Can We Fix San Francisco?
San Fransicko author Michael Shellenberger on homelessness, crime, addiction, and his differences with progressives and libertarians.

In December, San Francisco Mayor London Breed declared a state of emergency in the city's Tenderloin district, which will lead to increased police presence in the epicenter of the city's homelessness crisis. It was a major turnaround for Breed, who after the police killing of George Floyd in 2020 called for "ending the use of police in responding to non-criminal activity." The move was criticized by groups like the Coalition on Homelessness, which called it an "expansion of strategies that have been tried and failed" that would contribute to the "instability and poor public health outcomes" of people living on the streets.
Michael Shellenberger, author of San Fransicko: Why Progressives Ruin Cities, called Breed's new "tough love" approach a "big step in the right direction." The homelessness crisis, he argues, is actually an addiction and mental health crisis; to stop it, he believes, we need to end policies that permit open-air drug scenes on public property, prevent police from enforcing the law, and undermine the creation of a functional mental health care system. Shellenberger is certainly not a libertarian, though says he appreciates the "cultural libertarianism" of his home state.
In January, Reason's Zach Weissmueller interviewed Shellenberger, a Bay Area activist best known for his advocacy of nuclear power, about his foray into social policy, his critiques of both progressive and libertarian politics, and whether America's cities can clean up their streets without grossly violating civil liberties.
Reason: Your new book is San Fransicko: Why Progressives Ruin Cities. First off, could we talk about the title for a second? It's a little aggressive, no? Aren't you worried about scaring off potentially persuadable people?
Shellenberger: I don't want to scare off anybody, but I believe in truth in advertising. San Francisco and other liberal cities are sick. They have people with untreated mental illness and untreated addiction camping in parks, on sidewalks, using drugs publicly, defecating publicly. It's a huge public health problem. I don't just mean homelessness—I also mean the broader urban decay, including rising crime.
I also argue that there's a sick way of thinking about these problems, which is to pathologize our system as fundamentally evil and wrong, and that that leads to terrible outcomes. The book is about San Francisco, but it's also really about what the subtitle says, which is why progressives ruin cities. Why is it that cities that ostensibly care the most about poor people, minorities, and people suffering mental illness and addiction treat them so terribly? What's going on? That's the reason for the book.
I have identified as a progressive. I now identify as a liberal and a moderate, and I see myself making the case for institutions—police and criminal justice and functioning electricity grids and homeless shelters.
The perspective that you bring to this as a former activist involved in progressive causes is oddly relatable to me, because progressive politics and libertarian politics overlap in many of these areas—drug legalization, criminal justice reform, the rights of those with mental illness. As a former Californian who has seen and documented a lot of the tragedy unfolding on the streets, I've had to personally think very deeply about how some of these policies have been implemented and their real-world effects. I still want to see major changes in laws and sentencing across the country that maximize personal liberty, but my general sense is that the way it's been implemented in practice has emphasized the personal liberty side of the equation while ignoring the personal responsibility part. For a libertarian, those things are bound together. What is your big-picture diagnosis of what's gone wrong in California cities?
I'm in California because I love the cultural libertarianism here, the fact that we really reject a lot of the traditional status hierarchy of the East Coast around where you went to school, working in big companies, stuff like that. I love the entrepreneurialism.
I also care a lot about people. I mean, I think the trip that libertarians lay on people is that they care about freedom more. And the trip that progressives lay on people is that they're more compassionate. The truth is that a lot of us love our freedom and a lot of us care about other people, and we're looking for some practical ways to solve these problems.
If you take the so-called homeless problem, I believe it's fundamentally a problem of untreated mental illness and drug addiction, a form of mental illness. It's often self-inflicted, and it sometimes comes from trauma or from undiagnosed depression, anxiety, or schizophrenia, but sometimes it just comes from partying too much.
We don't have a functioning psychiatric system. A lot of people that are addicted to hard drugs might have done fine with an antidepressant, some cognitive behavioral therapy, and exercise, which works for almost everybody. We don't have that, and that's the traditional progressive criticism.
Then the other issue is why are there so many people on the streets in San Francisco? It's because we let them. There's a myth that it's because of the weather. Certainly in freezing places like Chicago, it's hard to be on the streets year-round. But there's other places like Miami, which are warm, which don't have the same problems that we have. Or they did, and then they fixed them. The solution is basically universal shelter—a safe and clean place to sleep. It should not be so nice that it attracts people to want to stay there.
That's not the policy we have. We have a "housing first" policy rather than a "shelter first" policy, under this utopian idea that we can just provide everybody who wants their own apartment in San Francisco or Venice Beach with their own apartment. It's obviously wrong. Just geographically you can't do it, but financially you can't do it. And it creates a terrible incentive for people to become homeless.
We need a "treatment first" policy. We need to enforce laws, including misdemeanors, including against public camping, public defecation, and public drug use. Those are cries for help from people. When they break those laws, they should be arrested, brought before a judge, and given the opportunity to have rehab or psychiatric care rather than jail or prison.
We should seek to reduce the size of the prison population. That's a goal that I had in the 1990s when I worked for [George] Soros' foundation and Soros-funded nonprofits. I still share that view, but that's not what many progressive prosecutors are doing. Prosecutors in L.A., San Francisco, Philadelphia, and Chicago are just letting people out of jail, and they're not prosecuting crimes.
