• Re: Inside San Francisco's 'dens of death' as liberal city faces drug c

    From cereal killer@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 31 03:21:27 2023
    XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.california, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    On 29 Aug 2023, "Warren \"Potsie\" Weber" <nowomr@protonmail.com> posted
    some news:ucm6ns$2j2cd$2@dont-email.me:

    The sooner these worthless fuckers die, the sooner the problem turns
    into Democrats only and we can get rid of their asses too. Bring
    rope, bats and gasoline. Don't stop until the entire city is ashes.

    San Francisco’s once-trendy downtown area has descended into a
    drug-addled hellscape — where addicts regularly overdose in city-funded
    “dens of death.”

    Historic hotels in the Tenderloin neighborhood — which used to be the
    City by the Bay’s premier entertainment district — are now the face of
    the progressive California city’s deterioration.

    Around 20,000 rooms in about 500 hotels have been converted from coveted tourist destinations into roach- and vermin-infested “Single-Room
    Occupancy” (SRO) housing for vagrants.

    Many of the century-old buildings are now overrun with drug-addled
    “zombies” high on fentanyl and the flesh-eating animal tranquilizer
    dubbed “tranq,” residents told The Post during a tour on Tuesday.

    “It’s like living in a prison, but worse,” Robert Blackburn said of his
    squalid room in one of Tenderloin’s SROs.

    The neighborhood, located just 2 miles south of tourist hotspot
    Fisherman’s Wharf, was “once one of San Francisco’s fashionable
    neighborhoods, home to Bonanza Kings, politicians and millionaire
    merchants,” according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

    Now, Blackburn says he sees overdoses “all the time” as drug dealers run
    the corners just steps from the squalid hotels.

    “I’ve had human feces come up and out of my shower,” Blackburn told The
    Post. “I try my best to keep my room clean, but there’s been mice [and]
    lots of roaches in other rooms.”

    Longtime Tenderloin resident JJ Smith, who lives near four of the
    city-funded buildings, said that “once they put these people in these
    SROs, it’s like they are stuck.”

    “The biggest issue is there are too many deaths in and out of there. On
    a daily basis, I see five overdoses, at least one or two of them end up
    dead,” he said.

    “The only way they leave there is in a coroner’s bag.”

    Smith estimates that he’s personally helped revive at least 50 SRO
    residents in the past year, sharing graphic video of one such harrowing
    scene from June.

    The shocking video shows the woman unconscious on the ground of the
    filthy room as Smith passes Narcan to the boyfriend to try to revive
    her.

    He squirts the Narcan — a drug used to reverse overdoses — into the
    woman’s nostrils, but she doesn’t move.

    “Wake up, girl,” the boyfriend says. “Come on, baby girl! Don’t die on
    us!”

    Smith repeatedly calls out her name, while her boyfriend shakes her
    repeatedly in a desperate effort to wake her up.

    “She survived that time, but she died about a month later inside the
    SRO,” Smith told The Post.

    “I saw her body be wheeled out by the coroner. She overdosed and died
    because no one was there to help her that time.”

    The city runs nearly 20,000 rooms in about 500 SRO hotels, according to
    San Francisco’s Department of Building Inspections 2021-22 stats. The
    rooms are typically 8 by 10 feet and the residents share a common
    bathroom on each floor.

    Many of the residents in the city’s hundreds of SROs are vagrants who
    first lived in encampments or one of the homeless shelters before
    securing a room. Some are recovering addicts, but many “fall off the
    wagon” and start using drugs again while living in the SRO, which is
    against the rules each resident must follow.

    Blackburn, a recovering heroin addict who is now taking methadone, said
    the SRO desk managers who man the doors and check on residents “don’t do
    much” to push them into seeking treatment and counseling.

    “They don’t push it because they can’t control us, and really, it’s not
    their job,” Blackburn said.

    The SROs were not meant to be used as permanent housing, but many of the recovering and still-struggling addicts stay in the roach- and
    mice-infested rooms for years.

    “We need help,” Blackburn said. “We keep asking, but our voices aren’t
    being heard.”

    Block after block in the Tenderloin district, drug dealers can be seen
    handing balled-up foil to addicts on the street.

    Business owners said they are frustrated with the amount of homelessness
    and drug overdoses happening right in front of their doors.

    Residents and business leaders alike said the blight surrounding
    Tenderloin and other areas in downtown have contributed to the city’s
    “doom loop” and flagship businesses like Nordstroms and Whole Foods to
    leave the area.

    “A lot of people just don’t want to come down to this neighborhood
    anymore,” said Tommy, who owns a Vietnamese and Chinese restaurant on
    Larkin Street.

    “We had the grand opening 10 days right before the [COVID-19] pandemic,
    but business is so slow. People see the street conditions, the homeless.
    I hope this neighborhood will get better.”

    https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/08/NYPICHPDPICT0000269 55342.jpg?resize=945,709&quality=75&strip=all

    The once fashionable neighborhood is now full of litter and crime.
    David G. McIntyre
    Workers from local non-profits paid by the city come to the Tenderloin
    to power wash the streets where families and young students walk daily.
    But right after the sidewalks dry up, the homeless addicts go right back
    to squatting on the street.

    On Monday night, a homeless man allegedly holding a knife and
    threatening residents at the 300 block of Jones Street was shot by San Francisco Police. The unidentified man was rushed to a local hospital
    with life-threatening injuries, police officials said.

    The next morning, a group of homeless men sat a few blocks away from
    where the shooting occurred and hot-wired one of the city’s electric
    poles, which they used to operate a TV in one of their tents.

    “If they are smart enough to do that, I want to get them into some
    program because they can get a job where they can actually use that
    skill,” said one former city worker who wanted to remain anonymous.

    City leaders said their hands are tied because of an injunction banning
    San Francisco Police from clearing most homeless encampments.

    A judge ordered the injunction while a lawsuit filed by the Coalition on Homeless — which claims the city has violated state and federal laws on homeless individuals’ rights — is ongoing.

    “It is not humane to let people live on our streets in tents,” said
    Mayor London Breed last week. “We want a reversal of this injunction
    that makes it impossible to do our jobs.”

    Meanwhile, residents of the once-fashionable district say that while
    there are services available to them provided by non-profits and paid by
    the city, nothing is being done to push them into drug rehabilitation treatments — and they are ultimately left behind.

    Overdoses from fentanyl claimed 62 lives out of 71 total deaths from
    drug overdoses last month, according to statistics released by the
    Medical Examiner’s Office. The grim figure now places San Francisco on
    track to break a 2020 record for the total number of overdoses, when 712
    people died.

    https://nypost.com/2023/08/30/inside-san-franciscos-drug-addled-dens-of-d
    eath/

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