When I look out my window
And when I look in my window
so many different people to
be.
That it's strange
so strange
The song 'Season of the Witch'
by Donovan
Season of the Witch, a book by David Talbot, covers the wild history of San
Francisco from roughly the Summer of Love in 1967 to the late 1980's post
HIV/AIDS crisis. To refer to that era as colorful is indeed an understatement.
It seemed as if everything but a major earthquake shook the city back then, and
its pieces were scattered everywhere. Scott McKenzie sang 'If you're going to
San Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair.' The hippies came in
droves in search of free love and drug experimentation. But the
party had to end sometime, and many revelers succumbed to std's and overdoses.
The hippies weren't the only
ones clashing cultures with the old Italian/Irish Catholic power structure of
the time. Next came anti-war in Vietnam protesters, race riots and other civil
rights demonstrations, neighborhood gentrification, porn theaters, radical
anarchists, Patty Hearst, the Jim Jones cult, and the assassinations of Mayor
Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. But bright spots also emerged within the
cataclysm. San Francisco was on the leading edge of the locally grown food
movement, grew into a place of tolerance for gay and transgender individuals,
became a model for compassionate healthcare for those afflicted with HIV/AIDS,
and even witnessed the unlikely rise of Joe Montana and the Super Bowl winning
San Francisco 49ers.
I've only visited San Francisco a few times, but after reading
this amazing historical account I certainly need to visit again. For despite
all its calamities, The City by the Bay is indeed a resilient and
beautiful national treasure.
Below, are some pictures from Miki's most recent trips to San Francisco. Perhaps you can share with us your San Francisco experience...
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