I can do a whole ranking if you like :)Been there twice. Once in ‘99 with a girlfriend who was working as a journalist in Vancouver. We spent the weekend there and then went back to British Columbia. Loved it. Loved its energy and its nightlife.
Second time on my honeymoon (not with the foregoing girlfriend!)just after we’d traversed the Big Sur. Ate and drank really well. It was late November 2008, and Obama had been elected a few days before. There was a good vide going round.
When thinking about the US cities I have loved (e.g. Boston, Chicago, Philly, Nashville) I sometimes overlook SF. And that’s wrong. Based on my memories, it’s a truly wonderful and interesting city.
Are you saying that people have been taken in by the lies of disinformation, and spread it as truth because they have been so gullible and thought nobody would check?So I decided to do a bit of reading, 36 pages in fact, on this DEI council. Because from your description it sounded pretty awful. Proper woke stuff!
A few examples of some of the action plans this DEI council is implementing:
> making sure government documentation is sufficiently accessible for blind people
> improving consultation with disenfranchised communities, including lower socioeconomic/working class groups, to gather feedback on how government policy would impact their community
> streamlining administration and demystifying business procurement to reduce costs and ensure the government can benefit from more small and medium business owners
> improve communication across government departments to share best practice on things like recruitment, and building practical anti-racism policies and procedures.
Horrendous! This guy should be ashamed. The whole policy document doesn’t mention trans people once!
It’s amazing what happens when you read. Opens up a whole new world of understanding.
Yeah, I noticed that too.Well, the excitement being "palatable" isn't exactly the start I was hoping for but . . .
That's great to hear.I can do a whole ranking if you like :)
I love all those too save Philly (my wife's from there; that's probably influenced me!). I've lots of friends in Boston (rabid, lunatic sports town also) and Nashville is really, really fun. I personally really love Washington DC.
I can tell you the rumors of SF's demise are also greatly exaggerated, though its been slower to get on its feet since COVID.
I believe a certain other regular poster in these forums will agree with me that -- hands down, not remotely close -- the most underrated town in the USA is Pittsburgh.
Mad Dog closed during COVID, but then happily moved to a new location a few years later, and is still around.That's great to hear.
I know I've mentioned several times I've been to SF twice back in my 20's. First alone (staying with a distance friend of the family) over in Lake Merritt, Oakland (but travelling by BART to SF every day) then with my then girlfriend at the time (subsequently mother to my children then subsequently my ex!).
Such strong memories and the utterly charming hospitality of the Mad Dog in the Fog in Lower Haight and Vesuvio Cafe in Northbeach still resonate (I've not had that experience anywhere else in the world).
Hope they're both still open (this was back in the mid 90s).
Would love to go back and may plan something for next year (then again, I've still not done NY....or the mid west as I'd love to do).
Are you saying that people have been taken in by the lies of disinformation, and spread it as truth because they have been so gullible and thought nobody would check?
Shapiro is well onside, as was said by one of his aids. What was said?For a bloke that just failed a job interview, Shapiro can give a hell of a good talk.
Oh my.Mad Dog closed during COVID, but then happily moved to a new location a few years later, and is still around.
And I drive by Vesuvio Cafe every day on my commute home!