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Introducing The Times’s New San Francisco Bureau Chief

September 28, 2023 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

Many San Franciscans know the feeling, that moment when it hits you: “I live here, and I’m lucky.”

I had one of those moments the other night at an outdoor dance class in Dolores Park. The class, “Roryography,” led by the choreographer Rory Davis, used to take place in a traditional dance studio but moved to the park during the coronavirus pandemic. It has stayed there ever since.

As we danced to “Jump” by the Pointer Sisters, guys playing basketball joined in. So did families with little kids. A colorful streetcar rumbled past as the setting sun cast a golden glow on the clouds in front of Sutro Tower.

As a longtime reporter and columnist for The San Francisco Chronicle, I wrote a lot about the city’s crises: fentanyl overdoses, homelessness, property crime, a hollowed-out downtown and exorbitant housing costs that have squeezed out the middle class. But I also wrote and recorded podcasts about the city’s beauty, parks, hikes, independent bookstores and movie houses, and incredibly creative people.

Now, as the new San Francisco bureau chief for The New York Times, I plan to continue shining a light on both sides of the city — the good and the bad. I’m excited to bring the full picture of San Francisco to a national audience and, hopefully, cover the beginnings of a recovery for the city I’ve called home for 24 years.

My dance friends were abuzz about my first byline in The Times . I had written about how frustrating, and just plain silly, it was to be constantly asked by outsiders: “You live in San Francisco? Are you OK?” One dancer said she had just returned from the Czech Republic where she was asked the same.

My story about San Francisco’s increasingly terrible reputation received plenty of other responses. One San Franciscan said she had just called a New Jersey flower shop to order a bouquet for a friend there, and the florist, upon hearing where she lived, asked if she was safe. Another recently traveled to Santa Barbara, where people reacted to his living in San Francisco as if he had told them that his dog died.

Since moving with her wife to Portland, Maine, over the summer, Ashley Kirzinger said she had been quizzed about San Francisco from just about everyone she encountered.

“They’re like: ‘Oh, San Francisco! I can see why you left there,’” she told me over the phone, mimicking the sound of disgust. “Everyone’s like: ‘The homelessness! The drugs! The crime!’”

All that is there, Kirzinger said — but so is the walkability, the beautiful parks, the great restaurant scene, the acceptance of L.G.B.T.Q. couples and the fun of swimming in the bay with the South End Rowing Club.

“I even liked taking BART!” she said with a laugh, referring to the region’s love-it-or-hate-it public transit system.

She and her wife moved to Maine because they could afford a three-bedroom, two-bathroom house there near the beach. In the Bay Area, they would have remained renters forever.

Still, she misses San Francisco. “I just think it’s magic,” she said.

I do, too, and I look forward to telling you its story.

For more:

  • Read my full piece .



The rest of the news

  • In a rare alliance, dozens of Democratic and Republican leaders , including Gov. Gavin Newsom, are urging the Supreme Court to help them bring homeless encampments under control.

  • The state’s education chief, Tony Thurmond, has announced that he is running for governor in 2026 , The Associated Press reports.

  • After a drop during the pandemic, community college enrollment in California is up — but students between 20 and 30 are lagging behind , CalMatters reports.

Southern California

  • An Orange County doctor who specializes in treating L.G.B.T.Q. people has been charged with sexually assaulting nine patients , The Los Angeles Times reports.

  • Dexter White, who was shot by Los Angeles police officers after they mistook his cellphone for a gun, was awarded $2.35 million in damages , The Los Angeles Times reports.

Central California

  • Employees at Yosemite National Park worry that a government shutdown could threaten the tourism business that keeps them afloat, The Fresno Bee reports.

Northern California

  • Mayor London Breed of San Francisco wants the city to require all recipients of county-funded welfare to undergo drug screening in order to be eligible for cash assistance, Politico reports.

  • Four people were arrested for allegedly stealing $1,400 in contraceptive pills, medicine and other merchandise from a Target in San Mateo, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.

  • Cities across Northern California are turning to A.I. chatbots to answer residents’ questions and take in service requests about issues like potholes and graffiti, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.


