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Surfing Legend Bethany Hamilton Speaks Out On Allowing Trans Women To Compete Against Biological Women | The Daily Wire

February 6, 2023 by www.dailywire.com Leave a Comment

Surfing champion Bethany Hamilton spoke out over the weekend about the World Surf League’s new policy allowing transgender women to compete against biological females in the sport.

Hamilton lost her left arm to a 14-foot tiger shark in 2003 but was unfazed by the attack. She has since won multiple national championships.

“The World Surf League has officially made the rule that male-bodied individuals known as transgender athletes can officially compete in the women’s division,” she said. “The World Surf League says they are following the Olympic guidelines.”

She said that while she tries to love everyone, she was concerned about allowing biological men to compete against biological women.

“I feel that I must speak up and stand up for those in a position that may feel that they cannot say something about this,” she continued. “I think many of the girls currently on tour are not in support with this new rule, and they fear being ostracized if they speak up.”

Hamilton then proceeded to ask the league to answer multiple questions that she had about the change.

“How is this rule playing out in other sports like swimming, running, MMA?” she asked. “Have any of the current surfers in the World Surf League been asked what their thoughts and opinions are on this new rule before it was passed or announced? Should there be a conversation with the 17 women and all of the men on tour prior to a rule change such as this? Is a hormone level an honest and accurate depiction that someone indeed is a male or female? … Who is pushing for this huge change? Does this better the sport of surfing? Is this better for the woman in surfing? If so, how? How did whoever decided these hormone rules come to the conclusion that 12 months of testing testosterone make it a fair and legal switch? Why is the WSL statement about trans women competing with women and yet there’s no mention of converted women competing with men?”

Hamilton said that she believes the best solution would be to create a separate division for trans athletes.

“I think it’s really hard to imagine what the future of women’s surfing will be like in 15 to 20 years down the road if we move forward in allowing this major change,” she concluded. “But we are seeing glimpses of male-bodied dominance in women’s sports like running, swimming and others.”

“I personally won’t be competing in or supporting the World Surf League if this rule remains,” she added.

WATCH:

Surfing champion Bethany Hamilton responds to the World Surf League’s new policy allowing biological males who claim they are women to compete against women: “I personally won’t be competing in or supporting the World Surf League if this rule remains.”

pic.twitter.com/JBCxAcbd2T

— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) February 5, 2023

Filed Under: News speak to women, the daily wire, recommended daily allowance, daily wire, Women Competing, Soul Surfer Bethany Hamilton, Bethany Beach Surf Shop, recommended daily allowances, daily food allowance, Daily Allowance

State pensioners with one of 56 health conditions including Asthma could get £400 a month

February 6, 2023 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Male pensioner taking tablets

Millions of pensioners are missing out on financial support (Image: Getty)

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Some 3.4 million people who have reached s tate pension age aren’t claiming Attendance Allowance despite having a disability or health condition that affects their everyday lives. It’s the most underclaimed benefit according to Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) yet at least 56 health conditions typically qualify. Campaigners are urging people to do a benefits check as they could be eligible for financial support from the government without even knowing.

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Attendance Allowance is paid to pensioners over the state pension age of 66 who are physically or mentally disabled.

More than two million pensioners are living in poverty in the UK, according to a report published by the Centre for Ageing Better, yet 3.4 million pensioners could be claiming Attendance Allowance according to the DWP.

While there is no specific condition that guarantees financial support, the DWP has previously named 56 conditions that usually mean someone would qualify.

These include asthma, respiratory conditions, depression, arthritis, loss of vision, back pain, and dementia.

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At least 56 health conditions qualify for Attendance Allowance (Image: Getty)

One thing that could be putting people off applying is they think they need to have a carer to qualify.

Although people have to show they need help to carry out certain tasks, this doesn’t actually mean they need to have a carer.

Benefits expert Paul Breeden explained: “Attendance Allowance is a weekly benefit that is paid to people aged over pensionable age that helps those who have difficulty with their bodily functions, and who need support or supervision to avoid danger to themselves or others.”

The expert confirmed there is no limit to what pensioners can spend this money on and it doesn’t need to be spent on a carer.

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Claims for DWP benefits like Attendance Allowance are usually reviewed every year but claimants should inform the DWP straight away if there are any changes to their circumstances.