The core American value has been freedom ever since our founding. That's a beautiful value, and we should continue to have that value, but it does require responsibility, at the individual level but also at the societal level. We need to balance those two values.
In terms of models, I looked at the Netherlands but also Portugal. The Europeans all do the same thing: They don't allow people to camp publicly, use drugs publicly, defecate publicly. They do require people to stay in shelters.

"Housing first" is the operating assumption of most homelessness policy. There's a simplicity to it that's appealing.
If you give people with untreated mental illness and addiction their own apartments and don't deal with the untreated mental illness or addiction, they end up back on the street, often very quickly. We now know from a big Harvard study that was done over 12 years that there were no better outcomes for people that had housing first than non–housing first, even on their own metric of keeping people in housing.
The National Academies of Science, our premier research body, did a review of the science a couple years ago [and] found that "housing first" did not have any improved outcomes. And there was some evidence that it had worse outcomes because it didn't deal with the underlying problem of addiction and mental illness. Just to be fair to my opponents on this, their response is, "Well, we never said that you wouldn't also have services."
We don't have functioning psychiatric and addiction care services, but a lot of it is also victim ideology, [which says] that you should give them things, like their own apartment, and offer them help but don't mandate it, because that would be an extension of the victimization. And that's where everything goes wrong.
There is some amount of coercion that's usually required for people to quit their addiction. People do need to be arrested. In Portugal, they do these interventions with a mix of family members, social workers, government officials, and cops. I think that's where the dogma has interrupted the proper treatment of people with addiction or mental illness: actually requiring some amount of pressure or coercion, if only the enforcement of laws when they break them.
One of the things that social workers do in the Netherlands is offer people their own private room as an incentive, or eventually maybe their own apartment. But even their own room is a really good incentive for people, because people don't like congregate spaces; everybody's the same in that way. So that's a "housing earned" approach. With a carrot-and-stick model, you're always trying to give people a reward when they respond properly, and then a stick—some consequence—when they violate it. There were big studies done on this in Birmingham, Alabama, actually, including around crack. Crack addicts who were given their own apartment as a reward for passing a drug test did very well.
An important piece of that is to have case managers. You need a bossy, annoying social worker. You're not supposed to like your social worker. They're trying to get you independent of them. A social worker needs to have a significant amount of power actually delivering those rewards and incentives.
I want to talk to you about the drug war, which I still see as a giant failure. I think that decriminalization and eventually legalization is the right path forward to alleviate a lot of the suffering we see on the streets and sidewalks—maybe done in a more careful way than it's been done in some of these cities. You say in the book that you were once a critic of the drug war. Do you now think it's a good idea? Given what we know about the effects of the black market, people having their lives ruined with jail or prison time, is keeping drugs criminalized a viable path forward?
I still want to see less incarceration. We had a system that was seeking rehabilitation with a model of nonfixed sentences, variable sentences for prison, where there was a lot of leeway on the part of parole boards in terms of reducing time in prison in exchange for good behavior. It was actually the radical left that pushed to get rid of that and have fixed sentences in the '60s and '70s. It was the conservatives who then went along with it and said, yeah, we'll just have longer sentences. So in some ways I think we were going in a better direction in the '50s.
I think it is also helpful to get some picture of the numbers of people that are actually in jail for drugs. There's a lot of mythologies promoted by things like The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander, and others, which suggest that the majority of people in prison are there for nonviolent drug crimes. It's not the case. It's true that half the people in federal prisons are there for drugs, but federal prisons are just about 13 percent of total prisoners. Almost 90 percent of prisoners are in state prisons. And of those, only 14 percent are there on drug charges; over half are there for violence.
Did the drug war succeed or fail? Well, on the one hand, it has spectacularly failed on every level, because we have 100,000 people that died from drugs last year. That's an increase from 17,000 in the year 2000. I mean, the numbers are mind-blowing. That's three times more people dying of drugs than car accidents, five times more than from homicides. It's the No. 1 cause of death right now for people between the ages of 18 and 45. These are terrible numbers.
Our thinking had traditionally been just: decriminalize drugs or prosecute people and lock them up. I think there is a third way, which is much more similar to the Dutch and Portuguese models. [In] the Dutch model, they are putting pressure on addicts to quit. At the same time, if you're using heroin or cocaine in the privacy of your own home, and you're not camping on the streets, they're not going to go after you.
In terms of drug dealing, drug dealing continues in the Netherlands. I don't think you could get rid of drug dealing or drug use without a severe curtailment of our civil liberties, which nobody, not even the most fascist in our society would support. But you can disallow open drug scenes. [With that focus] you get out of this black-and-white view that you're going to somehow eradicate drugs from society.
I have arguments with my conservative friends who think that somehow we could do something to stop the flow of fentanyl and meth into the United States. We couldn't stop the flow of cocaine and heroin, and those are plant-based substances. When you're talking about synthetics like meth and fentanyl, which are made in labs in Mexico and then shipped across the border, I mean, forget about it. You can't stop the flow of drugs, and you can't stop drug dealing or drug use. The right place of intervention, then, is at the neighborhood level and at the level of the addict who is committing crimes.
I think you can make the case for cities prohibiting these open-air drug scenes on public property—on libertarian grounds, even. Where it gets dicey is with the issue of personal consumption or sales within the privacy of your own home or a private venue. And in Portugal, for the record, they will arrest you just for doing drugs, and bring you in front of a drug court, and then force you into rehab. Are you willing to draw a bright line there and focus on the open-air drug scenes and not going after casual drug users?
