Ok, so here's my 2 cents after spending a few hours in San Francisco and driving around various neighborhoods.
The areas that have always been iffy until the big tech migration to the City in the early 2000s, like the Tenderloin, parts of Market and a couple of blocks around Valencia and Market are definitely significantly worse. Trash, tents, addicts, drugs, crazies... Extending from 5th and Eddy St all the way to Polk St to Geary Blvd and down Taylor St. That's about a 6x4 blocks area that no one unfamiliar with it should walk through and no one does, except the fools who bought apartments in the zone during the frantic property buying period.
On the other hand, I found the rest of the City pretty much like I left it in 2019. Bike paths are now clearly marked in the Mission, South of Market and upper Market street, including numerous streets designated as cycle streets. People walk about, parks are crowded, it doesn't seem like fear has taken over at all. Of course, this is a visual observation of a city I am very familiar with. I posted the article above to clearly show that looks aren't everything. In fact, on a couple occasions I saw guys with backpacks walking past parked cars, looking at what may be inside.
Another strange impression was how early restaurants close, even on weekends, most at 9:30 pm, a few at 10:00 pm. But this isn't limited to San Francisco. Oakland or Mill Valley, 2 opposites, also close early. When I asked I got various explanations, from people are afraid to walk at night, to labor laws make it too expensive to pay overtime, to customers are simply not going out as much... All of which may play a part in the early shut down. No fun.
Overall, I think conservative media is greatly exaggerating San Francisco's present situation. If you came to live in the city in the last 20 years you may be appalled by its downward spiral, particularly since COVID. But if you were familiar with San Francisco before tech moved in, what you see today is pretty much what was then. The difference is the homes look much cleaner, there are many more apartment buildings in areas that were once semi industrial. Tech kids bought properties at inflated values, remodeled and painted them, and now regret their decisions because the hood returned to what was prior to their move in. I don't know if property values are dropping, but I've seen a few for sale signs up this week, more than during all of 2019 when there were none.
Perhaps some are stoking FOMO, hoping to see an exodus and rapidly falling prices so they can swoop in with low-ball offers?
glad you can remain objective. Now to rub it in,
I told you:
The reality is the "picking and choosing" was done by 'the messenger', who took the chronicle's report and highlighted what fit their narrative and omitted the other arguments made by the chronicle counter to the narrative. Should come as no surprise given the founders.
Why would I just copy/paste text already covered in 'the messenger's' article if I'm pointing out the omissions? That makes no sense.