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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
San Francisco's tech bros told: get out of the gayborhood
2016-02-03
[THEGUARDIAN] When Cleve Jones, a longtime gay activist who led the creation of the Aids Memorial Quilt, went to his local gay bar in the Castro district, he saw something that shocked him.

"The tech bros had taken over The Mix. They commanded the pool table and the patio. These big, loud, butch guys. It was scary," he said. "I'm not heterophobic, but I don't want to go to a gay bar and buy some guy a drink and have him smirk and tell me he's straight. They can go anywhere. We can't."

Residents of the Socialist paradise of San Francisco
...where God struck dead Anton LaVey, home of the Sydney Ducks, ruled by Vigilance Committee from 1859 through 1867, reliably and volubly Democrat since 1964...
's historically gay Castro district are worried that it's changing, as speculators come in to flip the few remaining ramshackle old Victorians and the old-timer gay bars shutter. In a recent small survey, 77% of people who have lived in the neighborhood for 10 or more years identified as gay, while only 55% of those who moved in the past year did.

When an iconic building was on the market earlier this year, it was between two potential tenants: a gay strip club and a SoulCycle. The SoulCycle won. This winter, The Gangway, the oldest gay bar in town, is closing down.

"When you lose the geographic concentration, you lose a lot," Jones said. "We lose the cultural vitality, the political power -- you also lose the specialized social services."

Let's be clear: San Francisco is still extremely gay, with 6.2% of the population identifying as LGBT, according to a recent Gallup poll that puts the Bay Area as the gayest region in America. Portland follows with their gay population at 5.4% of the region.

But the gay community is changing -- and traditional LGBT institutions are rapidly disappearing.

"The neighborhood is more professional gay now. Not that it's less gay, but you gotta have money to move in," said Hank Cancél, who lives on the corner of 19th and Castro streets, where he keeps a collection of gay erotic dolls in the window. "So now it's Apple gay. Airbnb gay."
Posted by:Fred

#7  San Francisco is still extremely gay, with 6.2% of the population identifying as LGBT

Funny, in 2013, only 13.4 percent of San Francisco's population were younger than 18.
Posted by: Pappy   2016-02-03 21:25  

#6  Go ask the folks who lived in the Castro District before it was gay how they felt being pushed out.
Posted by: Capsu 78   2016-02-03 16:36  

#5  Apple gay, huh.

Well listen here sister: put the damn dolls down and go win back the billiards table. Few years back friends and I went to an old stomping ground where the shuffleboard table was dominated by, as you would say, young butch frat boys with money. We challenged and won the table after an admittedly good, fun, close game.

So put you big boy panties on, or stop making the argument that gays can't sustain generational enterprises. Nobody like a whiner.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2016-02-03 13:10  

#4  I calculate that the next 1906 level earthquake will hit San Francisco in 2027. Then we will see how all these interesting people fare.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2016-02-03 11:36  

#3  Don't sweat it dude - this kinda stuff will last a few more decades in SF

and imma guessin there will always be Hunky Jesus

Sucks to have people you don't like moving in and taking over, no? Might change the historical character of the locale. Oh wait.....
Posted by: Bov Flimbers   2016-02-03 04:19  

#2  Think this through with me. Because there are so many gay men in San Francisco heterosexual women find it hard to find a husband. Tech Bros are awkward around heterosexual women. But by moving to San Francisco the Tech Bros are increasing their chances of actually getting a date.

The perfect circle abides.
Posted by: Sven the pelter   2016-02-03 01:30  

#1  "They can go anywhere. We can't."

Apparently that isn't quite true.
Posted by: gorb   2016-02-03 00:22  

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