I'm very comfortable with that. Being explicit about it and creating some societal consensus is an important step in solving this problem. I am very uncomfortable with the government getting involved in selling these drugs or selling them from pharmacies. I think it's OK to decriminalize. Decriminalization is different than legalization. I think it should be hard to get those substances, not easy. Right now, $10 a day can get you your supply of fentanyl, about $10 a day for meth as well. I mean, that's just basically free at that point, when it's the cost of two Starbucks frappuccinos.
OK, but we've had this opioid crisis. And in areas where they crack down on pain pills, people turn to illicit street drugs and the overdoses go up. Isn't there a case for just allowing the legal sale of all of it? We need to build up a safety net around it. We need to build appropriate treatment centers, put recovery up there as one of the top priorities, and learn to grapple with the reality of these drugs in a more sophisticated manner society-wide.
I look to the Europeans because they're ahead of us on this. They had open drug scenes in the late '80s. They made the same mistake that we are making now. They changed their approach, they involved law enforcement in the early '90s, and they fixed it. There are supervised drug use sites in the Netherlands. They get between 10 and 20 people per day. That's a tiny number of people if you think about it.
There are some people that they do give heroin to in the Netherlands—less than 150. Those are people for whom methadone, which is the substitute for heroin, did not work. Suboxone or buprenorphine, which is somewhat superior to methadone, is widely available. I'm on board with the Dutch model. I'm fine if you need to allow some folks to use those harder drugs, but they do not sell heroin or fentanyl in coffee shops in the same way that they do marijuana.
By the way, marijuana smoking is not allowed in public outside of those coffee shops in the Netherlands. And in Portugal as well. They do arrest drug users who use in public. I interviewed the head of the Portuguese drug program, who said very clearly, "We do not normalize drug use."
I do not think we should make it easy for people to get access to those hard drugs. I have even become somewhat more conservative on alcohol and marijuana. I used to roll my eyes at prohibitions on selling alcohol on Sundays or at the supermarket or past 10 p.m. [Now] I think those can actually lead people to change their behaviors in positive ways. I worry about the heavy promotion of marijuana.
But look, it's hard. There's a problem right now in California where we've taxed marijuana so much that there's just a much more thriving black market for marijuana, because they can sell marijuana for so much cheaper. It's a tough problem.
Your big-picture idea for fixing dysfunction on the streets is this agency that you call Cal Psych, which would override local mental health departments and funnel those with mental illnesses and drug addictions into a centralized system. And you're a critic of what you call the results of the neoliberal model of contracting to nonprofits.
But aren't more localized public-private partnerships more accountable to communities? Why should anyone trust a system run by California's state government, which oversaw the system of abusive insane asylums of the late 19th and mid-20th centuries? Why would I expect something run out of Sacramento to be cost-effective, humane, or accountable?
In the current system, you have a bunch of charities, churches, private health care providers, and rehab health care providers that are paid by taxpayers at the county level to provide care. Right now, they're not accountable. They have been struggling for decades. They can't coordinate even at the local level.
Part of the problem is the population itself. The addict population is highly transient. If it's a criminal population, they're often escaping local police jurisdictions that are after them. But if they're mentally ill, there's also a high level of transience. So it's just a huge problem in that sense.
The other big problem is the cost. San Francisco and Los Angeles are attracting huge numbers of addicts from around the region, the state, and the country. There's people on the streets from Cleveland and West Virginia.
San Francisco's rich, but it can't provide psychiatric and addiction care for every addict in America. You have a physical problem: We don't have enough homeless shelters, psychiatric beds, residential care in San Francisco. And you never will. The city's just too tiny for it.
In cheaper parts of the state, like the Central Valley, you can have rehab facilities that are on organic farms, with woodworking classes and programming classes to help people get their lives together. And if they're in Fresno, it's a lot cheaper than if they're in San Francisco or Venice Beach or downtown L.A., even. It's good to get people out of drug scenes. The most famous [example] is American soldiers in Vietnam who became addicted to heroin. They came back to the United States, and most of them were able to quit without any problem, because they weren't around it all the time.
With Cal Psych, I'm arguing for a super-hierarchical, transparent agency that does contracts with these different providers, so there will still be a lot of private-sector providers. I don't think you need to nationalize the entire sector. The Dutch, for example, do a big subcontract with the Salvation Army. It's actually how it works in Massachusetts.
It would be a government agency with a CEO who reports directly to the governor, with regional managers who oversee case workers and contractors.
Look, there's no perfect model. If this is up and running and has success for a few decades, by 2050 or 2060 or 2070 it may not be working anymore, and you may need to change those institutions. I think this is actually what the Founders meant when they said that you need a revolution every several decades. These institutions do get corrupt.
I know from reading your book that you don't want to go back to the bad old days of insane asylums and mass incarceration. But the current trajectory in these cities is clearly not right either. What is the middle path? And how do you think that those of us who are legitimately concerned about issues like personal liberty and autonomy and not bringing in heavy-handed law enforcement who bother people for sitting on a park bench with their stuff can be part of a productive coalition to get America's cities back on track for the 21st century?
We don't want over-incarceration. That means that we need to rely more heavily on good policing, psychiatry, and probation. I would include, within psychiatry, rehab and addiction care. You also need some kind of case worker. You need empowered case workers—"assertive case management" is what it's called—to bridge those things.