Where we’re traveling

Today’s tip comes from Carolyn Coleman, who lives in Santa Cruz. Carolyn recommends seeing mosaic murals in Watsonville, along the Central Coast:

“The small agricultural community of Watsonville is becoming the ‘Barcelona of California’ thanks to an amazing mosaic art installation, led by the visionary creative Kathleen Crocetti of Community Arts & Empowerment , covering a downtown six-story parking garage adjacent to the courthouse, library and City Hall.

There are four 60-feet-tall vertical mosaic murals designed by the San Francisco artist and social activist Juan R. Fuentes , who grew up in the agricultural labor camps outside of Watsonville and was the first in his family to go to college.

Now the horizontal sections of the garage are being covered by smaller mosaic pieces with symbols and designs representing the various heritages of Watsonville’s people; 120 have been identified, including Indigenous, Latino, Asian, European, African and Polynesian.

The project involves the community in generating ideas for the pieces, with young people working as interns and volunteers to create the mosaics. The project is expected to be completed by the end of next year.”

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to [email protected] . We’ll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.


Tell us

Our California playlist is ever evolving, based on your recommendations of songs that best represent the Golden State.

You can email us your choices at [email protected] . Please include your full name, the city where you live and a few sentences about why your song deserves inclusion.


And before you go, some good news

Though the Disneyland park in Anaheim is best known for its kid-friendly amusements, in 1961 — six years after it opened its gilded gates — the theme park dreamed up a new kind of Disney experience for its older patrons: an all-night prom.

The prom received little coverage and many details of the evening are not widely known. But a series of never-published photographs from Life magazine’s archives gives viewers a window into the evening’s antics. Replete with poodle skirts and trolley rides, the images, now available online as part of the magazine’s tribute issue to Disney parks, tell the story of romance, adolescence and that singular Disneyland magic.

See the photographs and read more about the evening here .


Thanks for reading. We’ll be back tomorrow.

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword .

Soumya Karlamangla, Maia Coleman and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at [email protected] .

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox .

Filed Under: U.S. California, U.S., new san francisco park, new san francisco da, new san francisco, new san francisco subway, new san francisco bay bridge, new san francisco hotels, new san francisco skyscrapers, new san francisco park presidio, new san francisco trash cans, new san francisco playground

How Libraries Are Fighting Book Banning

September 28, 2023 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

Good morning. It’s Thursday. We’ll see what libraries in New York City are doing to fight book banning. We’ll also see what Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, who has sent buses of migrants to New York, said during a visit to the city.

“The freedom to read is essential to our democracy. It is continuously under attack.”

That line came from a statement issued by the American Library Association — not yesterday or last week, but in 1953.

Still, it seemed unusually timely after last week, when there was a bomb threat to a library in Brooklyn and a report from the American Library Association described a troubling increase in efforts to remove books from libraries nationally.

It was also timely because Banned Books Week begins on Sunday. All three library systems in the city have designated Wednesday as “Freedom to Read Digital Day of Action” and will encourage people to post images of their favorite books online.

Beyond that, the New York Public Library, with branches in Manhattan and the Bronx and on Staten Island, will begin a campaign called “Books for All” that will run through June. The library says it will be the longest anti-censorship effort in its 128 years and will include a “teen banned book club” with unlimited access to some young adult titles that have been challenged or banned.

“We know that stories are powerful and can shape our lives,” said Anthony Marks, the president of the New York Public Library, “but unlike advocates of book banning, we believe that’s a good thing and that free people have the right to choose for themselves.”

The Brooklyn Public Library, which last year began “Books Unbanned” to reach readers in places where restrictions might force books off library shelves and out of classrooms, is starting a podcast called “Borrowed and Banned.” In seven episodes, it will address “the ideological wars Americans are having with their bookshelves,” the library says.

The Queens Public Library will post decals that say “All Books Are Welcome Here” at library entrances and has scheduled online talks with Samira Ahmed and Phil Blinder, two authors whose books have been challenged or banned.

