Nazi Flag Flies Over San Francisco to Protest Donald Trump Win …

A San Francisco man protested Donald Trump’s astounding presidential victory by mounting a Nazi flag above his house on Wednesday. 

The Dolores Heights homeowner, who asked to remain anonymous, stressed that he neither supports the President-elect nor Nazis. Instead the red flag with the Swastika was akin to a harbinger of trouble that Trump’s win could usher in.  

The flag was taken down around 2 p.m. Wednesday and replaced with a California flag after the homeowner received angry phone calls and was confronted by an irate neighbor. The woman told him that she was very hurt because her grandparents were Holocaust survivors. 

A gate in front of the massive beige-colored home was also crowned with a skull, but the homeowner said that was part of his Halloween decorations.

Trump’s White House victory has spurred protests across the Bay Area with citizens blocking streets and highways, students walking out of classes, and others lighting flares and trash on fire.

Hate-filled messages were sprayed on the walls of a Philadelphi store. A pair of swastikas was accompanied by the words “Trump” and “Sieg Heil,” which is the Nazi salute.

NBC Bay Area’s Stephanie Chuang contributed to this report.

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Silicon Valley housing market an ‘outlier,’ according to economist

News is “always good” in Silicon Valley and it shows in its housing market, said a top state real estate economist at the annual general meeting of the Silicon Valley Association of Realtors, the local trade association with over 5,000 Realtor and affiliate members engaged in the real estate business on the Peninsula and in the South Bay.

The San Francisco Bay Area, and Silicon Valley in particular, leads the nation in job growth, outperforming the rest of the state and nation, according to California Association of Realtors vice president and chief economist Leslie Appleton-Young, the keynote speaker at the Realtor event.

“You are the outlier. You are in a premier area,” Appleton-Young told the Realtors.

Already in June 2016, the median price went above its peak in six Bay Area counties: San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Alameda and Marin. San Mateo County’s June median of $1,306,250 was 28.1 percent above its October 2007 peak of $1,020,000. Santa Clara County’s June median of $1,050,000, was 21.4 percent above its peak of $865,000 in April 2007.

“The Bay Area is unique. It’s the strongest regional economy in the nation, leading in income growth, high-end knowledge-intensive jobs. It is the epicenter for tech, and it shows in its housing market,” said Appleton-Young.

Despite the growth, traffic “clouds how we see development,” said the economist. A quick survey she took of Realtors found even more than the power of obtaining instant mortgage approval, Realtors wished they had the superpower to make traffic disappear. Migration patterns to outlying areas and flyover states reflect these sentiments.

Appleton-Young said California’s housing market is cooling. She noted the market is not dropping; sales are just not increasing as much as they have the last two years. The high-end has slowed, while the moderate to low-end of the market has taken off and continues to be very strong.

The supply shortage, which impacts affordability and home sales is a very real problem across the state. As a result, year-to-date statewide home sales are flat, while home prices have increased more than anticipated with mortgage interest rates still low.

Job opportunities are expanding in California. California’s unemployment rate was 5.5 percent in September 2016; San Jose, 3.8 percent and San Francisco, 3.2 percent.

Appleton-Young said the structural reality of the California marketplace is there are 100,000 new jobs and only 35,000 housing units. The state is missing 65,000 housing units.

Most counties in California are underbuilt. Santa Clara County added 175,000 new jobs from 2010 to 2015, but had only 35,426 new housing permits in the same period.

“We’re up against this invisible constraint,” said Appleton-Young.

She explained that fewer housing units have turned over since the Great Recession. Current homeowners already have a good mortgage and aren’t looking to move. The steep capital gains tax is keeping people, many of whom are baby boomers, from moving. Seventy-one percent of Californians age 55 and over have not moved since 1999.

Instead of moving, more people are reinvesting in their current home for the long haul by remodeling and building additions. The value of residential alterations/additions was at an all-time high the first seven months of 2016, compared to the same period of any other year ever, accelerating this year to an increase of 16 percent over last year.

Unless the housing supply increases, inventory shortage and lack of affordability will remain the housing market’s major challenges.

“I don’t see anything changing that,” said Appleton-Young.

Article source: http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/11/11/los-gatos-saratoga-silicon-valley-housing-market-an-outlier-according-to-economist/

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Nazi Flag Flies Over San Francisco to Protest Donald Trump Win

A San Francisco man protested Donald Trump’s astounding presidential victory by mounting a Nazi flag above his house on Wednesday. 

The Dolores Heights homeowner, who asked to remain anonymous, stressed that he neither supports the President-elect nor Nazis. Instead the red flag with the Swastika was akin to a harbinger of trouble that Trump’s win could usher in.  

