Samela Anderson

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Samela Anderson

Samela Anderson

@samela88

Punky Brewster/Mike Rowe

San Francisco, CA Katılım Mart 2009
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Samela Anderson
Samela Anderson@samela88·
So THIS is what "compassion" & "harm reduction" look like? Death in a toilet stall. Curious if he/she was using in the bathroom of this "SAFE" drug free facility. These policies have body count. This fatality brought to you by @LondonBreed @MattHaneySF @sfbos @SF_HSH @SFPort
Wallace Lee@sf_wallace

First death at the Embarcadero Navigation Center. How sad that drug addicts are being warehoused to die rather than treated. Meanwhile neighbors continue to be terrorized by drugged out people imported from all over the city.

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Arthur Dent
Arthur Dent@BrosephusRex·
@NickKristof @DanielLurie I'm living in some alternate reality. Everyone is talking about how San Francisco has improved. My lying eyes see the opposite. Streets are just as dirty, the clearly sick homeless just as plentiful. This must be what the news in the USSR was like right before the fall.
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Mike Solana
Mike Solana@micsolana·
two months after we wrote about it, everyone is finally discussing what could be the nation's first wealth tax. what nobody's yet discussing is why it was proposed: to fill the giant gaping hole in california's budget left by funding healthcare for illegal immigrants.
Mike Solana@micsolana

california democrats are proposing a wealth tax, which will abolish the concept of private property, in order to fund free healthcare for illegal immigrants. piratewires.com/p/relax-its-ju…