People need to inform the DWP of changes to their health such as if they need to go into hospital or a care home or if they leave the country for more than four weeks.

The DWP also needs to know if the amount of help someone needs changes or if their condition changes.

Even smaller changes to circumstances should be reported, otherwise, it could end up in someone having their benefits stopped.

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Budgets are being squeezed (Image: Express)

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Attendance Allowance claimants must inform the DWP if:

  • The amount of help someone needs or their condition changes
  • Someone goes into hospital or a care home
  • An individual leaves the country for more than four weeks
  • A person has to go into prison
  • Someone changes your name, address or bank details
  • A person wants to stop receiving your benefit
  • A doctor’s details change
  • An individual’s immigration status changes or they are not a British citizen.

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At least 56 health conditions qualify for Attendance Allowance worth nearly £5,000 a year including:

  • Arthritis
  • Spondylosis
  • Back Pain – Other / Precise Diagnosis not Specified
  • Disease of The Muscles, Bones or Joints
  • Trauma to Limbs
  • Blindness
  • Deafness
  • Heart disease
  • Chest disease
  • Asthma
  • Cystic Fibrosis
  • Cerebrovascular Disease
  • Peripheral vascular Disease
  • Epilepsy
  • Neurological Diseases
  • Multiple Sclerosis
  • Parkinson’s Disease
  • Motor Neurone Disease
  • Chronic Pain Syndromes
  • Diabetes Mellitus
  • Metabolic Disease
  • Traumatic Paraplegia/Tetraplegia
  • Major Trauma Other than Traumatic Paraplegia/Tetraplegia
  • Learning Difficulties
  • Psychosis
  • Psychoneurosis
  • Personality Disorder
  • Dementia
  • Behavioural Disorder
  • Alcohol and Drug Abuse
  • Hyperkinetic syndrome
  • Renal Disorders
  • Inflammatory Bowel Disease
  • Bowel and Stomach Disease
  • Blood Disorders
  • Haemophilia
  • Multi System Disorders
  • Multiple Allergy SyndromeSkin Disease
  • Malignant Disease
  • Severely Mentally impaired
  • Double Amputee
  • Deaf/Blind
  • Haemodialysis
  • Frailty
  • Total Parenteral Nutrition
  • AIDS
  • Infectious diseases: Viral disease – Coronavirus covid-19
  • Infectious diseases: Viral disease – precise diagnosis not specified
  • Infectious diseases: Bacterial disease – Tuberculosis
  • Infectious diseases: Bacterial disease – precise diagnosis not specified
  • Infectious diseases: Protozoal disease – Malaria
  • Infectious diseases: Protozoal disease – other / precise diagnosis not specified
  • Infectious diseases – other / precise diagnosis not specified
  • Cognitive disorder – other / precise diagnosis not specified
  • Terminally Ill.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized state pensioners, dwp, attendance allowance, Personal Finance, 9.under steady state condition

Book excerpt | The Shortest History of Democracy: The rise of monitory democracy

January 26, 2023 by www.moneycontrol.com Leave a Comment

“During the 1952 Indian general election, the first held after independence, conservatives claimed that women’s involvement in politics threatened ancient caste and gender hierarchies. They had a point: energised by democracy’s egalitarianism, women’s turnout in elections and contributions to public life have since been rising steadily, often outstripping men’s participation, as in the 2015 elections in Bihar, the country’s poorest state.” (Photo and caption from ‘The Shortest History of Democracy’)

At the heart of democracy is the idea of impermanence—the ability to change periodically to reflect what the people say they want.

In The Shortest History of Democracy —a 229-page book packed with facts and dates and traversing the globe to find large movements and transnational trends in democracy, starting with the first popular assemblies of 2500BC Syria-Mesopotamia—author John Keane writes: “Democracy often takes reality by surprise. It stands on the side of earthly miracles. The dramatic arrest and public execution of kings and tyrants, unplanned mutiny of disgruntled citizens, unexpected resistance to military rule and cliffhanger parliamentary votes are among the dramas that catch the living by surprise and leave those who come after fascinated by how and why such breakthroughs occurred.”