One of the big arguments for defunding the cops is that they shouldn't be responding to mental health calls; we should have social workers do that. Actually, less than 10 percent of those mental health calls are safe enough for a social worker alone. A lot of those mental health calls are really scary and involve people engaged in violent activities. Really what you want is more soft cops and more hard social workers, and you want them working together. It sounds very kumbaya, but it's not easy and it does take the police departments changing.
That's why I think you need something like Cal Psych, because I think it has to be somewhat hierarchical in the same way that police departments are hierarchical, where there's some mandate that you have to work with the social worker or you have to work with a cop in this particular way.
In terms of psychiatry, I'm with you. There have been some people that have called for the return to big asylums. The evidence, and basically what everybody says who has to live in one of those, is that residential care is much preferred to big, old asylums. You have to remember, then, that those residential care facilities are going to have to be in people's communities, and there's usually very strong NIMBY ["not in my backyard"] resistance. I think some of that is solved by being able to have those residential care facilities spread out more uniformly around the state, not all concentrated in downtown San Francisco. But I think that's an important reform and probably does need a lot of federal help.
And then probation. We would rather not have the state doing drug tests or electronic monitoring, for example, but those are better approaches than prison. We have to get away from thinking of sentencing as a switch: You're either incarcerated or you're not; you either do your time or you're free. There's a lot of good middle ground in electronic monitoring, electronic ankle bracelets. The technology is very sophisticated at this point. We should be doing a lot more of that.
One of the things you hear a lot when you interview people is they'll say, "I really hate my parole officer, they really bug me" or, "I hate my case worker, but I need them in order to stay sober and keep my life together." I have three friends from high school who became homeless drug addicts. Two are dead; one is alive. He has told mutual friends of ours that he feels he needs to be on probation to be getting the constant care he needs.
It's not the libertarian ideal, but it's a lot better than chaos or mass incarceration.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity. The full video version can be viewed here.
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Can We Fix San Francisco?
There's a rule like that, right? Where if a headline asks a question, the answer is always no.
Things have to, sadly, get significantly worse before fixing it is possible.
SF voters have to suffer horribly to change their views.
Would it help if SF voters were FORCED to buy Reason magazines? A little authoritarianism goes a LONG way, doesn't it?
Hey Damiksec, damiskec, and damikesc, and ALL of your other socks…
How is your totalitarian scheme to FORCE people to buy Reason magazines coming along?
Free speech (freedom from “Cancel Culture”) comes from Facebook, Twitter, Tik-Tok, and Google, right? THAT is why we need to pass laws to prohibit these DANGEROUS companies (which, ugh!, the BASTARDS, put profits above people!)!!! We must pass new laws to retract “Section 230” and FORCE the evil corporations to provide us all (EXCEPT for my political enemies, of course!) with a “UBIFS”, a Universal Basic Income of Free Speech!
So leftist “false flag” commenters will inundate Reason-dot-com with shitloads of PROTECTED racist comments, and then pissed-off readers and advertisers and buyers (of Reason magazine) will all BOYCOTT Reason! And right-wing idiots like Damikesc will then FORCE people to support Reason, so as to nullify the attempts at boycotts! THAT is your ultimate authoritarian “fix” here!!!
“Now, to “protect” Reason from this meddling here, are we going to REQUIRE readers and advertisers to support Reason, to protect Reason from boycotts?”
Yup. Basically. Sounds rough. (Quote damikesc)
(Etc.)
See https://reason.com/2020/06/24/the-new-censors/
Embrace it, SQRLSY. Where is your entrepreneurial spirit? The Tenderloin District is screaming for a food truck catering to you and your brethren's unique culinary desires.
SQRLSY's Sidewalk Snack Truck
We've got the freshest S##t in town
I've thought about that, but I can't compete with Sevo the Pedo and ALL of Sevo's homeless buddies who poop FOR FREE all over the place out there! HOW can one compete with FREE!?!?
It's all about the presentation.
Garnishes maybe? Tufts of fur from road-killed skunks? Side dishes such as squirming maggots?
Start creating money from home .It is a terribly nice and simple job .I am a daily student and half time work from home. yui I made $30,000 last month on-line acting from home. Everybody will do that job and make additional money by following this:-
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Link and a lot of details….... http://extradollars3.blogspot.com/
There are several business models that compete against a free product.
Practically Free water flows from the tap yet bottled water is $1 billion industry
Free porn is available on the Internet yet there’s plenty of people pay for it.
Oxygen bars!!!
https://www.healthline.com/health/oxygen-bar
I'm holding out, waiting for a "gravity bar" to open close to me!
SQRLSY's Sidewalk Snack Roller. That way the initials get to be SSSR! 😀
He's eat up his own profits.
Also, I suspect that the subtitle would have been more appropriate as "How Progressives Ruin Cities". The answer as to Why is incredibly simple, Progressives are evil fucktarded assholes who delight in causing suffering.
We just need to lock them in the open sewers they've built with their homeless companions and not let them back out.
I don't think they delight is causing suffering. I think they just believe that their doing it for the greater good and that individuals are expendable to that end. It still makes them evil, but I don't think suffering is the point in itself.
Also, they never seem to think they're going to be the ones suffering. It's always going to happen to someone else.
I spelled a bunch of stuff wrong above. I'm hopped up on cold medicine.
I mean... I see like one "their/they're" there (hah!) but nothing else... Looks better than about 99.999% of things I've read on the internet. 😀
At least you sniffed it out. Now get some rest, a nasty cold is nothing to sneeze at
> I don't think they delight is causing suffering. I think they just believe that their doing it for the greater good and that individuals are expendable to that end.