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Antonio García Martínez (agm.eth)
Funny how more or less every weekend in SF you have to ask yourself what performative lefty demonstration or niche lifestyle celebration you don't care about is going on, such that all movement is fucked. Somehow never have to think about this in other cities.
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Kane 謝凱堯
Kane 謝凱堯@kane·
These are three independent stories in the same week about the state of San Francisco bureaucracy:
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Samela Anderson
Samela Anderson@samela88·
@clairlemon Dude. Genuinely used to find you interesting... But you've jumped the shark. Is this just simple click bait?
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Lee Zeldin
Lee Zeldin@epaleezeldin·
🚨The Biden EPA tossed $20 billion of “gold bars off the Titanic”. BIG UPDATE! We found the gold bars and they are now being recovered for you, the hardworking American taxpayer. Here are more of the details:
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Samela Anderson
Samela Anderson@samela88·
@DanielLurie Honest questions: Will multiple bids be required on the contracts? Who qualifies for " affordable homes"? Why is this a success story? Did you work around the red tape? Or did you eliminate it?
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Daniel Lurie 丹尼爾·羅偉
Daniel Lurie 丹尼爾·羅偉@DanielLurie·
Big news for Lower Nob Hill: A 300-unit housing development, including 100 affordable homes, is moving forward. Thank you to the BOS for partnering to get this done. Together, we can cut red tape and make San Francisco more affordable.
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Kristen Mag
Kristen Mag@kristenmag·
Find someone who looks at you the way @JenniferSey looks at saving women’s sports. 🤩
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BAY AREA STATE OF MIND
BAY AREA STATE OF MIND@YayAreaNews·
2008: California will have a high-speed rail from Los Angeles to San Francisco by 2020 at a cost of $30 billion. 2023: California will have a train from Bakersfield to Merced hopefully by 2030 at a cost of no less than $170 billion.
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Richard Hanania
Richard Hanania@RichardHanania·
As an American, you should feel shame when you see ports in Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Savannah being ranked below Congo and Tanzania. Many societal problems have complicated causes. This one is simple: labor unions. Direct all your blame at them.
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Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
The Republic is in trouble. Congress is full of people who are happy to rubber stamp whatever the pentagon, state department, DOJ, FBI, FED… want. Most are not compromised or bribed. They’re just going along to get along as long as you re-elect them and let them wear the pin.
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Mike Solana
Mike Solana@micsolana·
Doom Loop Covid didn’t catalyze San Francisco’s doom loop, San Francisco voted for it. Checking in on Prop C(atastrophe). Tuesday, the San Francisco Chronicle produced two remarkable stories concerning Salesforce founder Marc Benioff. First, the Chronicle reported, due to San Francisco’s increasingly dire homelessness and drug problem there is a very good chance next month will mark Benioff’s final Dreamforce conference hosted in the city. Second — a total coincidence of timing, I’m sure — our industry’s champion of the downtrodden, the poor, and the dispossessed just donated $1 million to the Salvation Army in support of an “aspirational” program for pulling drug addicted homeless people off the streets. It was a “desperately needed” gesture, said Hillary Ronen, a city supervisor who has presided over San Francisco’s decay for six years, and she was not the only one who seemed to truly love this man. Reaction to Marc’s selfless donation to the Salvation Army (tax deductible, of course, and actually made by Salesforce) was equally, and overwhelmingly effusive online, not only from the press and local government, but from activists of every political stripe, and leaders throughout the technology industry. I followed the coverage in genuine shock. How was it possible, I wondered, for Marc Benioff to receive such praise in 2023 for tackling a problem he declared public victory for solving — at something like 1,000 times the cost of his donation to the city, and with an actually incalculable cost to the technology industry — in 2018? Five years ago, riding a wave of unrelentingly positive press, Benioff went to war on behalf of Proposition C, a massive new tax on San Francisco businesses, and the largest tax increase in city history. It was one of the year’s greatest tech industry dramas, as Benioff publicly demonized skeptical tech founders disproportionately hit by the tax, including Stripe’s Patrick Collison, and Square’s Jack Dorsey. Both Dorsey (in a lengthy Twitter thread here) and Collison (in a letter published to Stripe here), along with Mayor London Breed, opposed the proposition, noting, among many things, the city already spent an incredible annual sum on combating homelessness with no apparent plan for actually ending the crisis. With about $300 million allocated to the problem every year, in significant part funneled to the city’s countless homeless non-profits and activist organizations with nothing but shameless, abject failure on their resumes to show for it, there was the reasonable question of how more revenue could possibly help a city with no clearly stated intention for the money, let alone a strategy. The mayor advised an audit on current spending, and the composition of some coherent plan, before further funding was tapped. This was widely considered heartless. Benioff characterized all pushback on his favored policy as callous, greedy propaganda, viciously attacking Dorsey in particular. “When it comes to Proposition C,” he said, “you’re either for the homeless or you’re for yourself.” The proposition passed. Five years later, in keeping with all criticism at the time, around a billion dollars has been seized, an entire generation of tech companies has been run out of the city, and San Francisco’s population of drug addicted homeless people from around