The death of San Fran

Large firms and small are fleeing San Fran.  Streets are being closed to cars, employees are refusing to return to their San Fran offices.  It is a rarity to see children in this dying town.   At some point it will be noted that the homeless and crime have pushed decent people out of town and tourist to avoid being crime victims.  No need to visit San Fran to visit slums—go to L.A., Chicago, N.Y., Boston, etc. if you want to be a tourist that visits crime.

“Before the pandemic, the lack of kids was less noticeable because San Francisco was growing overall. But from mid-2020 through mid-2021, the city’s population fell almost 7 percent, a huge shift. Only Manhattan had a bigger drop. (Yet home prices in both are higher now than they were two years ago despite the outflow – a disconnect from reality driven by easy money.)

The missing children reminded me that San Francisco had imposed some of the strictest pandemic restrictions anywhere in the United States and held on to them longer than almost anywhere else. It kept its schools closed longer too.

I don’t think that’s a coincidence. Cities are their residents, and no American city has more narcissism and beauty and fear than San Francisco. It – its wealthy residents, anyway – live in a present too perfect to make room for the future.

The death of San Francisco

There are no children here

Alex Berenson Apr 28 1,100 284

San Francisco might be the most beautiful place in the world. If you’ve ever been here, I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. The bay, surrounded by hills on all sides. The bridges and container ships and ferries and cable cars. The brightly painted townhouses and crazily curving streets. The people are pretty too, wind-kissed women striding the streets. So why does the city feel like it’s dying? I’m not even talking about the homeless crisis on the streets around the Civic Center and the Castro and the Mission District. I spent the day walking the city’s northeastern quadrant, neighborhoods that so far have resisted the tent encampments and open-air drug markets and sidewalks littered with needles and human feces to the south. The day was bright and breezy, a perfect San Francisco spring afternoon.

And the streets were practically empty, aside from a few blocks in Chinatown, as lifeless as they were beautiful. The city felt like the backdrop for a dystopian sci-fi movie, with ads promoting brands that don’t seem to exist anywhere else and strangely outfitted self-driving cars popping up surprisingly often. Adimab? What’s an Adimab? Most disconcerting of all, I’m not sure I saw a single child. I must have, but I can’t remember any. I certainly didn’t hear any, didn’t hear them yelling or running or laughing. I would have noticed, they would have stood out. San Francisco has been desperately short on children for decades.

As a percentage of its population, it has fewer kids than almost any other major American city. Barely 1 in 8 of its residents are under 18. San Francisco is expensive and difficult, but Manhattan is also expensive and difficult, and Manhattan has far more kids. No, for whatever reason, the pretty girls and boys here seem particularly unable to pair off and take the final step into adulthood. Before the pandemic, the lack of kids was less noticeable because San Francisco was growing overall. But from mid-2020 through mid-2021, the city’s population fell almost 7 percent, a huge shift.

Only Manhattan had a bigger drop. (Yet home prices in both are higher now than they were two years ago despite the outflow – a disconnect from reality driven by easy money.) The missing children reminded me that San Francisco had imposed some of the strictest pandemic restrictions anywhere in the United States and held on to them longer than almost anywhere else. It kept its schools closed longer too. I don’t think that’s a coincidence. Cities are their residents, and no American city has more narcissism and beauty and fear than San Francisco. It – its wealthy residents, anyway – live in a present too perfect to make room for the future. Subscribe to Unreported Truths By Alex Berenson · Tens of thousands of paid subscribers Independent, citizen-funded journalism Type your email…

You wanted progress…you got it! For all you Californians moving to Texas, remember why you left your shit hole state and what contributed to the downfall of a once beautiful Republic. 264Reply 66 replies JuanApr 28 I remember taking our kids there for a vacation. We were walking down the sidewalk and people were stepping over a person laying there. My kids were really taken back by it as we all were. We stopped and tried to bring the person to consciousness and we were treated horribly by people passing by for stopping to check on the person. We called 911 and a rescue squad came and revived the person that was dying. We have never been back after that experience. How could people become so cold to the life that is around them that is dying. They are so concerned with controlling the world outside of San Francisco that they have died to the world they live in. …

San Francisco might be the most beautiful place in the world.

If you’ve ever been here, I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. The bay, surrounded by hills on all sides. The bridges and container ships and ferries and cable cars. The brightly painted townhouses and crazily curving streets. The people are pretty too, wind-kissed women striding the streets.

So why does the city feel like it’s dying?

I’m not even talking about the homeless crisis on the streets around the Civic Center and the Castro and the Mission District. I spent the day walking the city’s northeastern quadrant, neighborhoods that so far have resisted the tent encampments and open-air drug markets and sidewalks littered with needles and human feces to the south.

The day was bright and breezy, a perfect San Francisco spring afternoon.

And the streets were practically empty, aside from a few blocks in Chinatown, as lifeless as they were beautiful. The city felt like the backdrop for a dystopian sci-fi movie, with ads promoting brands that don’t seem to exist anywhere else and strangely outfitted self-driving cars popping up surprisingly often.

Adimab? What’s an Adimab?

Most disconcerting of all, I’m not sure I saw a single child. I must have, but I can’t remember any. I certainly didn’t hear any, didn’t hear them yelling or running or laughing. I would have noticed, they would have stood out.

San Francisco has been desperately short on children for decades. As a percentage of its population, it has fewer kids than almost any other major American city. Barely 1 in 8 of its residents are under 18.

San Francisco is expensive and difficult, but Manhattan is also expensive and difficult, and Manhattan has far more kids. No, for whatever reason, the pretty girls and boys here seem particularly unable to pair off and take the final step into adulthood.

Before the pandemic, the lack of kids was less noticeable because San Francisco was growing overall. But from mid-2020 through mid-2021, the city’s population fell almost 7 percent, a huge shift. Only Manhattan had a bigger drop. (Yet home prices in both are higher now than they were two years ago despite the outflow – a disconnect from reality driven by easy money.)

The missing children reminded me that San Francisco had imposed some of the strictest pandemic restrictions anywhere in the United States and held on to them longer than almost anywhere else. It kept its schools closed longer too.

I don’t think that’s a coincidence. Cities are their residents, and no American city has more narcissism and beauty and fear than San Francisco. It – its wealthy residents, anyway – live in a present too perfect to make room for the future.Top of Form