I'd like to think that. But I just can't, anymore. They end up with that result so often, it must be intentional at this point.
I think (know) that most liberals are addicted to caring about suffering, and most are equally addicted to DOING SOMETHING in response to caring about suffering. In Moral Foundations Theory (and other social analyses), liberals are primarily motivated by harm prevention. Think about a 5 year old girl or an elderly grandmother responding to a hurt puppy.
Now think about the girl and grandmother running massive government and NGO programs.
Maybe not in causing suffering, per se, but there's not beneficence in their actions, either.
From C. S. Lewis, from his 1948 book God in the Dock: Essays on Theology:
Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of earth. This very kindness stings with intolerable insult. To be “cured” against one’s will and cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals.
H.L. Mencken perhaps said it more succinctly:
The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false-face for the urge to rule it. Power is what all messiahs really seek: not the chance to serve.
Calling other people are evil because they believe in misguided policy approaches is not going to fix things. Open honest discussions, facts, data, logic is what may solve things.
Can We Fix San Francisco?
More like Should we fix SF? WE shouldn't.
THEY can fix it however and whenever they want without my taxes.
Yeah. Betteridge's Law of Headlines - "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no."
It’s just a question of how many megatons are needed.
I think there’s also a headline rule about “Or…Or?” questions in a headline. One randomly chosen example being “San Francisco: Fixable Or Broken Beyond Repair?” If memory serves, in this case the answer to the first question is “no” and the answer to the second question is “yes”
Yeah, gonna go with "things that aren't gonna happen" in this one.
I notice there still wasn't a speck of personal accountability to be found within miles of these pipe dreams. So much for Libertarianism, there's free shit if you jump through a hoop!
I spent a weekend in San Francisco 4 years ago. It was a pleasant time. I rented a bicycle and rode over the golden gate bridge and over the surrounding hills. I also rode through a homeless encampment in Haight-Ashbury. It was not as bad as described here. I also talked a couple of Danish tourists in letting me ride their bike up the steepest hill (they were walking the bikes at the time due to the steepness). No going back unless for work. I also live 2.5 hours from Chicago. It is nowhere near as bad as described, but I avoid it out of principle.
The boom in homelessness and public defecation started about 2016, to the point that some people claim it was a deliberate ploy to make Trump look bad. I don't buy that theory, but the regardless that's about when it all started. The touristy parts of the city are still clean and pretty, but get out of those spots and it's pretty damned rank.
Hey, Reason writers. You know what really compelling story about gov't corruption you're missing? Besides the Durham investigation, which is just local news, there's this big, scary global plague that Putin just ended, and a magical gene therapy and it's 1,291 serious side effects.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/chd-says-pfizer-fda-dropped-205400826.html
Hmmm... the page you're looking for isn't here. Try searching above.
Yeah, that didn't last long.
Here's direct to the PDF.
https://phmpt.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/5.3.6-postmarketing-experience.pdf
So basically the Author is saying "I helped create the problem, but, now that it is affecting me, we need to solve the problem."
I think it's more "I got older and thus gained more experience with the real world, which has made me more conservative."
LMAO.......... Pretty sure lefties have been "fixing" it for years...
That's why it's where it is today....
Live and let live, man.
Why, of course they can fix it. They'll just need a few trillion dollars. Just make taxpayers in the rest of the country foot the bill. No problemo!
Don't fix it. Just leave it as a cautionary tale of what the Progressive end game is.
"The homelessness crisis, he argues, is actually an addiction and mental health crisis"
While addiction and mental health issues play a big part in homelessness, that can't explain why the homelessness problem is so much bigger in San Francisco than in say New York City or Chicago.
The driver for why it's so much worse in California cities than in equally progressive Northern cities in the Mid West and East is local climate.
The average winter low temperature in San Fransisco is in the 40s.
The average winter low temperature for Chicago is in the 20s and New York is in the low 30s.
See Miami, as cited by the author.
Did Miami actually get rid of the problem or just move them into areas where they aren't so visible to the general public?
That’s true.
But those other places, fucked as they are, also don’t allow homeless camps, open air drug use, and shitting in the streets.
They don't get homeless camps not due to any proactive effort to prohibit them but because winter temps are too low for such camps to be viable.
As far as I'm concerned, the all the talk about homelessness, addiction, and mental health issues is a smokescreen to mask the real problem; ketchup on hotdogs.
Part of the blame can be traced to California's closing of all the mental hospitals. While that system was corrupted and needed reform the solution was to toss the baby out with the bathwater. Institutionalization was not the answer, but neither was tossing everyone out onto the street.
There is temporary homelessness and there is permanent homelessness. The latter is a mental health and addiction problem.
"There is temporary homelessness and there is permanent homelessness. The latter is a mental health and addiction problem."
That is part of the issue, but the permanently homeless will go where it's easiest to survive in that state, in other words they will go to places with relatively warm winters.
Except San Francisco has wet and damp winters. Not freezing but definitely not comfortable. Go inland and you get Sacramento and Fresno, where it's warmer and drier, so why not there? Assuming they have a choice, more are choosing SF fog and drizzle over sunny Sacramento.
If the problem were centered in San Diego, you might have a point. But while San Diego has the same problem all the big cities have, SF still has the bigger problem per capita.
^ This.