The book also charts the development of democracy, from assembly to electoral democracy and finally monitory democracy. Reproduced below is the section on “The rise of monitory democracy”:

Developments in Senegal, South Africa, Brazil and elsewhere showed that in the decades after 1945, democracy was no longer a white-skinned, Western affair – as it had been, say, when Lord James Bryce wrote his classic Modern Democracies in 1921, or when a Natal-based historian of democracy spoke john keane book cover of election-based, parliamentary government as ‘largely the outcome of the character and historical development of Englishmen’, unsuited to ‘states where the population does not display the same talents for, or interest in, the management of public affairs’.

Yes, broadly speaking, the many different species of democracies that sprang up on every continent still belonged to the genus called democracy, not just in name, but also in spirit. Political leaders and citizens who thought of themselves as democrats were still bound by respect for non-violent lawful government based on the consent of ‘the people’. They were suspicious of concentrated and unaccountable power; they were committed to the principle that all citizens are equals. But the indigenisation of democracy in environments radically different to the earlier parent electoral democracies of Western Europe, Spanish America and the United States was nevertheless remarkable.

India, soon to become known as the world’s ‘largest democracy’, was no liberal democracy, if that means American-style representative government founded on a large middle class, a free market economy and the spirit of possessive individualism. India’s tryst with democracy fundamentally challenged the presumption that economic growth is the core requirement of democracy – that free and fair elections are practical only when a majority of citizens owns or enjoys commodities such as cars, refrigerators and radios. Weighed down by destitution of heart-breaking proportions, millions of poor and illiterate people rejected the prejudice that a country must first be wealthy before it can be democratic. They decided instead that they could become materially stronger through democracy. Not only that: the Indian pathway to democracy bearded the woolly predictions of experts who said that French-style secularism, the compulsory retreat of religious myths into the private sphere, was necessary before hard-nosed democracy could happen. The Indian polity contains every major faith known to humanity and is home to hundreds of languages. Social complexity on this scale led Indian democrats to a new justification of democracy. It was no longer a means to protect a homogeneous society of equal individuals. It came to be regarded as the fairest way to enable people of different backgrounds and divergent group identities to live together harmoniously, as equals, without civil war.

India showed that the spirit and substance of democracy were alive globally in local sentiments, languages, institutions and shifting and contested forms of power. After 1945, democracy grew more grounded. But since then something else of historic importance – a transformation less obvious – has been happening: the growth of monitory democracy, a new form of self-government distinctively different from the assembly-based and electoral democracies of the past.

What is monitory democracy?

Why the adjective ‘monitory’ – which first entered English in the mid-fifteenth century (from the Latin monere, to warn, to advise) to refer to issuing a warning of an impending danger, or an admonition to check the content or quality of something, or to refrain from a foolish or offensive action? It is a form of democracy defined by the rapid growth of many new kinds of extra-parliamentary, power-scrutinising mechanisms: ‘guide dog’, ‘watchdog’ and ‘barking dog’ institutions. Monitory democracy includes practices such as election monitoring, workplace codetermination and participatory budgeting. It also includes bodies such as future generations commissions, bridge doctors, truth and reconciliation forums and coralreef monitoring networks. These monitory or public accountability mechanisms are newcomers in the history of democracy. They spring up in many different contexts and are not simply ‘Western’ inventions.

The rights of workers to elect representatives to their company’s governing boards in workplace codetermination schemes (Mitbestimmung) first happened in war-torn Germany in the 1940s. Participatory budgeting, in which citizens decide how to spend part of a public budget, is a Brazilian invention. Future generations commissions with statutory power to champion the rights of unborn citizens were born in Wales. Bridge doctors – volunteer teams of university engineering students checking the safety of city bridges – are a South Korean specialty. South Africa made truth and reconciliation forums famous. Coral-reef monitoring networks are a product of global cooperation.

These monitory bodies have taken root everywhere within the local and national fields of government and civil society, as well as in cross-border settings. As a result, the whole architecture of representative government is changing. The grip of elections, political parties and parliaments in shaping citizens’ lives and representing their interests is weakening. If electoral democracy rested on the principle of ‘one person, one vote, one representative’, the guiding ethic of monitory democracy is ‘one person, many interests, many voices, multiple votes, multiple representatives’. Under these new conditions, democracy means much more than elections. Within and outside states, independent and toothy watchdog bodies have begun to reshape the landscapes of power. By keeping corporations and elected governments, parties and politicians permanently on their toes, the new watchtowers question abuses of power, force governments and businesses to modify their agendas – and sometimes smother them in public disgrace.

