Opinion Sorry, San Francisco is not the crime-ridden hellhole the far right claims it is - Ignore the junkies, robberies, used needles, urban youths; enjoy the drag shows and suck some girldick

The first time Kenshi Westover walked into AsiaSF, an iconic transgender cabaret in this city's gritty South of Market neighborhood, it was as a closeted gay Mormon visiting from Utah.

That was 20 years ago, and Westover (who uses they/them pronouns) remembers being stunned by the performers strutting down an elevated runway behind the bar, heels impossibly high, dresses dangerously low cut, the mood ebullient.

"These are my spirit animals," Westover thought. "And I am going to be part of that world."

I met Westover on Sunday night as AsiaSF celebrated its 25-year anniversary, in a room packed sardine-tight with drag queens, politicos in suits and even a couple of Stanford students. Westover, who identifies as gender nonconforming, was turned out in a beaded Art Deco gown, with dangling earrings and slicked-back hair, very much a part of this vibrant community that reveals more about San Francisco than the alarmist tales of urban doom that have come to define its reputation nationwide.

For years, the hard-right outrage machine has zeroed in on San Francisco as a "hellhole" that epitomizes everything wrong with Democratic leadership. They have been aided by a small but vocal cadre of local social media influencers who have made their brand pummeling San Francisco's public health and public safety policies. They focus almost entirely on drugs and crime, which dovetails perfectly into the right-wing propaganda that's stoking paranoia and panic in various parts of the country.

If you're wondering why I'm not including the usually obligatory sample posts from these influencers, it's because I don't feel the need to give that false narrative more oxygen. But their new king seems to be Elon Musk, who recently tweeted out that "violent crime in SF is horrific," despite the reality that, with the exception of robberies, rates for violent crimes like homicide and rape are so far on par or declining from last year.

Many of these proselytizers protest that they are not conservative, and most wouldn't dare to touch other issues that animate the right, such as the wars on transgender people and abortion. But they have a symbiotic relationship with hard-right media (think Fox News) on crime and drugs.

In another California town, maybe Sacramento or even Los Angeles, their vitriol would be the stuff of Nextdoor posts. But because San Francisco is a target of the right wing, these local voices have amassed power by providing the so-called proof that this city, like other Democratic strongholds, is in perpetual chaos.

They post countless videos online of what I consider exploitative moral-outrage porn — clips of destitute people using drugs, splayed out on sidewalks, incoherent and lost. Few of these appear to be filmed with the person's consent, but all are meant to convey to the good folks in Iowa and Idaho just how bad life can be under "leftist" leadership.

Of course, that narrative is not new.

In 2015, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump called out San Francisco and its sanctuary city policies after the horrific killing of resident Kathryn Steinle, who was shot by an undocumented immigrant with an extensive criminal record and a history of deportations. The shooter, Jose Ines Garcia Zarate, was acquitted of murder after a jury decided he had found the gun under a bench and accidentally fired it. The weapon belonged to a Bureau of Land Management ranger and had been stolen from his vehicle a week earlier.

But with the success of Trump's political attack on the hearts and minds of immigrant-averse Republicans, the pile-on of exploiting woe has continued, culminating recently in the aftermath of the killing of tech entrepreneur Bob Lee.

Lee was stabbed in the early-morning hours of April 4 in an upscale area of downtown. By the next morning, right-wing social media were drowning in condemnations of the city that assumed Lee had been randomly attacked — the unspoken implication that the assailant was likely a homeless drug user. Lee's death quickly became just the latest proof of how violent San Francisco has become despite its continuing low homicide rate.

Police eventually arrested an acquaintance of Lee's for the killing, suggesting the attack may have been motivated by a dispute involving the suspect's sister. Not a random killing at all, but that hasn't stopped these vendors of grievance. After the arrest, one frequent social media poster suggested that it didn't matter who did it, because any type of killing proves just how dangerous San Francisco is.

On Friday, when Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a multiagency effort, including the California National Guard, to target large drug distributors in San Francisco, another one of those agitators declared "victory," wrongly claiming that soldiers would be on the streets because the situation was so dire. CalGuard will provide backroom intelligence-gathering aid. There will be no tanks.

San Francisco has problems, of course. Not little ones. There's a tech bust emptying expensive office towers, much like the dot-com bubble did around the same time AsiaSF first opened.

There is also a crisis of addiction, which has led to unacceptable levels of property crime as well as areas of the city where drugs are openly sold and used, and stolen goods hawked at sidewalk markets. As with so many other places — urban, suburban and rural — fentanyl has become the drug of choice, leading to skyrocketing numbers of overdoses. So far this year, 200 people have died of fentanyl overdoses in the city compared with 142 deaths in the same period last year.