Can’t speak for Fresno, but rest assured Sacramento is irreversibly fucked, and won’t ever fix its homeless problem at this point.
https://www.kcra.com/article/fire-homeless-camp-damages-2-bridges-along-roseville-road/37511893
San Francisco does everything they can to enable being worthless and unproductive. This is the result. Portland and Seattle have emulated the SF model, with similar results. Since they can’t handle it, they’ve take to exporting their excess homeless to Eastern WA. Which now has around 400% of the homeless population relative to five years ago.
It’s the democrat way.
Climate makes only a small difference in the amount of homelessness problems in the US. It's mostly determined by politics.
Any list of worst homeless cities is dominated by far-left progressive cities even bad weather places like Seattle and NYC.
San Diego has better weather than SF but homelessness isn't as bad because up until recently SD mayor was GOP. Now that there's a progressive mayor in SD we're starting to see the same problems as LA and SF.
Does Savage still have his radio show?
On March 24, 2019, Savage celebrated the 25th Anniversary of the radio show. On January 1, 2021, The Savage Nation was discontinued by Cumulus Media and Westwood One.
Michael Savage - Wikipedia
I caught a few minutes of him once on the radio and was impressed... The man indeed IS "savage"! No place that he won't go to stir up some more outrage, and monetize it! Kinda like Ann Coulter in that way...
BUILD THE WALL!!!
Around San Francisco, to keep them in.
Make San Francisco pay for it!
If you're going to San Francisco, be sure to wear some flower in your hair.....
It may help hide the smell - - - - - -
They need to get those sidewalks sub lime
San Francisco and had 2 goals. Stop gentrification and stop job growth in the tech sector. Progress toward the goals is going well.
I remember when people were freaking out about the tech companies running their own buses for their employees.
Haha. Yeah. Fun times.
Progs don’t like private sector jobs
Either you think every human, no matter how dysfunctional and destructive, is worth saving, no matter the cost, or you think not.
Ironically; Generally Indoctrinating them into believing it's someone else's purpose in life to cater to them isn't "saving" them.
Even if I did think every human is worth saving, it doesn't give me the right to force others to support my charitable sense.
It took years to get into this mess, it's going to take years more to get out. First off the people of SF keep electing the worst of the worst. When Newsom ran for mayor he almost didn't win because he was seen as too reactionary. Yes, that's San Francisco for you.
But liberals are coming around and seeing that progressives are not liberals but authoritarians.
At the state level, the policy that closed hundreds of mental health institutions created the homeless problem. While the system definitely needed reforming, the baby was tossed out with the bathwater. Homeless shelters are a joke, they are unavailable, with rule that prevent their effectiveness.
Then you have the crime. In a mostly crime free state in a nation that has seen a steady plummet in crime since the 80s, SF is simply a dangerous place to be. "Tough on crime" isn't the answer as it's just a phrase. But effective policing and intolerance of crime is necessary. I do not believe in the broken window doctrine of policing, but at the same time the breaking of windows is still a crime.
The housing sucks, and SF just can't seem to get anything built except housing for the gentry class who rules the city. Tenements torn down and never replaced.
The impossibility of doing business in the city unless you're a giant corporation. A city once known for a dining scene rivaling New York and Paris seems hell bent on closing successful dining establishments. Small to medium sized business are leaving. Why set up base in SF when you can set up base down in Silicon Valley? Or across the bay in Emeryville or Pleasanton? Or even leave the state entirely?
And taxes. Not a council meeting goes buy that another major tax is proposed. The problem is the spending. Spend what little money there is on the essential without dreaming up new utopian schemes. Get your finances in order.
I used to love going into San Francisco. It was once a beautiful city with interesting people. No longer. The place reeks and the people are intolerant assholes.
I worked in San Francisco from the early 80’s through 2020. I saw it change from a vibrant city that was a great place to live and work to the mess it is today. The decline started when leftists took over the city council and set up programs where if you had a pulse, the city would give you money and shelter. Multiple charities provided free food. South of market where the bums and addicts used to live was developed with the UCSF complex, the ballpark and office buildings. This was in the late 90’s-early 2000’s. The politicians ordered cops to have a hands off policy. So the bums and addicts started sleeping in front of stores, taking dumps and doing drugs in public. I moved out of state in 2021. I think California is a lost cause and eventually tech will leave.
There were always bums in SF. As a kid we would head over there to see the sights and stuff, and play the game of "dodge the bum" as they came at you begging. This was circa 76/77.
No one was openly shitting in the streets though.
I've thought for some time that this would be an achievable compromise that would give both the prohibitionist and libertarian sides most of what each wants regarding prostitution and narcotics. Most people aren't ready to go for making these businesses legal unless the government can make a lot of money from them, and most not even then. But they would be satisfied if the activities just got out of sight. If we could keep the laws but abolish undercover enforcement, there is very little that would be left wanting for both the laissez faire and the anti- sides.
In other words, if the only people who knew about these activities were the people who wanted them, we'd all be happier.
One of the benefits of true legalization / decriminalization / I'd say "it's no more regulated than water" but water is pretty fuckin' regulated these days but you get what I mean, is that prices drop, a lot.
Straight up, "grow or make and sell any substance as long as you don't pollute outside of the general tolerances, blow up your neighbor's house, etc" type legalization, is what I mean. Maybe about as much regulation on manufacturing or buying heroin as acetaminophen, and as much for marijuana as oregano.