Monitory democracy is the most complex and vibrant form of democracy yet. In the name of ‘people’, ‘the public’, ‘public accountability’ or ‘citizens’ – the terms are normally used interchangeably – power-challenging and power-tempering institutions are springing up all over the place. Corruption scandals and public outcries against monkey business are becoming the new normal. This does not mean that elections, political parties, legislatures and public assemblies are disappearing or declining in importance, but they are most definitely losing their pole position as hosts and drivers of politics. Democracy is no longer simply a way of handling and taming the power of elected governments, and no longer confined to territorial states. Gone are the days when democracy could be described, and in the next breath attacked, as an abuse of statistics, as ‘government by the unrestricted will of the majority’; or, in the oft-cited words of the Moravian-born economist Joseph Schumpeter (1883– 1950), the ‘institutional arrangement for arriving at political decisions in which individuals acquire the power to decide by means of a competitive struggle for the people’s vote’. The age of representative democracy is behind us. Whether we are talking about local, national or supranational government, or the world of non-governmental organisations and networks, those who wield power are now routinely subject to public monitoring and restraint by an assortment of extra-parliamentary bodies.

The advent of monitory democracy challenges earlier, election-centred understandings of democracy. It spells trouble as well for the commonsense view that democracy is essentially a method of controlling governments and taming state power. What’s remarkable is how the spirit and power-scrutinising mechanisms of monitory democracy spread ‘downwards’, into areas of social life previously untouched by democrats. Assembly democracies typically regarded power dynamics within households, and the treatment of women and slaves, as private matters. We saw how the age of representative democracy witnessed resistance to slavery and to the exclusion of women, workers and the colonised from elections. Elected governments intervened in such areas as healthcare and education. One thing that’s different about the age of monitory democracy is that it enables, as never before, organised public scrutiny and refusal of arbitrary power in the whole of social life. Matters such as workplace bullying, sexual harassment, racial and gender discrimination, animal abuse, homelessness, disability and data harvesting all become central themes of democratic politics.

Parties, parliaments and elected governments are typically reactive to such issues. Monitory bodies and networks therefore become the true drivers of politics. They help deepen democracy. Its spirit of equality and openness spreads through social life and across state borders. For the first time in the history of democracy, not surprisingly, ‘civil society’ is a phrase routinely used by democrats at every point on our planet. Monitory democracy springs up wherever there are abuses of power. Uncontested rule in areas ranging from family life to employment is checked – if and when it’s checked – not just by elected representatives in government, but also by a host of new institutions that remind millions of citizens of a simple but perennial truth: democracy requires colossal transformations of people’s daily lives. Their habits of heart and everyday routines must grow more allergic to abuse of power. To stand against bossing and bullying, people need to nurture the spirit of democracy within, as well as to spread it and keep it alive in others. Citizens must be confident that they themselves are the source of power of the institutions that govern their lives; that government and other bodies indeed rest upon the consent of the governed; and that when they withdraw their consent from these institutions and demand alternatives, things can change for the better, even if only in the smallest of ways.

Excerpted here is the section The rise of monitory democracy, from The Shortest History of Democracy by John Keane, with permission from Pan Macmillan India .

Filed Under: Uncategorized India general election, women’s involvement in politics, democracy, history of democracy, john keane shortest history of democracy, john keane shortest history..., james hawes the shortest history of germany, racy book excerpts, book excerpts meaning, book excerpts love scene, book-excerpts-4-ways-touching-women, book-excerpts-how-challenge-women, book-excerpts-how-challenge-women girlschase, shortest history of germany, democracies rising, romance book excerpts

Met police rapist David Carrick held gun to victim’s head & told another he would be ‘last thing she saw’

February 6, 2023 by www.thesun.co.uk Leave a Comment

A SADISTIC Met Police officer held a gun to a victim’s head and told another he would be the “last thing she saw” in a 17-year reign of terror.

David Carrick , 48, tortured his victims as he abused his position in the police to “charm and beguile” them.

The monster locked women naked in a cupboard under the stairs for ten hours at a time, controlled what they ate and branded them his “slaves”.

He was revealed as one of the UK’s worst serial rapists last month after admitting 49 charges – including 24 counts of rape.

Some of the multiple-incident counts relate to at least 85 separate offences -including at least 71 sexual offences and 48 rapes.