The flag was taken down around 2 p.m. Wednesday and replaced with a California flag after the homeowner received angry phone calls and was confronted by an irate neighbor. The woman told him that she was very hurt because her grandparents were Holocaust survivors. 

A gate in front of the massive beige-colored home was also crowned with a skull, but the homeowner said that was part of his Halloween decorations.

Trump’s White House victory has spurred protests across the Bay Area with citizens blocking streets and highways, students walking out of classes, and others lighting flares and trash on fire.

Hate-filled messages were sprayed on the walls of a Philadelphi store. A pair of swastikas was accompanied by the words “Trump” and “Sieg Heil,” which is the Nazi salute.

NBC Bay Area’s Stephanie Chuang contributed to this report.

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‘Not Our President’: Protests Erupt Across the Bay Area After Trump’s Stunning Presidential Victory

Hundreds of protesters poured onto Bay Area streets minutes after Donald Trump was declared the 45th president of the United States early Wednesday morning, blocking freeways, lighting fires and chanting, “Not our president” and “F— Trump.”

Protesters, who predominantly appeared to be students and other millennials, also burned Trump effigies, smashed windows of the Oakland Tribune newsroom, and set tires, trash and newspaper stands on fire in Oakland and Berkeley. The disturbance also forced BART officials to shut down the 12th Street Oakland City Center station. Most of the vandalism was concentrated in the 2300 block of Broadway to 7th Street starting just before midnight, police said. Despite the mayhem, no injuries were reported and just one person was cited for a vehicle code violation, police said.

All the noise and angst came hours after Trump was declared leader of the free world, a stunning upset in this liberal swath of the country.

“When our communities are under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back,” railed protesters, walking through streets with their arms linked. 

RAW: Protests in Bay Area After Trump Win560d1 KNTV 000000019736676 1200x675 804579907808 Not Our President: Protests Erupt Across the Bay Area After Trumps Stunning Presidential VictoryHundreds of protesters poured onto Bay Area streets minutes after Donald Trump was declared the 45th president of the United States early Wednesday morning, blocking freeways, lighting fires and chanting, “Not our president.” (Published Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016)

Police stopped protesters at Broadway and 8th Street in Oakland. “Let us through,” the crowd hollered at officers, who stood their ground.

One protester held a sign which read, “Trump is a fascist pig,” joining about 50 people who refused to disperse. Others, however, turned back around and headed to Berkeley. No one was arrested.

“I’m angry, it’s hard to accept Trump to represent our country, it doesn’t represent the best part of country,” said Berkeley City College art major Devan Tevanbentuy.

During the earlier part of the protest, a woman was struck by a car on Telegraph Avenue and Highway 24, the California Highway Patrol said.

Bay Area Erupts Protests After the Announcement of Donald Trump Presidencycbd11 Cwztjc7VIAANd5  Not Our President: Protests Erupt Across the Bay Area After Trumps Stunning Presidential VictoryHundreds of protesters poured onto Bay Area streets minutes after Donald Trump was declared the 45th president of the United States early Wednesday morning, blocking freeways, lighting fires and chanting, “Not our president” and “F— Trump.” Pete Suratos reports. (Published Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016)

California Highway Patrol Officer Sean Wilkenfeld said officers responded to reports of a protest at Interstate 880 and Broadway around 12:20 a.m., when they heard of pedestrians running into the eastbound lanes of Highway 24. A Honda Element hit a pedestrian in the second lane, near Telegraph Avenue.

Protesters surrounded the car and vandalized it. The woman, who sustained major injuries, was taken to an area hospital for treatment. The driver pulled over to the side of the road after the collision and cooperated with officers, Wilkenfeld said.

Officers said that the highway’s eastbound lanes were closed as emergency responders treated the severely injured pedestrian.

“Although we respect the public’s right to protest, we continue to stress the fact that the freeway is not a safe or legal place to conduct a demonstration,” CHP officers said in a statement.

University of California, Berkeley students reportedly gathered at Sproul Plaza to watch the presidential election unfold.

Malini Ramaiyer, a Daily Californian reporter, said some screamed and booed as Trump snatched up electoral votes. “We, the rational people, are a minority now,” freshman Sean Betancourt told her.

The Berkeley protest swelled to over 200 people, and spilled into Oakland city limits. People chanted, “Whose streets? Our streets,” Anderson Lanham, a UC Berkeley sophomore and reporter for the Daily Cal, said on Twitter.

Lanham credited Ilsa Carillo with spearheading the protest in the East Bay city. “We are students of color and we will not be marginalized, we will not be silenced,” Carillo said, according to Lanham’s Twitter page.

