daveman
Diamond Member
Indeed.TRIGGER WARNING: MATHThe quality of life of the productive, has been decimated.
Store owners are asking people to please wipe the shit off their feet before entering, if they can get passed the garbage in front of the owner's door to begin with. The smell must be appalling.
They are devolving to the filthy early 1800's, and keep voting for it to compound. Incredible.
Then there are the real freebies. Shop lifting is de facto, no longer a criminal offense under $950.00.
Imagine yourself a business owner. How many $950.00 hits can you take per day before your inventory and your livelihood are wiped out?
And yet they vote for the situation to deteriorate even more.
And worse yet is, the productive are leaving the shit holes they helped to create and insist on voting for the same downward spiral in the once normal cities they escaped to!
Prove to me your lies.
lol. With pleasure:
Beyond making the city a toxic sinkhole of poor hygiene, the epidemic of human beings defecating in the streets has had a tremendous economic impact on the city of St. Francis. NBC News reported last year that the city has become so filth-infested that the city spends approximately $30 million a year to clean human feces off the sidewalk.
San Francisco lost more residents than any other city in the US in the last quarter of 2017, according to data from real-estate site Redfin, which sampled a million users. The data factored in the number of residents that cities gained, meaning San Francisco lost a net 15,489 residents; about 24% more than the next-highest loser on the list, New York City.
This is expected to continue into 2018, considering that, as of February, 49% of Bay Area residents were looking to move out of San Francisco, according to a survey by public-relations firm Edelman.
There ya go...
Your link is from last year dumbass. You may want to update your ignorance.
San Francisco curbs waste with public toilets, 'poop patrol'
Today, the staffed bathrooms have grown from three to 25 locations, and the program has expanded to Los Angeles. In May, the toilets in San Francisco recorded nearly 50,000 flushes, all logged by attendants.
Some of the bathrooms are permanent fixtures, while others are portables with two toilets that are trucked in and out.
Let's do some, shall we?
In May, Frisco's staffed toilets were flushed nearly 50,000 times.
In July, the city has about 9,784 homeless residents.
So, dividing 50K flushes by 9,784 homeless, that gives us 5.1 flushes per homeless person...per month.
Dunno about you, but I use the bathroom a little more often than that.
Did it help? Yes. Did it help much? No.
I double checked your stats.
By God, you're right!
Ain't that some shit?