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Friday, May 17, 2024

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Tagged with: displacement

‘The system is broken’

A photographer working with homeless people reflects on the utter failure of the city's sweeps and housing policy.

The myth of drug cartels is a cover for state-sanctioned violence

Author Oswaldo Zavala says the way we think about Mexican narcos is all wrong

The real problem with the CPUC’s robotaxi decision

Like AI, this is going to displace human employees. And nobody in government is demanding that the profits be shared with the people whose lives are damaged.

Breed housing plan, which threatens tenants, gets narrow commission nod

Maybe Paris is not such a great role model for the West Side of town.

This is the state of housing policy in SF in 2023

Planners say environmental law doesn't matter, and supes approve a project almost everyone hates, all to deal with state Sen. Scott Wiener's rules—and Breed wants to make it worse

Et Tu, Mother Jones?

Once a storied left-wing publication, the magazine is now fallen into the neoliberal Yimby camp—and the editor refuses to talk to us about it.

Arts Forecast: Exploring SF’s Black past and present through the Great Migration

Plus: Afro-Haitian bard Wesli brings twoubadou folk, Surgeon has us swooning in techno.

SF continues to violate court order on sweeps of homeless people, filing says

Cops and clean-up teams offer no shelter, destroy belongings, and ignore a federal judge's ruling, advocates and unhoused people report.

In ‘Chinglish,’ much to be found via that which is lost in translation

United States and China's marriage of convenience gets a hard, if humorous look at SF Playhouse.

Sondheim’s ‘Merrily We Roll Along’ highlights his talent for writing women

Characters garner empathy in tale of selling-out and relationships in its wake.