Shockingly, it also emerged Carrick came to police attention nine times before his arrest after rape and domestic violence allegations were made against him.

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At the start of his two-day sentencing hearing today, the predator’s evil crimes were revealed for the first time.

Southward Crown Court was told Carrick would “often humiliate his victims in a number of different ways”.

He used his police baton and handcuffs during attacks and sent one victim a photo with a work-issue handgun, saying: “Remember I am the boss”.

Two women were kept in the tiny cupboard under his stairs while others were urinated on or hit with a belt.

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He put his hands around one victim’s throat and told her he was “going to be the last thing she saw” and “brandished” a knife at another.

Prosecutor Tom Little KC told how he invited one woman back to his home after claiming he was the “safest person that she could be with and that he was a police officer”.

Once there, he told her “she couldn’t go” and “grabbed her by the hair and put his hand round her mouth, dragging her backwards”.

The prosecutor said: “He threw her on the bed. He held her down. He grabbed her arms. He had taken his shirt off. She bit his arm and he put his hand behind the bed.

“He searched for something and then put a black handgun to her head and said to her ‘you are not going’.

“She froze”.

Carrick also attacked another as she sat on the toilet after developing a sick interest in “urination for sexual gratification”.

And he offered a victim he raped five times £1,000-a-month to be his “s**t” as he coercively controlled her.

She recalled how in one attack, she was “sweating from the pain and crying” and said Carrick would watch her remotely after making her cut ties with her family and friends.

The woman was left feeling suicidal and dropped from a size 14 to a six after Carrick controlled how much she ate.

In another chilling encounter, he stood naked and waved goodbye to a victim he raped “as if nothing had happened”.

Controlling Carrick also told a victim she “belonged to him and that she must obey him” – including with the clothes she wore and what she spent money on.

He threatened the woman with a police baton and “punished” her by shutting her in the cupboard under the stairs.

She told how she would scream out in pain while being repeatedly raped by Carrick but didn’t tell anyone as the fiend was a “police officer and very powerful”.

Describing Carrick’s 17-year reign of terror, Mr Little KC said: “If the offending had to be accurately and fairly summarised, it was systematic.

“It was catalogue of violent and brutal sexual offences perpetrated on multiple victims, whether he was in a controlling or coercive relationship with them or not, or even if it was just a single occasion.

“The reality was that it did not matter who the victim was, the reality was, if he had the opportunity, he would rape them, sexually abuse or assault them and humiliate them.

“Some of his victims were either appreciably older or younger than him – they were all, in their own ways, vulnerable.”

Carrick worked for the Met’s Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command unit – the same department as Sarah Everard’s killer Wayne Couzens.

It is not clear if the pair knew each other while working at the elite unit at the same time.

The gun cop, whose colleagues branded him “B*****d Dave”, met some of his victims on dating apps such as Tinder and Badoo.

He would flash his warrant card to lure the women into a false sense of security and told them: “I’m a police officer, you can trust me”.

The monster also boasted about meeting the Prime Minister in his role guarding parliamentary, government and diplomatic buildings.

Evil Carrick would appear charming at first before spending time “developing relationships to sustain his appetite for degradation and control”.

He forced women to clean his home naked, carried out degrading acts against them, cut them off from family including their children and whipped them with belts.

One victim was forced into a tiny cupboard smaller than a dog crate, while others were forced to perform sex acts until they “fought for breath”.

Carrick also controlled how much they ate and when they slept, telling them: “You’re only allowed to eat this much of an apple today”.

The monster would abuse his position in the police to terrify his victims into silence.

The women ranged from a school pal to a previous abuse victim, with some abused at the home in Stevenage he shared with his pet snake.

Another victim claimed she was attacked after she woke up naked and covered in a sick in a hotel following drinks with Carrick in St Albans.

Carrick allegedly raped her while calling himself a “dominant b*****d”.

She came forward after seeing another case of a rapist police officer, but the offence against her has been left to lie on the court file.

When officers swooped on his home, Carrick told them “not again” before giving a “no comment” interview.

Carrick was described as “very persuasive but also manipulative” to the point of being “cocky”.

He first served in the Military before becoming a Met Police officer from August 2001.

Eight years later, a domestic abuse complaint was made against him but no further action was taken.

The woman who made the allegation is one of the 12 victims.