And with 826 National, a nonprofit group that helps children and teenagers improve their writing skills, the New York Public Library is seeking submissions for a teen writing contest. The contest question asks what the freedom to read means. There will be a $500 grand prize, with 20 additional prizes of $250 each.

The incident in Brooklyn began with 911 call on Saturday morning that said an explosive device would go off in the Cortelyou Library in Flatbush, which was scheduled to hold a drag story hour session. About 12 children and their parents were on hand, a spokeswoman for the library said.

The library’s public safety officers and the police evacuated the building, and the police “swept the building and did not find anything,” she said. The librarians moved the event to a bakery and cafe nearby.

The incident prompted Letitia James, the state attorney general, to comment on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, that “our families go to Drag Story Hours to have fun and get our kids excited about reading.” She said that “terrorizing them with bomb threats is disgusting.”

Dennis Walcott, the president and chief executive of the Queens Public Library, said there have been repeated attempts to disrupt drag story hours “to stop certain voices from being heard.” “I’ve been in the middle of aggressive protests outside our libraries where we’ve had them,” he said, “and then gone inside and experienced the beauty of acceptance as kids and families listen to the stories.”

Nationally, efforts to ban books have moved from school to public libraries in the last year. The American Library Association said that nearly half the book challenges it tracked between January and August of this year involved public libraries, up 16 percent from the same period last year. The library association said there were 19 attempts to restrict access to books in New York State involving 45 titles between January and August. The most challenged title was “Gender Queer: A Memoir,” by Maia Kobabe.

The Brooklyn library’s “Books Unbanned” program continues to offer free library cards. So far 7,000 teens from all 50 states have requested them.

The “Borrowed and Banned” podcast will feature interviews with authors like George M. Johnson, who wrote “All Boys Aren’t Blue,” the second most frequently challenged book in 2022, according to the library association. In a preview of the podcast, he mentioned challenges to writers like Toni Morrison.

“You don’t ban Toni Morrison unless you are trying to prevent people from understanding a very profound truth that they need to understand,” he said.


Weather

Expect a mostly cloudy day, with a high near 65. At night, a chance of showers, with a low of 59.

ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING

In effect until Saturday (Sukkot).


The latest Metro news

Menendez

  • Senator and his wife are charged : Robert Menendez and his wife, Nadine, were charged in what federal prosecutors say was a yearslong scheme . They entered not guilty pleas Wednesday in Manhattan.

  • Menendez profile : The New Jersey Democrat broke barriers for Latinos. But prosecutors circled for decades before charging him with an explosive new bribery plot.

Trump

  • Ruling : Lawyers for former President Donald Trump and New York State began sorting through the real-world meaning of Justice Arthur Engoron’s finding that Trump had inflated the value of his holdings.

  • Takeaways : The judge’s finding that the former president committed fraud has major implications for his businesses, but Trump still has cards left to play. The ruling also undermined the narrative of the business career that launched Trump in politics.

More local news

  • Juilliard for free : Starting in the next academic year, the Juilliard School in Manhattan will make its graduate acting program tuition-free .

  • Store closures : Target announced that it was closing nine stores in four states, including one in Harlem, saying theft was threatening the safety of employees and customers — and hurting its business.


What the Texas governor said about New York

Mayor Eric Adams has called Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas — who has sent buses of migrants to New York City in the last year — “a madman” whose actions were “morally bankrupt.” Adams has also said the migrant crisis “will destroy New York City.”

Abbott was in New York on Wednesday and made unexpected comments about the city. The migrant influx in New York is “calm and organized,” Abbott said , compared with his own state. “We have crime taking place in ways you don’t see in New York,” he said, without elaborating.

Adams has called Abbott’s tactics in sending migrants to New York “inhumane.” My colleague Claire Fahy writes that Abbott, in an appearance organized by the Manhattan Institute, did not directly address the mayor’s characterization, even as he acknowledged sending 15,800 migrants to New York, about 10 percent of the nearly 120,000 who have arrived in the city in the past 12 months.

