Anonymous wrote:The criticism of covid school closure on this thread is a breath of fresh air. Where were all of you when every other comment was "school isn't childcare!" when working parents were saying they were at their breaking point?
Anonymous wrote:The criticism of covid school closure on this thread is a breath of fresh air. Where were all of you when every other comment was "school isn't childcare!" when working parents were saying they were at their breaking point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a failed city, it pretty impossible to buy a house there. When do all these people fleeing actually flee?
When they have kids. There are very few kids in SF.
Anonymous wrote:For a failed city, it pretty impossible to buy a house there. When do all these people fleeing actually flee?
In February 2021, board members agreed that they would avoid the phrase learning loss to describe what was happening to kids locked out of their classrooms. Instead they would use the words learning change. Schools being shut just meant students were “having different learning experiences than the ones we currently measure,” Gabriela López, a member of the board at the time, said. “They are learning more about their families and their cultures.” Framing this as some kind of “deficit” was wrong, the board argued.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A big issue is SFPD. They stopped arresting for petty crime even before Chesa was elected. This is a theme throughout many cities in the US - the police work slowdown has been real, they stop arresting (except when there’s a gun, a body, or a protest), and that ends up leading to civilians feeling helpless.
A prediction: nothing will change with Chesa gone. SFPD is still pissed off at the Mayor, the council, and the citizens who ask for respect of their rights. How do you reign in a rogue police force?
This is a good point. SFPD is a department that is famously corrupt and out of control and everyone knows it. They need full time DOJ oversight.
Yes. The downward slide is all the fault of the police. That excuse played itself out since the summer of 2020 and guess what happened? Crime has skyrocketed in all major cities. DC looks like a dump in multi places - but heck - we have graffiti in the middle of a major commuting street and carjackings from the under 16 age group.
Priorities shifted and the result is crime and looking the other way in the name of equity:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A big issue is SFPD. They stopped arresting for petty crime even before Chesa was elected. This is a theme throughout many cities in the US - the police work slowdown has been real, they stop arresting (except when there’s a gun, a body, or a protest), and that ends up leading to civilians feeling helpless.
A prediction: nothing will change with Chesa gone. SFPD is still pissed off at the Mayor, the council, and the citizens who ask for respect of their rights. How do you reign in a rogue police force?
This is a good point. SFPD is a department that is famously corrupt and out of control and everyone knows it. They need full time DOJ oversight.
Yes. The downward slide is all the fault of the police. That excuse played itself out since the summer of 2020 and guess what happened? Crime has skyrocketed in all major cities. DC looks like a dump in multi places - but heck - we have graffiti in the middle of a major commuting street and carjackings from the under 16 age group.
Priorities shifted and the result is crime and looking the other way in the name of equity:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A big issue is SFPD. They stopped arresting for petty crime even before Chesa was elected. This is a theme throughout many cities in the US - the police work slowdown has been real, they stop arresting (except when there’s a gun, a body, or a protest), and that ends up leading to civilians feeling helpless.
A prediction: nothing will change with Chesa gone. SFPD is still pissed off at the Mayor, the council, and the citizens who ask for respect of their rights. How do you reign in a rogue police force?
This is a good point. SFPD is a department that is famously corrupt and out of control and everyone knows it. They need full time DOJ oversight.
Anonymous wrote:A big issue is SFPD. They stopped arresting for petty crime even before Chesa was elected. This is a theme throughout many cities in the US - the police work slowdown has been real, they stop arresting (except when there’s a gun, a body, or a protest), and that ends up leading to civilians feeling helpless.
A prediction: nothing will change with Chesa gone. SFPD is still pissed off at the Mayor, the council, and the citizens who ask for respect of their rights. How do you reign in a rogue police force?
Anonymous wrote:A big issue is SFPD. They stopped arresting for petty crime even before Chesa was elected. This is a theme throughout many cities in the US - the police work slowdown has been real, they stop arresting (except when there’s a gun, a body, or a protest), and that ends up leading to civilians feeling helpless.
A prediction: nothing will change with Chesa gone. SFPD is still pissed off at the Mayor, the council, and the citizens who ask for respect of their rights. How do you reign in a rogue police force?
Anonymous wrote:I would pay for an interview with Chessa’s parents. Curious if these SDS folk would also be fed up with SF today.
Anonymous wrote:The petty crime was frustrating, but it wasn’t what lit the city up for revolution. The housing crush is miserable, but it’s been that way for more than a decade now. The spark that lit this all on fire was the school board. And the population ready to rage was San Francisco’s parents.
The city’s schools were shut for most of the 2020–21 academic year—longer than schools in most other cities, and much longer than San Francisco’s private schools. In the middle of the pandemic, with no real reopening plan in sight, school-board meetings became major events, with audiences on Zoom of more than 1,000. The board didn’t have unilateral power to reopen schools even if it wanted to—that depended on negotiations between the district, the city, and the teachers’ union—but many parents were appalled to find that the board members didn’t even seem to want to talk much about getting kids back into classrooms. They didn’t want to talk about learning loss or issues with attendance and functionality. It seemed they couldn’t be bothered with topics like ventilation. Instead they wanted to talk about white supremacy.