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Recent Articles by Matt Smith

  • Business Conductor

    The city needs to stop subsidizing the S.F. Symphony and other snobby arts organizations that cater to the rich.

  • Change Hasn't Come to S.F.

    Blacks should look to Washington and not to City Hall for hope.

  • Train Wreck

    Major public transit agencies around the country — including San Francisco's — may pay billions for risky deals with bankers.

  • The Failed Experiment

    The Class of 2000 made San Francisco its political petri dish.

  • On the Waterfront

    Pier 39's management dismisses Joe Abuzaid as a wingnut, but this wingnut may be a real whistleblower.

National Features >

  • Broward-Palm Beach New Times

    The Lost Season

    Here's how you become one of those people who screams at his kid's coach.

    By Bob Norman

  • Houston Press

    Deadly Evidence

    First, Houston's DNA lab became a laughingstock. Then its controversial director was murdered.

    By Randall Patterson

Let the Sun Shine, You Hypocrites

Continued from page 2

Published on March 25, 2008 at 1:18pm

These are a fraction of the SF Weekly stories that have elevated San Francisco public life. Yet the Guardian has argued that by spending this kind of money on journalism, SF Weekly somehow sought to cause harm to the less fortunate. This is a perverse idea of social justice.

"Who bloody cares? Tempest in a teapot!! Does anyone actually read these rags? Let's save a few trees. A plague on both their houses," was a typical reader remark on the Chronicle story announcing the Guardian-Weekly verdict.

Who indeed?

If, two decades from now, Alameda County children are not brain-damaged by lead exposure, nobody will wonder why. If there are no unusual clusters of cancer of the skin, lungs, urinary tract, bladder, and kidneys of the types typically caused by arsenic, it's doubtful anyone will pause to reflect on the stadium's worth of toxic dirt that filled a convoy bound for a safer repository in 1999. That's old news.

But to my admittedly biased way of thinking, it's news that deserved to see the light of day.

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