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How the Internet ruined San Francisco | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 "A guy walks into A Different Light bookstore [a famous gay bookstore] with a big list of high-end books ... and asked our clerks to help find them. We were happy to oblige, and when he was finished looking at a dozen or so books, he put them away and the clerk asked, 'So can I help you with a purchase?' The guy said no, he just wanted to look at the books before he bought them from Amazon. We've got news for you, buster: Keep doing that and you aren't going to have any bookstores where you can paw the books."
So what can San Francisco mean, if it's not a place where you can be arty or subversive or living in genteel socialist poverty? Yes, there have always been rich people in San Francisco -- hell, robber barons made San Francisco -- but the point is, there was always room for the rest of us. You could have the backyard, suburban pleasures that are possible in a city that's not built to bulk, a city where well-to-do people lived right next door to people of modest means. Gross class stratifications weren't there. But not anymore. The San Francisco of Sierra Club founder John Muir and Ambrose Bierce; of Kenneth Rexroth, impresario of the alternative without whom there would have been no Beat scene in San Francisco; of the Tubes and the Jefferson Airplane; of R. Crumb and Bruce Connor; the place where Sam Shepard and Allen Ginsberg arguably created their best work; the great beautiful last-chance saloon, the last best hope for those who can't fit in anywhere else -- gone. Gentrification is a story that's been told many times in many locales -- but the difference is, it happened so fast in San Francisco. Yes, boomtown Silicon Valley means money is pouring into the city -- but the city that remains is not San Francisco.
So that's what the Internet has done to San Francisco: given it the devil- salon.com | October 27, 1999 - - - - - - - - - - - -
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