the country has increased. Today, all agree the city has a homeless problem, and almost none ascribe that problem to the city’s actual homeless policy. Much has recently been made of San Francisco’s “doom loop,” with a sense that Covid-era remote work led to a depopulated downtown. This, runs popular thinking, gutted local retail, and led to further decline. The worse things get, the worse things get, and none of it is really any single person’s fault. It was just this awful virus, we’re told. But Proposition C catalyzed the tech industry shift out of San Francisco years before Covid, which only accelerated tech’s departure. In other words, the “doom loop” wasn’t caused by the pandemic, it was caused — or at least greatly assisted — by Marc Benioff. Now, years after his ‘victory,’ Benioff himself is hinting at an exit from the city. Incredibly, he is concurrently celebrating the city’s great success in tech, where Salesforce, San Francisco’s largest company, apparently leads. But of course Salesforce is “leading.” Benioff wielded the state as a weapon against the rest of the industry, and in so doing made himself king of a wasteland. Back in 2020, in a piece called Extract or Die, I defended tech leaders and employees for exiting a city run by people who hated the industry, but I lamented tech’s failure to get involved in local politics. No, I argued, tech wasn’t directly responsible for the city’s decline, but it should have been the city’s salvation. That criticism, while I still think generally correct, was in one small part flawed: there had been some effort from tech in service of local politics, but that effort was largely made in support of the activist class committed to the city’s dystopian trajectory, and there is no possible way to redraft industry strategy moving forward without first analyzing the disastrous choices of men like Benioff. In the first place, the failure of Proposition C was right there in the language of its champions. Prior to the vote on the legislation, in which gross receipts tax on businesses with over $50 million in revenue was doubled, then funneled into the newly created Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing, Ted Egan, the city’s “chief economist” (???) declared it would almost certainly reduce homelessness. “Almost certainly.” “Reduce.” For over $600 million a year, in service of (then) something like 7,000 people on the streets, this historic tax increase might “reduce” homelessness. Somehow. In Marc Benioff’s victory lap, the point was much more clearly made: “there is no finish line,” he said. It was, verbatim, a stated belief that San Francisco’s homelessness crisis would literally never end. This is because solving the problem was not the purpose of the policy. Indeed, again and critically, there was never a plan in place to actually end homelessness, and no such plan exists today. The purpose of Proposition C was and remains to fund the city’s activist class of local non-profits, which — and this is genuinely a steelman — Benioff must have supposed an inherently good group of people, who meant well. Benioff credits two things for convincing him to support Proposition C: 1) a conversation with tech journalist Kara Swisher, which is a fun digression for another day, and 2) a conversation with the socialist activist Christin Evans — or, social-ish (her family owns a $12 million home in the city). Evans publicly insulted Benioff for callousness on the issue of homelessness, which garnered a public apology from the Salesforce founder, and eventually led to a phone call between Evans, Benioff, and activist Jennifer Friedenbach, Executive Director of the Coalition on Homelessness (COH) who helped craft Proposition C. Today, Friedenbach sits on the Proposition C oversight committee, which has somehow also greenlit funding for her organization. Accusations of corruption have been made, though few seem to care, and Friedenbach’s paltry $250,000 grant is not why I’m writing today. In the first place, I’m assuming this woman is not actually dumb enough to step into something so obviously suspicious without some kind of legal loophole in her favor. But more importantly I’d like to focus on her actual policy, which Benioff helped make law. Under Friedenbach, the Prop C oversight committee has recommended $423 million be spent on “permanent supportive housing.” This is the popular activist euphemism for the practice of giving free one-bedroom apartments to every drug addict who moves to the city. A little less than 10,000 homeless are already supported in such a manner, with something like 33,000 still waiting (it remains unclear how this list has grown so long, given San Francisco’s unsheltered population appears to be a fraction of this number). It is an incredible sum of units required, which couldn’t be built even were there adequate funds for such an undertaking as San Francisco largely, and quite famously, prohibits new housing at almost every possible turn. Unsheltered homeless with no free one-bedroom apartment available are placed on a waitlist, and left to die outside. Meanwhile, a comparatively small $53 million has been set aside for “shelter,” a concept the city’s socialist left largely considers inhuman, vehemently opposes, and also can’t be built. Sanjana Friedman recently published a detailed report on this entire strategy, and philosophy, in a great piece for Pirate Wires called San Francisco’s Homeless Ticking Time Bomb. But, in a nutshell, here’s where the city’s at: A well-funded, well-organized, highly vocal class of activists who genuinely believe anyone who moves to San Francisco is entitled to a free one-bedroom apartment for the rest of their life (provided they are sufficiently drug addicted or mentally ill) maintains total strategic decision making for the city’s homeless funding. Separately, activists have systematically driven productive tax payers out of the city along with industry, which they both hate on an instinctive level and need to fund their policies, while marketing to the nation’s entire population of the mentally unwell and dispossessed. The results were inevitable. With analysis of the city’s strategy here laid down, I think it’s worth finally explaining exactly what the city needs to do — what every city needs to do — to solve the homeless problem. Much of this solution