But the governor maintained that he was not the problem. “The lead importer of migrants to New York is not Texas,” said Abbott, a Republican. “It’s Joe Biden.”

Adams, for his part, has faulted the White House for not doing more to provide aid to the city and has said the president is “failing” New York City. When Biden was in New York last week for the United Nations General Assembly, he and the mayor did not cross paths. The mayor did not attend a reception hosted by the president at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The White House later announced that would grant a special status to Venezuelan migrants so they could apply for jobs, something the mayor and Gov. Kathy Hochul had been calling for but not the immigration policy change Abbott had in mind.

“There probably could not be a worse strategy, a worse policy than temporary protected status,” Mr. Abbott said. “Temporary protected status leads to permanent magnet status. They’ll be attracting millions and more people to come to this country illegally.”


METROPOLITAN diary

Tender buttons

Dear Diary:

In the 1970s, my side gig was producing handmade cards. In making them, I loved to use rare vintage buttons from Tender Buttons, a world-class shop on East 62nd Street.

In those days, the card buyer for Bloomingdale’s held an open call for budding artists on Thursdays. One day I went.

“OK, honey,” the card buyer said. “Show me what you’ve got.”

With my hands shaking, I held out three cards featuring vintage airplane, tricycle and sailboat buttons from Tender Buttons.

“That’s it — all you’ve got?” the buyer said. “I need a display. Pull yourself together and make a line of 12 designs. I need a dozen each by Monday at noon.”

I stayed awake from Thursday until Monday and delivered 144 cards on time.

— Susan Hamilton

Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here .


Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B.

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee . You can find all our puzzles here .

Bernard Mokam and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at [email protected].

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.

Filed Under: Uncategorized NYC;New York City, Internal tag to designate no storyline, Library, Book Bans, Books, Censorship, Brooklyn Public Library, NYPL, Queens Borough Public..., the fight book, bridge to terabithia book banned, central york school district book ban, 6 books banned, 100 books banned in america, everywhere babies book banned, books banned why, books banned, books banned qr code, books banned at schools

Colin Kaepernick compared NFL to slavery, now he wants to play for the Jets. Is he nuts?

September 27, 2023 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

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Jen Hale gives football fans a sneak peek into the NFL’s top week 3 matchups Video

Jen Hale gives football fans a sneak peek into the NFL’s top week 3 matchups

‘NFL on FOX’ sideline reporter Jen Hale joined ‘Fox & Friends Weekend’ to preview week three’s top matchups as fans gear up for an exciting slate.

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It’s been seven years and former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick is still begging the league to pass. And that’s exactly what they are going to do… pass on his return.

Even Google admits he’s just an “American civil rights activist,” not a quarterback. Not anymore. The perennial whiner had a subpar season in 2015 and ended it injured. He made his mark in the 2016 preseason refusing to stand for the national anthem during the game against Green Bay.

That’s when he proceeded to slam the nation that also made him a millionaire. “I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses Black people and people of color,” he said after the game. He went from sitting to kneeling and created a fracture between the league and its fans as other players joined in.

COLIN KAEPERNICK WRITES TO JETS ASKING TO JOIN TEAM IN ‘RISK-FREE CONTINGENCY PLAN,’ CALLS HIMSELF ‘ELITE QB’

That was the first of many stupid plays he made – bashing America and the NFL. He depicted police as pigs and even slammed his adoptive parents. Nope, not joking. The quarterback, who went from Super Bowl to super woke, claimed his parents had been perpetuating “racism.” He was upset that they didn’t like his cornrow hairstyle.

49ers players kneel for the anthem

San Francisco 49ers’ Eric Reid, starting quarterback Colin Kaepernick and Eli Harold kneel during the national anthem before the Tampa Bay Buccaneers game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, on Oct. 23, 2016. (Nhat V. Meyer/MediaNews Group/The Mercury News via Getty Images)

Yep, his parents didn’t like his hair because that generational battle never happens to anyone else. Then he publicly attacked them years later. Classy. The athlete/ingrate had a similar reaction to the NFL which gave him a net worth of $20 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth.