Yeah, the gov't hates the idea because it means no taxes for them and they're all greedy fucks. But lower prices mean more people can be functional addicts. Which means they can manage to hold some low end job (or possibly even a high end one) and not have to worry about getting kicked out of their dwelling for drug use, or because they couldn't afford to pay the rent because they bought massively overpriced drugs instead.
Which will also lead to less burglary and robbery to support habits, because the prices will be lower. Yes, there will definitely be some portion of people who just can't handle their shit under any circumstances, but I think this is likely to reduce the number of people who end up on the street, in addition to being philosophically correct.
Well, that would put a lot of drug warriors out of a job!? Can't have that.
Kinda like local governing? Instead of National?
As the USA was framed upon?
The solution is simple but CA doesn't want to do it. Let people do drugs as long as they're not bothering anyone but once you're bothering other people (living on the street, leaving needles around, etc) then you have to either go into rehab or prison.
Make loitering and camping on the street serious crimes and enforce it.
Can We Fix San Francisco?
Do we still have neutron bombs in the inventory?
Yes!!! Catchy slogan, "Nuclear weapons for urban renewal"!!!
Cut 4 highways just south of the airport, drop two bridges; done.
Is San Francisco the last bastion of vaccine passports to eat in restaurants? In the US anyway?
The city where going out to dinner is a public health crisis but shitting on the sidewalk isn't.
Stolen
You're going to have to first convince people in San Francisco that it needs fixing.
OK, but we've had this opioid crisis. And in areas where they crack down on pain pills, people turn to illicit street drugs and the overdoses go up.
This is a false narrative. Or at least a misleading one. My grandmother didn't end up sleeping under a bridge and giving blowjobs for a heroin hit because of the 'crackdown' on pain pills.
Yes, I have no doubt that the crackdown on pain pills has caused some people to return to dangerous street drugs, but the crackdown on pain pills has been more of a follower of this problem.
San Francisco isn't fucked up because of the drug war. If the 'drug war' were responsible for the disaster of cities like San Francisco and Seattle, then every town in the US would have tents, garbage, drug addicts and dirty needles strewn around the streets and that's simply not the case.
The drug war, prohibition and other things can be brought into the fold, but 'ending the drug war' won't fix San Francisco any more than the war on drugs 'broke' San Francisco.
> My grandmother didn't end up sleeping under a bridge and giving blowjobs for a heroin hit because of the 'crackdown' on pain pills.
...
...
...
Your grandmother ended up sleeping under a bridge and giving blowjobs for a heroin hit due to completely different reasons?
*confused look*
😉
I see you've met my grandmother.
As Brandybuck noted above, this is going to take years to fix, because it took years to break... a long, slow march on the institutions took place which was successful at almost every level of San Francisco government.
I say again, there is a sickness on the left where "competence" is considered 'right wing'. My comment on this was predictably misunderstood where people thought I was saying "The GOP is therefore, competent" which is NOT the thesis.
I recall some 15 years ago in Seattle there was a local political race where a liberal democrat was considered a right-wing reactionary, prompting an article in the local paper that essentially said, "Only in Seattle is a pro-choice, pro gay rights liberal Democrat 'right wing'". The reason was is this pro-choice, pro-gay rights liberal democrat wanted to do stuff like fill a pothole, occasionally throw a criminal in the clink, make it a little easier to run a business and employ some people, and keep the traffic moving. These should not be 'partisan ideals' but to the left, they have become so, and the left's focus on identity politics is front and center in this process. The refusal to consider candidates of certain color or sexual orientation is a major problem and if the left doesn't get past this form of racism, they're going to do not only real damage to themselves, but real damage to the constituencies they serve.
Think about the concept of 'competency' for a particular high profile or high pressure, high-responsibility position in any government. Presume that across a random sampling of people, maybe two percent would be considered competent for the job.
Because of the math on how minority populations work (and presuming the competency percentage remains the same across all demographic populations) if you remove 'straight white people' or even 'straight white males' from your pool of choice, the number of competent people to perform a job starts going down dramatically. As you further narrow the pool: Only people of color... only women of color. Only lesbian or bi women of color, only trans women of color... imagine how narrow your available pool of 'competent' candidates becomes, when it may have only been at 2% of the entire population to begin with.
I am a transcolor translesbian.
...
I think.
Does not take years to fix. Only takes one election and a decision to end this.
1. Reverse laws which prohibit forced treatment of the mentally ill.
2. Build cheap basic shelters, rehab facilities and mental hospitals in the desert and central valley.
3. Round up anyone found camping on the street and force them into treatment for mental illness / addiction.
4. For the small number of homeless who aren't mentally ill or addicts then make sure temporary shelter and help find them a more affordable state to live in.
5. Fight hard against the woke judges who will try to stop this.
Years to fix. You have unelected positions, power brokers, ngos, special interests all who are lining their pockets with the money that's flowed in to fix this. They won't go quietly. You've got a local media that's cheered it on at every level, and now you're going propose the above changes and expect the local media to just shrug and say, "You're right, we were wrong for the last fifteen years, you go fix this thing and we'll sit here with our hands between our knees and not get in your way."
Years... to fix.
The end of meritocracy, risk taking, personal responsibility and civil debate (all replaced by name calling) contributes to the decline and fall of any area, city or country.
But it advances equity, diversity, and inclusion.
Diversity. Inclusion. Equity.
DIE!
+10000 well said; and a byproduct of Communistic/Socialistic (lefty) thinking/government.
