Blog: San Francisco

Angel Island

Rising 788 feet out of San Francisco Bay, Angel Island has been a Native American fishing ground, a U.S. Army garrison, the Ellis Island of the West, and a missile base. Today it is a state park which provides breathtaking panoramic views of San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, and Marin County.

posted on May 14, 2007 8:30 pm (comment)

The Alameda-Weehawken Burrito Tunnel

"The inaugural burrito (carnitas with lettuce, salsa and avocado, no beans) was loaded into the breech at the Alameda terminus at 10:05 AM and was served to a beaming Cavanaugh, Vice President Walter Mondale and New York mayor Ed Koch in Weehawken 64 minutes later."

Read it.

posted on Apr 8, 2007 7:39 pm (comment)

Mt. Tam

North of San Francisco, the range of mountains that makes San Francisco hilly grows even larger, making large portions of Marin County mountainous and uninhabitable. Mt. Tamalpais is one of Marin's best known mountains, 2,571 feet in height, and on a hot summer day which brought thousands to Stinson Beach at its base, Daisy organized a group trip for a three-hour hike up its slopes.
Hikers On a tree The Golden Gate
Stinson Beach on a hot day Sunny rock

posted on Aug 10, 2006 9:38 pm (comment)

San Francisco

August's edition of my monthly pilgrimage to Mountain View coincided with the Young Democrats of America's national convention, which I was able to attend for the evening sessions. Drinking Liberally threw a party Wednesday which packed the house and overwhelmed the restaurant's bar staff. That came on the heels of a terrific edition of the regular weekly DL (Tuesdays, Zeitgeist, Valencia and Duboce, 7 pm).

I'm on vacation all week this week, so posting will be light to nonexistent. Meanwhile, enjoy the pictures of San Francisco under a blanket of fog.

New Yorkers in the West Politicos partying Girls of San Francisco
Liberal Laughmasters in the West From atop the city Fog's edge
Tucked in under the blanket

posted on Aug 14, 2005 5:59 pm (comment)

Gavin Newsom Clone for NYC Mayor

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom wowed the Young Democrats of America, and me, at their annual conference on Wednesday. His message was simple, yet drew a contrast with many other Democrats: we should stand up for what we believe in, period. People will respect that, even those who disagree.

Newsom has been criticized by many for issing marriage licenses to same-sex couples in San Francisco last year. But, he persuasively argued, when John Kerry claimed that he believed marriage should be between an man and a woman, most people just plain didn't believe him. He lost respect from those who supported marriage rights and credibility from those who did not. Instead, he should have stood up for equality. It's the right thing to do. It's what Democrats believe.

People respect a leader who stands up for himself and for what he believes. Democrats continuously fall into the fallacious trap of thinking that voters will make their decisions based on which politician agrees with more of their positions. Voters want a strong figure to follow. A charismatic leader who extolls a vision for a better future is very attractive no matter the specifics.

And Gavin Newsom did this. "I'm pro choice, period, exclamation point," Newsom shouted, to thunderous applause. We need more people like Newsom. State Senator Eric Schneiderman is cast from the same mold. A fierce partisan and persuasive speaker, he pulls no punches yet comes across as an appropriately zealous advocate for truth and justice. No matter what one's beliefs, that's hard not to be attracted to.

Justin argued that Newsom is the perfect argument for why we need a Democratic mayor in New York City. Too many Democrats believe that Bloomberg is a fine mayor despite being a Republican, because he has run the city efficiently. But Bloomberg has sucked up to state and national Republicans, burnishing their image through the use of New York imagery without getting much for the city in return. He hasn't pushed for progressive social principles or progressive economic policies. He has weakened unions and trod upon civil liberties. Meanwhile, Newsom is doing the exact opposite in every one of those ways, making San Francisco into a shining city of a hill - several hills, actually - of why liberalism is a viable and inspiring political philosophy. Conservatives may mock it, but they mock it because of its success, and its success will persuade millions.

At the Parks1 Mayoral Forum, Gifford Miller got the greatest applause and won the most fans when he broke out of the thoughtful, wonkish, mature discussion they had all engaged in and launched into a spirited defense of parks maintenance. Written down that doesn't sound like much, but his enthusiasm and eloquence made even maintenance funds exciting. Imagine what would happen if he exhibited that kind of fire all the time.

He'd be like Gavin Newsom.

And maybe, like Gavin Newsom, he'd be Mayor.

posted on Aug 6, 2005 3:53 pm (2 comments)

Fog

Landing at San Francisco airport this evening, we approached the Bay Area from the north, giving me an amazing view from the Richmond-San Rafael bridge all the way down past the Golden Gate along the peninsula to San Jose. The entire Bay laid out at our feet.

And everywhere the sky was clear, except for a blanket of clouds and fog smack dab over the city of San Francisco, and one very small one over Richmond. Except for a patch around SoMa and Potrero Hill, the fog draped across the city down to San Bruno Mountain.

This is the way it always is. But nothing reminds us of it so starkly as seeing the entire Bay Area at once from the air, all the clouds concentrated over one space - the very space where the most people live. It's bizarre.

And freezing. I went from short sleeves in New York to a biting chill waiting for the AirTrain at San Francisco airport. Mark Twain was right when he said, "The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco."

Forecast for San Francisco: Tuesday, cloudy, 67. Wednesday, cloudy, 69. Thursday, cloudy, 71. Forecast for Mountain View: Tuesday, sunny, 78. Wednesday, sunny, 84. Thursday, sunny, 88.

posted on Aug 2, 2005 3:33 am (comment)

Four cities and a wedding

Time in New York, Martha's Vineyard, the Bay Area, and Los Angeles for Jason and Lan's wedding (third of four for the summer) constitute an eventful few weeks.
NYPD show of force Jamie on the Arabella Sails
Jamie and Erika Jamie and Erika The beach, Southern California style
Up in the chairs Mother/son dance Cutting the cake
Carrying over the threshold

posted on Aug 1, 2004 5:05 pm (comment)

Wedding #2

The second of the four weddings I will attend this summer took place at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco and provided a mini-reunion for a completely different set of friends than the last. It's too bad that a wedding has to happen for there to be a mini-reunion, because I'd love to have people gather in one city and hang out for a weekend just for fun. Sadly, it's just a bit too expensive to be practical.
Motor Vessel Martha's Vineyard If you go down to the woods today Another day in the Bloggerplex
The newlyweds Ridleys and Starkey The floral dress guests
Krinsky and Ridley Mmm cake! Old friends
Conga line Demonic Russian dancer Woo hoo!

posted on Jun 22, 2004 3:44 pm (comment)

City life in all its glory

A whirlwind few weeks brought me past a diverse collection of sights, from enormous hero sandwiches and misprinted umbrellas in New York, to beautiful airplane window views of San Francisco, to a progressive mixer featuring Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi and a great collection of local and national progressive organizations.
Stoller and a broomstick San Francisco, Oakland, and Alameda San Francisco to Walnut Creek
Umbrellas Keep New York City Clean Six foot hero
Assemblyman Scott Stringer Felipe Luciano reads his poetry Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi
Tom Suozzi exhorts the crowd Rising stars W Hotel and M Hotel
Major misprint on a subway map umbrella

posted on May 25, 2004 5:19 pm (comment)

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