In 2019, Carrick was accused of assault and criminal damage but again, no action was taken.

He was also cleared to return to work just weeks after first being accused of rape.

The predator was not even subjected to a fresh round of vetting as a result of the July 2021 rape allegation.

And he passed vetting back in 2001 despite being accused of burglary and malicious communications when a relationship ended.

The Met has now referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) and apologised for not stopping him sooner.

In total, Carrick pleaded guilty to 49 offences against 12 women including 24 rapes between 2003 and 2020.

He also admitted nine counts of sexual assault, three charges of coercive and controlling behaviour, two attempted rape, one count of indecent assault and three of false imprisonment.

Carrick further pleaded guilty to five counts of assault by penetration, one count of attempted sexual assault by penetration and one of causing a person to engage in sexual activity without consent.

He denied a count of rape in September 2020 relating to a 13th woman but the CPS decided it was not in the public interest to proceed to trial on that charge.

Assistant Commander Barbara Gray, the Met’s lead for Professionalism, said: “It is nearly three weeks since David Carrick entered the last of his guilty pleas.

“In doing so, he admitted to the most appalling offences against women.

“I am truly sorry for the harm and devastation he has caused them. We let them down and we failed to identify a man in the ranks of the Metropolitan Police Service who carried out the most awful offences.

“He should not have been a police officer.”

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The sentencing hearing continues.

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S.F. to barricade Mission District street over sex work: ‘Out of control and dangerous’

February 6, 2023 by www.sfchronicle.com Leave a Comment

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The scene on Capp Street, in the heart of San Francisco’s Mission District, had become dire: presumed sex workers lining the sidewalks and spilling into roadways; traffic choked bumper to bumper throughout the night; and erruptions of violence, including at least one pistol whipping, according to officials and residents.

In response to increasingly desperate pleas from neighbors, city officials plan to install barriers this week along a strip of Capp between 18th and 22nd streets where the problems appear most concentrated.

Supervisor Hillary Ronen said in an interview on Monday that the barriers are meant to put an end to the “cruising zone.” Residents and authorities are not merely worried about the busiess owners and neighbors, many with young children, who are tormented by disturbances in the night, but about the women themselves, who in many cases appear to be suffering abuse.

“It’s absolutely out of control and dangerous — not just for the sex workers, but for the community,” explained Ronen, whose district includes the Mission. She described the planned enclosure as an experiment somewhat resembling San Francisco’s “Slow Streets” configurations, in which bollards limit the number of vehicles on the road, but allow residents to have access to their garages.

Nobody is sture whether the strategy will work, but Ronen said the city had to take action as residents implore for help.

The tumult and misery on Capp Street marks the latest struggle for the Mission , where residents and merchants have contended with illegal vending , visible drug use, burgeoning homeless encampments and a high number of commercial burglaries over the last few years. Ronen said many of these issues began welling up after City Hall directed police and resources to the Tenderloin and Union Square, pushing drug markets and fencing of stolen goods into the Mission.

One neighbor, Delaney White, said she’s been startled awake by the crackle of gunfire, and occasionally witnessed beatings.

“From the window right there, I’ll see three (people) ganging up on a girl,” she said, gesturing toward a bay window that overlooks a busy intersection. “They’ll be hitting her,” White continued. “I call the cops; no one comes. There’s nothing I can do.”

Multiple videos posted on YouTube show women sauntering down the middle of the roadway on Capp. Cars and vans swerve around the women as they teeter in knee-high boots. In one video, a woman approaches the driverside window of a car, then walks away after the motorist keeps driving.

While Capp Street and nearby roadways, such as Shotwell Street, have historically been known as hubs for sex work, signs of unchecked solicitation began escalating over the past year, particularly since the fall. Residents are ramping up pressure on San Francisco police, who in turn have blamed state Senator Scott Wiener for successfully pushing legislation last year that struck down a state law against loitering “in a public place with the intent to commit prostitution.”

Wiener has vigorously pushed back, arguing that San Francisco police historically have not enforced anti-loitering laws, which he characterized as a tool disproportionately used to profile Black and trans women. Now, Wiener said, police are in a bind and trying to shift culpability to someone else.

“What these neighbors are going through is unacceptable,” the state senator said. “The situtation has gotten very chaotic, and these neighbors deserve help. But SB 357 did not cause this chaotic situation on Capp Street,” he continued, referring to the bill that Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law last year, meaning it took effect roughly a month ago.

