san francisco

This is what progressivism gets you by Nathan Jones

A family walks past a man lying in the street, San Francisco. Photograph by Austin Leong.

A family walks past a man lying in the street, San Francisco. Photograph by Austin Leong.

A couple of years ago, one of my friends saw a man staggering down the street, bleeding. She recognized him as someone who regularly slept outside in the neighborhood, and called 911. Paramedics and police arrived and began treating him, but members of a homeless advocacy group noticed and intervened. They told the man that he didn’t have to get into the ambulance, that he had the right to refuse treatment. So that’s what he did. The paramedics left; the activists left. The man sat on the sidewalk alone, still bleeding. A few months later, he died about a block away.
— Nellie Bowles in How San Francisco Became a Failed City (The Atlantic, June 8 2022)