To live in San Francisco, as I do, is to realize that there is no utopia of equal rights for all. Public transportation tells the real story- the sides of buses have had everything on them from blatant islamophobia (“Islamophobia = Islamorealism”, it claimed) to ads for marijuana in mason jars, stating that weed can finally to be up to “California standards,” i.e. packaging amount. Non-black school children continue to use the n-word as if it’s the new buzzword. Yuppies from Silicon Valley flood in every day, pushing out established, poorer families because rent is now higher than some people pay to buy their house in another state. The day after pride, the “sins of the flesh” posters come up. So what’s the difference? …show more content…
To a native San Franciscan, “The South” might as well be the pits of Hades. And to some degree, there are statistically more recorded incidences of violence in some parts of the south, that can’t be disputed very much. But this overblown fear makes null any actual incidents of hate going on locally, because hey, it could always be worse. You could be in that violent, hateful, every -ism and -phobia-loving South. Many people are surprised when I mention the existence of Houston,