Last night I caught up with Alicia Garza who, when her fingers typed for the first time #blacklivesmatter, co-founded a movement that shook and shakes up the planet in every way. Even today experiences of cities, activism, and identity monetized by sound bytes continues to overturn and it all started right here, in a neighborhood not even on the tourist map of the tech capital: Bayview, San Francisco. "I have knocked on everyone of these doors" Garza shares as she describes the neighborhood where her roots as an organizer emerged. And now, as the world grows new activisms under her canopy, we must pay tribute to the neighborhood with rich (albeit radioactive) soil at the epicenter of it all, Bayview, San Francisco. Dry land shipyards where the atomic bomb sailed from to end the Second World War: Bayview, San Francisco. The last neighborhood still affordable for people whose backs built an industrial past in a city washed over by the tech industry: Bayview, San Francisco. The proposed future site of the next Google campus : folks keep your eyes on Bayview, San Francisco.