Because you don't own you; [WE] Power-Mad mobs toting gov-guns owns you... If there is no personal motivation for better/greatness in an entire nation of people then there will be no greatness cast upon that nation but only complaining, self-entitlement by theft and battles on who gets to tote those gov-guns of theft. Gang-Land 101.
Reminds me of when the public school we used to send our kids to made all classrooms “inclusive”, so kids who used to be in special ed because of behavior problems ended up taking all of the teacher’s time to deal with and the rest of the class learned nothing and spent the time just goofing around. Parents like us who cared sent their kids to private schools, so the entire class essentially became kids with behavior problems
This guy had 3 friends in high school who ended up homeless drug addicts? 3?
San Franciscans should learn to love their homeless as another thing that makes their city unique. Maybe they can have tours organized by the homeless to show their artwork (especially feces-based art), street performances, poetry, etc. Then they can use the money they make to support their drug habits, or maybe even find housing.
Practical [see my comment just below].
You can't fix stupid. As long as the bay people keep voting like they do then nothing will change.
So Shellenberger worked for some of the Soros-funded charities. Well then, I would think that he would be pleased with the progressive policies of San Francisco’s elected officials, as well as the crap hole it has become because of these policies.
Like most SF progs, he’s a NIMBY. He supports diversity, equity, and inclusion so long as it doesn’t affect him.
DIE? Where did that come from? in a few months every HR department, federal and state agency, NGO, and public school system was pushing the agenda...someone really should look into who paid for it..
Where? Why? Don’t ask me why. Whoopie! We’re all gonna DIE!
What are we fightin' for? I don't know and I don't give a damn.
In my experience with persons addicted at this level [to the point of being homeless] over the years, I can tell you that the recovery rate is very very small. They do not choose to quit and when forced to by by the legal system they most often do not succeed for any length of time. I call it terminal addiction; there are no consequences so great as to overcome their craving, which [by latest research] is neurologically imprinted. Even the latest treatments like Vivitrol will not serve to abate the incessant need for an additional "fix."
And war or no war on drugs, where there is a need there will be a supply, as long as money can be had [stolen, fenced] to pay for it.
This problem is with us to stay, like it or not.
We don't have to allow the encampments and defecation and fires and public drug usage in urban areas. Move the homeless out to the desert or central valley where they aren't bothering others.
Give them what they want for free, and let the problem sort itself out?
The basic responsibility of govt is to ensure self sufficiency of its citizens. By definition needing massive food stamps or social programs is evidence of failure. For San Fran, accepting this behavior over decades has brought this on. Degeneracy begets degeneracy. Zero tolerance for public urinating and defecating to start. Mental illness and drug issues should be delt with moving these folks to a more rural location (perhaps at an old miltary base) where they can get help. Zero tolerance of public camping out in tents..was in LA recently and it was disgusting..only Burbank seems to have not allowed this to occur. Frisco was a great city..it is a failed city now. Remove all progressives and socialists from elected positions. Stop govt schools and get tough with punks...zero tolerance..
Yeah, no. That's not the basic responsibility of government.
The basic responsibility of govt should be to protect individual/private property rights. But maybe that's what he means by that?
The good citizens of SF voted 61% to tax other people's money to add hundreds of millions of dollars to the hundreds they already spend on the homeless. The percentage didn't pass the 2/3 mark to become law but the good judges on the Cali Supreme court legalized it anyway. The money will be well spent by the good citizens on the myriad homeless committees, mostly on out of state meetings to discuss the homeless problems with other good citizen committees. The consensus will be that more money will be needed to address the homelessness crisis.
BTW those homeless are good for the democrats. If they had homes they may not vote right.
San Francisco advocacy groups help register homeless to vote in November's election
https://abc7news.com/vote-2020-how-to-register/6501982/
Why would you want to? Let it stand as a perfect monument to the consequences of progressivism.
Let's just build a wall around it to keep it contained.
Snake Plissken will be along shortly.
https://bloody-disgusting.com/movie/3675518/john-carpenter-says-snake-plissken-deserves-third-maybe-even-fourth-story/
Yeah, he did, but that ship sailed a long time ago. If they made it now the lead would be a female lesbian of color, trying to stop alt-right insurrections.
No. I live in the bay area and the left here are such freakin idiots I don't know where to begin. They get exactly what they deserve, they get exactly what they voted for, and then they blame republicans.
No, it's not the one party you keep voting into power. If there's one republican, anywhere, no matter how insignificant, it's their fault!
A few have told me they want to move out of state, and I'm a dick when I ask why they would ever want to move?
"You are getting exactly what you voted for"
"You only ever vote democrat, and democrats own everything, why would you ever leave?"
"If you hate republicans so much, why are you moving to a republican state?"
They literally can't fucking grasp that the reason they want to move to a republican state is because republican policies have made is prosperous. They literally can't fucking grasp that the democrats they have voted for have caused the issues that make them want to leave.
They think that CA is bad and other states are better just fucking somehow I guess, it has nothing to do with the things people vote for.
God they are such fucking locusts.
Way too much "democracy" going on in a nation that was never founded on unlimited democracy. Hitler was voted-in by unlimited democracy. Forgetting that Constitutions are the Supreme Law and "the people's law" over their governments is what is broken. Democrats will talk about "consent of the governed" but wildly dismiss the actual "people's law" over their government.
What means "we"? It's San Francisco's problem. They will figure it out someday.