is obvious, but requires a painful engagement with reality. In the first place, homelessness in San Francisco is not a housing problem. San Francisco has a massive drug problem, and drug addicts are chiefly motivated by proximity to drugs. This is why American cities with high, well-meaning tolerance for drug dealing, and ample supportive services provided in place of mandatory treatment, attract the most homeless people in the country, and such people prefer urban slums adjacent to major drug markets over idyllic farms and fields and remote, seaside vistas. Like most people, I believe we live in a society in which the absolute lowest a man should be able to fall is onto a bed, in a warm shelter, with food, clothing, bathroom facilities, and medical care. Fortunately, San Francisco already has more than enough money needed to provide such charity for every homeless person in the city. All the city requires is strategy and will. The policy should look something like this: strip all non-profits of city homeless funds, then pool all of the city’s homeless funds in the mayor’s office, and task a single person with directing a new, emergency strategy. The goal: zero homeless people on the streets of San Francisco. With hundreds of millions of dollars at the director’s disposal, and with total legislative alignment from the government, emergency shelter should be immediately established on the outskirts of the city, in one of the parks perhaps, far from the city’s drug markets. Then heated, temporary shelter, bathrooms, food, clothing, and nursing support geared toward treating addiction should all be supplied. Once the shelter is erected, and the man power is put in place to facilitate the emergency program, the city must immediately ban sleeping on the streets. Henceforth, the homeless should be provided the options of 1) moving to emergency shelter, or 2) taking a free bus home, with the reestablishment of the city’s Homeward Bound program. Finally, drug markets should be forcibly cleared. Fentanyl dealers should be arrested, and tried for mass murder. Fentanyl dealers living in the country illegally should be deported. With legislative alignment from the city, and the full budget for homelessness redirected from the task of growing our city’s homeless population to providing that population with emergency shelter and supportive services, the problem can be solved in a month or two. And it has to be solved. This remains the most important thing: in order to solve a problem, solving the problem has to be the goal — not funding committees to think about the problem, not in some ambiguous way easing the problem, but actually solving the problem. This is true of homelessness, but is also, I think, a philosophy of governance surprisingly not in vogue, in almost any corner, from almost any party, for almost any one of our great, civic challenges. For most executives in tech, San Francisco’s failure of intention is difficult to comprehend, as business is impossible without clarity of purpose, and technology in particular is nothing if not a system of inputs and outputs directed toward some very specific end. But while such earnestness tends to make technologists naturally somewhat vulnerable to grifters, and blind to reality, it also makes them, if they would truly commit themselves, an ideal group of leaders — for our cities first, and then our country. Just no more amicable calls with deranged activists, please. And problem solved, by the way. You’re welcome. -SOLANA
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Chiquita’s Friends Dog Rescue
Chiquita’s Friends Dog Rescue@ChiquitasFriend·
URGENT SAVE SALLY 🚨 Meet Sally, a sweetheart from the streets of San Lucas. Despite facing unimaginable hardships, her spirit remains unbroken. Sally has a slew of health problems that are currently preventing her from being adopted: She’s developed ehrlichia, a bacteria that she has developed from living on the streets. Her foot was likely abused by her previous owner. She was recently discovered to have also developed anemia. To have a chance at a better life, Sally will need her leg amputated. Given the cost of this procedure, we’re asking you for donations to help cover it. Our goal is $3000 total, and you can make your contribution by going here: bit.ly/3OTcN7h.
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Samela Anderson
Samela Anderson@samela88·
@MattHaneySF Did you just "Accountable"? Roll the video of Matt's "Hold me accountable" speech! Matt said he wanted to be held "accountable" at a Stop Fentanyl rally but he turned his district into FentyDome & fought to keep Fenty dealers on the street before skipping off to Sacramento.
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Stephen Martin-Pinto
Stephen Martin-Pinto@StephenMPinto·
...Furthermore, any mod org who claims that they can improve quality of life in San Francisco while simultaneously supporting politicians like Scott Wiener or Matt Haney should not be taken seriously, especially in light of their recent Assembly and Senate Bills...
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Samela Anderson
Samela Anderson@samela88·
@MattHaneySF Cool Matt. Now do the tenderloin.... How is the "wellness check" on district 6? How do we "hold you accountable" as you requested?
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💥Susan Dyer Reynolds🗞️
💥Susan Dyer Reynolds🗞️@SusanDReynolds·
This is one of the suspects in the beating of a former police commissioner in the Marina yesterday. Here is his record. ⁦@BrookeJenkinsSF⁩ ⁦@LondonBreed⁩ ⁦@SFPDChief⁩ does he look like someone who should have been arrested and released over 17 times?
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Michael Shellenberger
Michael Shellenberger@shellenberger·
San Francisco is in free fall. We don't know who killed your friend, but we know homicides are up 20% & drug ODs up 18%. Gov. @GavinNewsom & Mayor @LondonBreed need to deploy the National Guard to restore public safety. That starts with shutting down the open-air drug dealing.
Jake Shields@jakeshieldsajj

I just found out my good friend was killed last night while walking him in San Francisco He was in the “good” part of the city and appeared to have been targeted in a random mugging/attack Fuck San Francisco

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