Last fall, Wiener said, San Francisco Police Captain Gavin McEachern began telling residents that SB357 was tying officers’ hands, months before the law became enforceable. To the Democratic senator from San Francisco, these statements amounted to scapegoating. He cited other tactics that police and transportation officials have at their disposal to disrupt trafficking, including laws that ban pimping, solicitation and purchasing sex, and traffic regulations that allow officials to ticket drivers for idling in the middle of the street.

San Francisco police did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, who, like Ronen, has communicated with residents and visited Capp Street at night to assess the conditions, said she is working with police to conduct “enforcement operations to deter and disrupt this activity while holding traffickers accountable.”

Citations for solicitation get adjudicated in neighborhood courts, Jenkins said, where people accused of purchasing sex are “expected to abide by the agreements they make with community members, including going to John school and pledging to not repeat their behavior.” Fourteen alleged johns have gone through neighborhood court since last November, Jenkins said, adding that her office does everything possible to rescue victims of trafficking and prosecute pimps “where there is sufficient evidence for us to move forward.”

Ronen defended the state’s recent repeal of the old misdemeanor law against loitering and wants to see legislators take an even more far-reaching approach, by legalizing sex work to make it safe and orderly.

“Criminalizing is not helpful,” Ronen said. “We have to provide services and opportunities to make different decisions.”

Several neighbors said they’d welcome various tactics to suppress trafficking or shunt it to a commercial area, so long as they no longer see it on Capp Street.

Lyn Werbach, an organizer with Central Mission Neighbors, who does not live on Capp Street but who advocates on behalf of all Mission residents, said she would support a sanctioned red light zone. She worries, however, that it could take a decade or more for the city to orchestrate such a program.

“We don’t want sex work to continue on Capp Street while we wait for that to happen,” Werbach said, adding that she considers the city complicit in trafficking and exploitation, because officials have heard residents’ complaints for years, and done nothing. She echoed Wiener’s criticism of the police, saying they have not cracked down on sex work in the past, and have instead pointed fingers at legislators.

At this point, Capp Street residents say their snug Mission District artery has become inundated. Even on a relatively quiet, rain-spattered Saturday afternoon, at least one spot bore signs of the previous night’s activity. A resident who was holding an estate sale from his garage pointed to a spent condom in the narrow alley between his building and the one next door. He said it wasn’t there on Friday.

Some residents who denounced the sex work happening outside their windows were reluctant to give their names, fearing they would be targeted by traffickers. Still, they acknowledged a pervasive sense of frustration and anguish in the neighborhood. Over the past year, neighbors have routinely held community meetings, emailed the Police Department and turned to local politicians, including Wiener and Ronen.

“I’ve lived here (on Capp Street) for 14 years, and in the Mission District for 20, and what I’ve seen over the last four or five months is not what Capp Street has ever been,” said one resident who the Chronicle is not naming in accordance with its anonymous source policy .

He and others noted that the seemingly ubiquitous sex trade has become a raw topic among neighbors, who constantly swap anecdotes about what they see and hear at night. Many are flummoxed by the recent uptick, and wonder whether it relates to the city’s decision to convert nearby Shotwell Street into a slow street, reducing the speeds and volume of vehicles, and possibly pushing business onto Capp Street. Wiener also cited economic instability has left more people in “desperate situations.”

Not everyone perceives the alleged sex work as a quality-of-life issue. Aaron Wojack, who lives in a roomy Capp Street apartment with art on the walls, said he frequently sees people he believes to be sex workers around 20th and 21st streets. He’s worried they may be exploited or victimized, but not perturbed by their presence on the sidewalks.

“It doesn’t really upset me,” Wojack said. “Those people aren’t hurting anyone.”

Werbach and others see the situation differently.

“Sex work should not be on a street where children and families live,” Werbach said, adding that it should not be the job of residents to “state something obvious.”

Rachel Swan is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: [email protected] Twitter: @rachelswan

Filed Under: Uncategorized Scott Wiener, Delaney White, Hillary Ronen, Brooke Jenkins, Lyn Werbach, Capp, Ronen, Gavin McEachern, Gavin Newsom, Central Mission Neighbors, Rachel Swan, ...

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