The hashtag #Berkvote was trending on Twitter with city resident Carol Coyote saying, “We need to get organized … as a nation. We cannot have a Trump presidency. This is frightening.”

San Jose State University Students Protests Turned Violent Not Our President: Protests Erupt Across the Bay Area After Trumps Stunning Presidential VictoryProtests erupted early Wednesday morning at San Jose State University after the announcement of the Donald Trump presidency. Chuck Coppola reports. (Published Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016)

Students also used the hashtags #Berkprotest and #Notmypresident.

In the South Bay, a demonstration raged at San Jose State University. Pajama-clad students crowded outside dorms, with one yelling, “I’m not giving up.” Noise complaints were filed as hundreds of protesters took to Tower Lawn, according to the Spartan Daily.

“The time for reform starts with us,” one student said to a chorus of cheers. 

Another said she voted for Hillary Clinton, but her voice “was not heard” because many of her peers “did not do the same.”

Determined to be heard, San Francisco State University students also launched their own expletive-filled rally, chanting, “The people divided will never be divided.”

Students posted on Twitter that they planned to protest again at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Malcolm X Plaza on campus. Oakland protesters were scheduled to re-appear at 5 p.m. at Frank Ogawa Plaza. Another demonstration has been planned at the same time near San Francisco’s Powell and Market Streets cable car stop.

The CHP and Oakland Police Department will increase staffing levels Wednesday as a precautionary measure, Wilkenfeld said.

Students at other UC campuses protested after the election results as well, with at least 500 people taking to the streets at UCLA. Smaller protests sprung up at in Santa Cruz, Irvine and San Diego.

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49ers place DL Arik Armstead on Injured Reserve List

The Chip Kelly-Goes-Back-To-School story is a tribute to one thing and one thing only – the aching desire of some folks to talk about the San Francisco 49ers when there is clearly nothing to discuss.

I mean, he didn’t write any letters of support to Presidential candidates or anything, so we have no other he-should-stick-to-sports distractions to keep us from speculating without evidence. Or for that matter, logic.

So yes, file the latest round of Kelly-may-go-back-to-college yammerage to the age-old media hobby of feeding the beast who must always eat. And who are we to complain about a well-nourished beast?

Only in this case, the beast is being fed nothing but high-sugar snacks because there is no reason why this should be a thing, unless you happen to be committed to (a) blaming Kelly for this team and its performance, (b) allowing general manager Trent Baalke a human shield from his own culpability, (c) wanting Jed York to become the new most-impetuous owner in North American sport, or (d) continuing to be employed as Kelly’s real estate agent.

Of those four options, only (d) is an acceptable motive.

Now Kelly may go back to college, but only if Jed York’s annual scapegoat hunt leads him to Kelly’s office rather than Baalke’s. It’s as simple as that. It’s always been as simple as that. If he is fired, he will leave. That’s how being fired works.

Otherwise, he gains nothing by opting out. NFL jobs don’t come along often, and if he leaves of his own volition, he is unlikely to ever be asked to return. Nobody has offered a convincing reason why he would want that.

Rather, it makes far more sense that he would want to raise this sunken ship – a ship that was already on the ocean bed the day he got here. That is being forgotten in the Will-Chip-Skip scenario.

For one, he would stand to have greater power and influence on the football side if Baalke is the one to go.

For two, he would stand to have greater power and influence on the football side even in Baalke stayed in his present weakened state.

For three, York needs him every bit as much as he might need York, a marriage of convenience that Jim Tomsula could not arrange on his own behalf and that Jim Harbaugh didn’t bother to, since as it turns out, he needed York less than York needed him.

York, though, is a jumpy sort, and he might be convinced as the second half of the season goes from rescue mode to recovery mode that the 49ers are a good team that was simply coached badly, which given that he is the one who brought you all the other 49er coaches makes him 1-for-5 over nine seasons in that relatively important category.

It seems far likelier that he would rather turn in Baalke for the resale value, or even maintain the status quo than turn on Kelly after one year. But that would require that the questions being aimed at Kelly be more properly directed at the CEO, who has maintained his own posture of running silent and running deep.

So where are we at, beast-feeding-wise? Chip Kelly is a coach, and coaches work to be dismissed, and they can either deal with baseless speculation or they find a new gig. So the questions are not unfair.

They are, however, misdirected. The question is not, “Will Chip Kelly quit the 49ers?” but “Will the 49ers quit Chip Kelly?” The difference is crucial, even if it doesn’t feed the beast quite so well.
 

Article source: http://www.csnbayarea.com/49ers/49ers-place-dl-arik-armstead-injured-reserve-list

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