And anti-Asian hate crimes, largely unrelated to the addiction crisis, have rightfully galvanized anger — having increased 167% nationwide between 2020 and 2021, according to FBI data, far outpacing rises for any other group. In San Francisco that has included, among other brazen attacks, an Asian man dying after being shoved into the street, a man throwing a brick at elderly Asian people in a park, and an elderly woman being robbed and beaten by four juveniles in her senior living center.

Anti-Asian hate crimes seem to be declining this year, but Asian communities have become more vocal and political in their demands to better police the city — appeals that at times have been conflated with the far-right talking points but which stem from very different perspectives.

A recent city survey found all residents, regardless of ethnicity, feel less safe than before the pandemic.

Only 36% of respondents said they felt safe or very safe walking alone in their neighborhood at night. In 2019, 53% said they felt safe at night.

Despite that decline, the overall grade for residents' feelings about safety came in at a C+, which isn't great but isn't a hellhole failure, either.

Which is to say, don't believe the hype you read about San Francisco on the internet.

"The real San Francisco is AsiaSF. It's the cherry blossom parade. It's Easter with the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence in Dolores Park," state Sen. Scott Wiener told me, when we stepped outside the club to talk. For those who don't know, the sisters are a collective of activist queer and transgender nuns who have been around since Jimmy Carter was in the Oval Office. They like to roller skate.

"This is a place with a soul that can't be stifled," said Bette McKenzie, a former public relations executive who helped conceive one of the largest AIDS fundraisers on the West Coast, as we screamed over the pounding beat back inside the club.

"In spite of all the BS you hear from the right-wing media, San Francisco is a beacon of hope for so many people," Larry Hashbarger told me. He's one of the owners of AsiaSF.

He came to San Francisco from Boulder, Colo., in 1977, a "young gay man who was not quite ready for the scene." At 71, he is the scene, working the room in a black bedazzled suit fashioned after a Keith Haring painting.

When AsiaSF opened, "the word transgender was not even in our vocabulary yet," Hashbarger told me.

But still, everyone wanted to come. "Pacific Heights matrons would bring their Dom Perignon."

Since then, he estimates a million people have come through the doors. On Friday, Mayor London Breed stopped by, he said. Former U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a San Francisco resident, sent a proclamation "in recognition of outstanding and invaluable service to the community." Even state Treasurer Fiona Ma was there with her brother on Sunday.

"Everybody comes to be who they are and celebrate who they are. No matter who you are, you have to find your truth and live your truth," Hashbarger said.

And that is the enduring strength of San Francisco. People go to New York and Los Angeles seeking fame and wealth. People come to San Francisco seeking themselves — searching for freedom and authenticity.

Those who find their own identity and their own tribes are the true powers in this city, building communities with clout and endurance. Just look at who gets elected, from Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to hold office in California, to Wiener, who has championed a progressive agenda that has made him reviled by the right.

For a small minority, their truth is always going to be born of spite and privilege. And that minority will have its power, as democracy demands, especially in this perverse American timeline in which the push toward authoritarianism requires hate and fear to justify itself. That, said Wiener, is a "challenge," but one San Francisco always has and always will overcome.

For the majority of San Francisco, the outrage peddlers are a sideshow, a pale whisper against the force of the real show in places like AsiaSF.

Decades ago, Westover, the closeted Mormon, found themselves standing on a 20-foot ladder, contemplating suicide — jumping to see if that could quiet the noise and the pain. They were 23. Their parents had rejected them, and being gay or transgender or something else entirely seemed terrifying. Seeing the performers of AsiaSF gave Westover the courage to define themselves on their own terms.

On Sunday night, I saw Westover as a beautiful human wholly owning who they are, surrounded by found family.

"This city is a safe sandbox that allows a person to play without fear," Westover told me. "I think it saved my life."

They aren't the only one San Francisco has saved, and they won't be the last.

That's the beauty of this city, and no amount of fear-mongering will change it.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

 
according to FBI data
Fuck you faggot:
Other journoscum said:

California is second worst in nation on FBI crime reporting​

  • Russell Contreras
  • Megan Rose Dickey
Axios on facebook
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Axios on linkedin
Axios on email
Data: FBI; Chart: Tory Lysik/Axios Visuals
California had the second lowest percentage of law enforcement agencies turn over crime data to the FBI last year.
The big picture: The estimated number of violent crimes in the U.S. decreased slightly in 2021 from 2020, according to the FBI — but the data is incomplete because 40% of law enforcement agencies nationwide failed to report their crime statistics.
  • Experts say the data gap makes it harder to analyze crime trends and fact check claims politicians make about crime, the Marshall Project's Weihua Li reports.
Context: The FBI's annual data set is the foremost way to understand how crime is changing across the U.S., measuring trends like how many murders or rapes took place last year or total people arrested on an annual basis.
By the numbers: An Axios analysis of FBI data released earlier this year found that 2% of California's law enforcement agencies turned in crime data.
Zoom in: None of San Francisco’s seven law enforcement agencies reported crime data to the FBI in 2021.
  • Yes, but: 100% of law enforcement agencies in Connecticut, Delaware, North Dakota and Vermont submitted their crime data to the FBI.
The intrigue: Art Acevedo, a former Houston and Miami police chief, told Axios the lack of reporting is likely a technological challenge for local agencies to get on a new reporting system the FBI introduced in January 2021.
  • Lenore Anderson, founder and president of the Alliance for Safety and Justice, said many agencies still use pen and paper to track crime and input data.
The bottom line: Unless states require police and sheriff's departments to submit crime data to the FBI at higher rates, the country won't be able to recognize crime-related trends and set policies accordingly.

First you do not get to use FBI statistics and ignore the inconvenient facts that they contain.

Second they are incomplete because lawless faggots in your state refuse to fucking provide crime data because THEY ARE LYING ABOUT HOW MUCH CRIME IS GOING ON.

I dunno why but I have awoken with a really shitty attitude and these cunts are not helping.
 
despite the reality that, with the exception of robberies, rates for violent crimes like homicide and rape are so far on par or declining from last year.
Well, damn. Now I feel downright foolish. On par with or declining from the already-astronomical numbers of the bygone era of one calendar year ago?

I sincerely apologize to the utopian metropolis that is San Francisco, it's truly the closest we have to Eden on earth except that Adam is a heroin-addicted illegal alien hobo and Eve is an drag queen with AIDS.
 
Ignore your lying eyes, ears, nose, skin, tongue (you can taste the decay in California) and all common sense you plebian racist! All those junkies, drug needles and hood rats littered about the shit stained streets aren't real you fucking bigot!!! People are not evacuating the state en masse, those stats are blatant Nazi Lies!

I love that this journoscum loon took the even more loony state senator at their word and simply didn't bother to question ANY OF THE OBVIOUS BULLSHIT they were spouting. It truly speaks to the collective brain rot in California.
 
Oh, right, you took shoplifting and minor drug use off the books as crimes, that means the needles everyone steps on and the shuttered businesses that couldn't afford to put up with all that not-theft every day to the tune of millions are just side-effects of utopia, huh?

Lie all you like, the number of Uhaul rents tell the truth.
 
Having had the misfortune of going to the bay area for work earlier this year, and having done so for a trip when I was a teenager over a decade prior, it really is night and fucking day like seeing Berlin in 1939 and Berlin in 1945. The entire ride between SFO and Pacific Heights had patches of encampments and tent cities scattered all over, I hadn't even seen anything so bad since I watched Hurricane Katrina refugees flood my home town and set up in tents. At least they had a good excuse.

So yeah I don't buy it. I'll keep trusting my lying eyes, thanks.
 
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I went to San Fran for the first (and hopefully only) time in 2019 for business. I was already aware that it was considered a shithole, but this is one of the few cases where what people were saying was no exageration nor did it properly prepare me to the absolute concentration of human mysery.

Biggest take away for me was how much contrast there was. Shit on the sidewalk and the first time I thought to myself "yeah, that didn't come from a dog", hobo niggers galore though a good number of whitey clearly with withdrawal. And then a block or two up and sky scrapper with a faggot conference about tech with pronoun tags when going in. I also saw my first tranny in the wild there.

China Town had no hobos ouside of a single chink one which made my almonds roast for a bit.

Basically it was already well beyond what I'm used to seeing in my day to day, I cannot imagine how much worse it is 4 years later and the scamdemic in the middle.
 
I live in California. I can personally testify that San Francisco is actually even worse than people boogieman it to be. Even in the nice wealthy hwite parts of California, there are more homeless than you'd believe everywhere, constant crime everywhere, and so many more places are run down.

Its literally like a campy 90s parody of an urban dystopian near-future. Hollywood knew all along what the policies they support would turn the world into. We even have the corpo tyranny and AIs overlords censoring everyone's thoughts. Play the Cyberpunk videogame and then imagine WAY dirtier, more crime ridden, etc. I played it and was like "Oh hey, this looks like CA, before things got bad."
 
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How do you report a crime in san francisco? do you call 911 and the cops come to you or do you have to go down to the station and hope theres an officer available to file the report? Less reporting = decline in crime rates.


e: whole food closes its SF flagship store because of crime.
 
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