Carol and Hubert are still here and are approaching 1 year old. at this point, I'm willing to let them go separately if that helps them find homes. They are getting 0 interest as a pair and they'll be fine separated. please share
How bad is it? Until just last year, in California, “proving theft from a vehicle required proving that all the doors were locked”. https://t.co/KSaWseKV5l
In 2026, residents of every major city should understand this simple truth:
Crime and squalor are choices.
Policies exist that can both be compassionate but put the rights and quality of life of the tax paying and law abiding above everything and everyone else.
It’s not as crazy as it sounds.
Reminder that @sfgov and the judiciary have nothing but disdain for the residents that have to live with their policies of ambient criminality and decay.
San Francisco is hamstrung by hard leftist Judges, a hard leftist State Legislature, and a hard leftist interpretation of law. As @SteveAdami correctly pointed out, per HS11550, it is illegal to be under the influence of a controlled substance. So, why do we allow it?
San Francisco doesn’t make addiction hard.
It makes it sustainable.
I know because I lived it.
When I was using, I didn’t have to hide.
I didn’t have to stop.
The system kept me alive—but it also kept me stuck.
That’s the part no one wants to talk about.
San Francisco will get drug addicts off the streets.
But it won’t jail them.
Instead, the city is launching a new RESET center where they’ll be taken off the street and offered VOLUNTARY rehabilitation.
Officials emphasize that the goal is not punishment, but recovery.
The problem is obvious:
when some were interviewed, they openly admitted they have no interest in rehab. They just want to keep doing drugs.
This reveals the core issue:
a fundamental misunderstanding of why these people are on the streets in the first place.
The liberal narrative insists they are victims of society.
The reality is far less comforting: many aren’t victims at all.
They actively choose this life, prefer it, and cannot (or will not) function in any other way.
Some people are simply damaged goods.
That remains the inconvenient truth.
San Francisco once again is a superlative leader.
@sfgov spent $423M on hotels for homeless and didn’t ban drug trafficking inside for some reason.
Three hotels permanently closed, reducing taxes to the city and increasing prices for visitors.
When you're revived from an overdose with Narcan, you go into immediate withdrawal because Narcan is an 'opioid antagonist.' I've seen it hundreds of times. So, why aren't we intervening beyond OD reversal if we know they need to use again immediately?
The 1st of the month the ambulance blares, checks cashed, Hondos funded. The entire check blown smoked inhaled narcan pushed. It’s only capitalism for billionaires. It’s a massacre.
The text in the Instagram post linked below is sad. But I encourage you to read it. And, should you find space in your heart and home, consider adopting an animal for your local animal shelter, whether that be a dog, cat, bird, lizard, or something else.
🎥April 30 2026 7:17pm
This is the scene at #1 of San Francisco Open Drug Markets that’s located on 16th & Mission SFPD media spokesperson Evan Sernoffsky made a statement yesterday that they made over 14,000 arrest in since June 2023. But what was the outcome of those arrest? Because the drug markets are still flourishing.
📍 SF Bay Area
This is a desperate plea for Bertie, a sweet ~13 y/o cat who has not had it easy. He is a very sweet boy but is not doing well in a kennel and needs out of here. He needs an adopter ASAP. He prefers to be the only pet in the home.
more info in next tweet
Drug traffickers kill people in San Francisco at between double and triple the rate of COVID at its peak, and @sfgov shut down the entire city for COVID.
@sfgov still lets drug traffickers have free rein of Tenderloin and parts of SOMA.
San Francisco residents have finally had enough and file a lawsuit against the City of San Francisco over the large concentration of homeless
“People living in the south of market neighborhood have filed a complaint against the city. They claim the concentration of homeless resources and affordable housing
— This complaint, it’s 47 pages long and the local neighborhood association says it's the result of years of not being heard by the city — These residents say the high concentration of homeless support, resources and affordable housing are leading to what they call a deliberate hyper-concentration of poverty”
“The Soma West Neighborhood Association says after years of no action by the city, they filed a complaint to the state alleging the city is violating state housing law and civil rights mandates — This complaint basically says segregation is illegal, so you should, the state requires you to take affirmative steps to desegregate.”