In a documentary, Kaepernick angrily declared that the NFL draft was like slavery: “Before they put you on the field, teams poke, prod, and examine you searching for any defect that might affect your performance.” As he says this, actors in the background step out of an NFL scene where they are being analyzed and walk into another that morphs into an 1800s slave auction.

NFL legend Mike Haynes talks Deion Sanders' impact at Colorado Video

That’s the institution that Kaepernick wants to rejoin as “an elite QB option” and he’s ready to do it in a New York minute. Because these days he’s on the sidelines of the so-called civil rights movement and can’t even make the practice squad of a team that lost its starting quarterback four plays into this season.

COLIN KAEPERNICK’S AGENT TELLS JETS QB IS INTERESTED IN NFL COMEBACK AFTER AARON RODGERS’ INJURY: REPORT

Kaepernick didn’t just go woke after he left the NFL, he spiked the ball. He started a publishing operation and released a book, titled “Abolition for The People: The Movement For A Future Without Policing & Prisons.” Don’t just defund what he called the “white supremacist institution” of policing, but defund prisons. You have to be nice to all those rapists and murderers.

Make-A-Wish recipient Kyle Stickles meets Jets draft pick he announced Video

Then there’s his blasting the Betsy Ross flag and giving a memorably anti-American Fourth of July message on Twitter. He blamed the nation, saying “Black ppl have been dehumanized, brutalized, criminalized + terrorized by America for centuries, & are expected to join your commemoration of ‘independence’, while you enslaved our ancestors.” Then he added: “We reject your celebration of white supremacy & look forward to liberation for all.”

As long as it comes with a hefty NFL salary for Kaepernick.

Now, he is either in a New York state of mind or just continuing his social-justice grift and wants attention. He released a formal letter asking for the Jets to sign him to their practice squad and give him another chance… seven years after playing.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION

Just in May, he was bashing the league once more because he hasn’t “seen any substantial change” since it wouldn’t hire him for a return of the Over The Hill Gang. “Obviously, not playing and being out of the NFL for six years is an indictment on where they are currently at,” he said.

Kaepernick just exchanged one sport for another: Greg Gutfeld Video

Kaepernick, who turns 36 in November, is a tangible reminder of how the NFL relies on instant replay. Just usually the tale of the tape happens soon after the play, not every season. Even the desperate New York football team doesn’t need the drama he would bring.

The former 49ers star inhabits a unique space in American culture. The media love him for his anti-American, anti-police diatribes. CBS journalist James Brown depicted him as a “bridge builder.” And sports “journalists” regularly harangue the league pushing to get him a job.

Atlantic contributing writer Jemele Hill was promoting Kaepernick as soon as Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers got hurt. “There’s a QB right there in New Jersey who took a team to a Super Bowl and a NFC championship game. Rhymes with Happernick,” she explained on X, which used to be called Twitter.

Colin Kaepernick watches the Raptors

Colin Kaepernick attends the NBA game between the Toronto Raptors and the Boston Celtics at Scotiabank Arena on Dec. 5, 2022 in Toronto, Canada. (Cole Burston/Getty Images)

The NFL and, especially, the fans are more than happy to have him benched forever. And other players, who once embraced his radical agenda, realized it ticked off the people who made them rich.

The sport has plenty of prominent Black stars at the very position Kaepernick once played. Fourteen Black QBs started week one this year, according to CBS Sports. Both Super Bowl quarterbacks this past season were Black, only they didn’t spend their time protesting. They made their marks praising the Lord.

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That’s why Kaepernick’s latest stunt will lead to another incompletion. The league doesn’t want him. No team would welcome the distractions he would cause. And fans won’t forgive what he did any more than they will forget it.

Why should they?

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM DAN GAINOR

Dan Gainor is a freelance opinion editor for Fox News Digital.

Filed Under: Uncategorized who colin kaepernick play for, colin kaepernick who does he play for, colin kaepernick who is he playing for, why does rodgers want to play for the jets, colin kaepernick years in nfl, kaepernick plays for what nfl team, colin kaepernick why not playing

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