An SF municipal official allegedly went legit crazy and was sent to nuthouse:
| ,.,..,.,..,.,.,.,..,.,.,,..,..,.,,..,.,,. | 03/28/26 | | cannon | 03/28/26 | | ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,...,.,,.., | 03/28/26 | | '"'''''''''''''"' | 03/28/26 | | average/ordinary/typical citizen/person | 03/28/26 | | ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, | 03/28/26 | | gibberish (?) | 03/28/26 | | ,.,..,.,..,.,.,.,..,.,.,,..,..,.,,..,.,,. | 03/28/26 | | just be racist | 03/28/26 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: March 28th, 2026 8:53 PM
Author: ,.,..,.,..,.,.,.,..,.,.,,..,..,.,,..,.,,.
libs, why are you so nuts?
https://nypost.com/2026/03/28/us-news/san-francisco-supervisor-jackie-fielder-hospitalized-after-leak/
Mystery surrounds welfare of socialist San Francisco supervisor as city investigates leaked memo
The mysterious hospitalization of San Francisco Supervisor Jackie Fielder has set off a torrent of rumors on what led to the health crisis amid reports she intends to resign after little more than a year on the job.
Fielder’s office said she was suffering an “acute personal health crisis” Friday and The Post has confirmed the most progressive elected official in the liberal city has notified city officials she intended to take a leave of absence.
But by Friday evening Fielder was telling San Francisco reporters that she will resign from office, shocking residents and political insiders — and potentially setting the stage for Mayor Daniel Lurie’s further consolidation of power.
Sasha Gaona, who served as Fielder’s campaign manager in 2024 and now works as her chief of staff, told The Post in a text message that Fielder has not officially resigned.
“We are hoping the press can respect her privacy at this time and give her space to get better,” Gaona said.
Fielder, a Latina and indigenous Democratic Socialist, has missed at least four board and committee meetings this month, according to the San Francisco Standard.
Before those absences, she was often publicly opposing the mayor on numerous issues, from Lurie giving out multi-million-dollar contracts to people with close ties to the anti-poverty nonprofit he founded to the mayor’s controversial zoning policies on housing.
Fielder has called for a hearing looking into whether Lurie’s administration gave preferential treatment to OpenGov in awarding a $5.9 million contract to streamline San Francisco’s permitting technology.
The mayor’s allies outside of City Hall launched an ad campaign attacking Fielder and other supervisors for opposing the mayor’s housing plan.
Lurie issued a statement Friday evening on social media wishing Fielder a “speedy recovery.”
“She is a dedicated advocate for her community,” Lurie wrote on X. “I am encouraging everyone to give her the time and space to get better so she can do that work fully, and I’m wishing her strength and all the best for her health.”
Rumors have swirled that Fielder could be the subject of an internal city investigation looking into leaked documents regarding a “sobering center,” a place for homeless people high on drugs to receive treatment without punishment but face arrest if they decide to leave.
A memo obtained by news website Mission Local shows the City Attorney’s Office warned elected officials that the mayor’s proposal for the South of Market area — located near the city’s downtown core — could violate state laws and presents a “very high legal risk.”
The plan passed on a 9-2 vote and Fielder was one of only two supervisors to oppose it.
The city attorney’s office launched an internal investigation in February to find out who leaked the memo to the media, and a source with knowledge of the situation said it almost certainly came from one of San Francisco’s 11 supervisors or an elected officials’ staffer.
However, the leak investigation is in its early stages and Fielder does not appear to have been pinpointed as a culprit.
“Our thoughts are with Supervisor Fielder,” said Jen Kwart, a spokesperson for City Attorney David Chiu. “We wish her a quick recovery and encourage her to take the time and space necessary to thoroughly consider any potential resignation.”
Aaron Peskin, a four-time city supervisor who was often seen as one of the most polarizing figures in San Francisco’s progressive wing of politics, called the job Fielder is doing “extremely stressful” and a “pressure-cooker environment.”
“This is a moment where people need to put politics aside and prioritize giving her the space to do what she needs to do,” Peskin said.
If she were to resign, Peskin noted, the mayor’s appointment would likely be a placeholder, as the city’s Mission District has historically had the most progressive voting bloc in the city.
Before running for supervisor in 2024, Fielder gained attention as a candidate in the 2020 state Senate race against Scott Wiener. She has aggressively pushed for publicly-owned banks to divest from fossil fuels and reinvest in local communities.
Fielder has frequently found herself outnumbered in political fights as a supervisor, as San Francisco voters have shifted to supporting more moderate candidates and policies in recent years.
She has publicly supported alternatives to incarceration, stronger police accountability measures, and reaffirmed San Francisco’s sanctuary city policies, speaking out against ICE enforcement actions and backing legal protections for undocumented residents.
Fielder’s has faced criticism for her opposition to the mayor’s upzoning efforts and market-rate housing expansions, instead pushing for expanded tenant protections, rent control enforcement, and large-scale public or social housing investments.
She is the chair of the city’s Government Audit & Oversight Committee, a chair for the Local Agency Formation Commission and a member of the San Francisco County Transportation Authority.
If Fielder does resign, Lurie would have the opportunity to make another appointment to the Board of Supervisors, before a special election is held. San Francisco’s last supervisor appointment blew up in the mayor’s face, as Lurie appointed Beya Alcaraz, an unvetted 29-year-old former pet store owner.
Alcaraz resigned just nine days into the job after it was uncovered that she’d abandoned her pet store with hundreds of dead mice, lost tens of thousands of dollars in the final years of operations and paid employees under the table.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851064&forum_id=2Elisa#49777472) |
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Date: March 28th, 2026 9:10 PM
Author: ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,...,.,,..,
(((Fielder)))
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851064&forum_id=2Elisa#49777516) |
Date: March 28th, 2026 9:05 PM Author: '"'''''''''''''"'
Final paragraphs:
> If Fielder does resign, Lurie would have the opportunity to make another appointment to the Board of Supervisors, before a special election is held. San Francisco’s last supervisor appointment blew up in the mayor’s face, as Lurie appointed Beya Alcaraz, an unvetted 29-year-old former pet store owner.
> Alcaraz resigned just nine days into the job after it was uncovered that she’d abandoned her pet store with hundreds of dead mice, lost tens of thousands of dollars in the final years of operations and paid employees under the table.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851064&forum_id=2Elisa#49777499) |
Date: March 28th, 2026 9:09 PM
Author: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
wait until you learn about the Chairman of the San Francisco Housing Authority Commission. (it involves Kool-Aid.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Jones
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851064&forum_id=2Elisa#49777513) |
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Date: March 28th, 2026 9:58 PM
Author: ,.,..,.,..,.,.,.,..,.,.,,..,..,.,,..,.,,.
that's an interesting question. how insane do you need to be to get sent to the nuthouse in SAN FRANCISCO of all places? you must have to be an off-the-fucking-charts lunatic for that to happen.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5851064&forum_id=2Elisa#49777612) |
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