18.5 million in May.
Less than a mile away in Cow Hollow, a property at 2660 Scott St. that was listed for sale in January at $16.5 million sold in July at $13 million.
In Sea Cliff, a property at 9 25th Ave. that first went on the market last September at a $32 million asking price, saw a series of price drops before selling in April for $20 million. ...
In July, the median price per square foot for homes over $5 million in San Francisco was $1,468, a more than 20% decline from the number one year prior, based off three-month rolling data.
Sales for homes over $5 million in San Francisco are down 56% year to date in 2023 compared with a year prior. ...
Brokers like Stiewe attributed some of the drop-off in San Francisco to larger concerns among residents about urban problems like homelessness and public safety. ...
Lazier said she’s found high-net-worth families moving to San Francisco, drawn by the city’s strong labor market and tech industry, have taken to renting expensive properties instead of buying. ...
Cow Hollow, a property at 2660 Scott St. that was listed for sale in January at $16.5 million sold in July at $13 million.
Sales for homes over $5 million in San Francisco are down 56% year to date in 2023 compared with a year prior. ...
The money San Francisco collected from a controversial 2018 business tax known as Prop C fell from $394 million for July 2019 to June 2020 to $218 million for the following year, according to the city controller’s office.
Prop C, aimed at housing the homeless, specifically targets companies with revenues of more than $50 million. The drop in Prop C revenue was far greater than the 12% decline in revenue over the same period from the tax that applies to all businesses, showing the extent to which mobile workers and their employers left the city during the pandemic.
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