20
January
2014
|
04:08 AM
America/Los_Angeles

The Indifference Of Tech Companies That Make A Difference


IntegrationMural 1

A mural in the Mission district of San Francisco offers a message of integration.

The indifference of tech companies that make a difference — to the plight of their local communities — is astounding. San Francisco and Silicon Valley schools and neighborhoods suffer from the very same problems that affect schools and cities everywhere.

Tech companies such as Google, don’t see a contradiction in their claims of making a transformative difference in the world — but not in the places where they live. 

It seems tech companies need “Big Data” to decide what is the right thing to do? They’ve lost empathy with the world outside of their blackened bus windows and security patrolled campus enclaves.

Without empathy there is no compassion. Without compassion there is no comprehension that there is even a problem that needs to be solved.

This can all be fixed because where there is a will, there is always a way.

If tech can help sell shoes it can help sell us on empathy. But the self-segregation of the tech community needs to be stopped. Integration is the answer. Segregation is at the root of community conflicts because they aren’t known by their neighbors. And  segregation keeps the tech workers from knowing the issues their neighbors face daily.

San Francisco should be working to integrate its tech firms instead of doubling up on police patrols to sweep away the unpleasant grime of urban life from outside their offices. 

The answer is here…

The answer to these issues is right here at our door. We have an amazing resource: Silicon Valley. It has proven itself time and again, the global engine of innovation; and its visionary leaders have time and again, proclaimed that there is no problem too hard that can’t be solved. 

Let Silicon Valley and San Francisco tech companies prove it.

The streets of SF…

The police should not clear away local street people from tech company doors in downtown San Francisco.  Let that sharp ammonia smell of urine in the early morning act like smelling salts, to revive their conscience, and rouse them to action.

Integrate the tech community and they’ll be part of the solution. 

If Silicon Valley can fix the future — it can fix the problems on our streets and in our schools. And if we can fix it here, we can fix these issues anywhere — what an amazing business opportunity. And what a great advertisement for Silicon Valley companies. 

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Coming up next, “Why do tech companies segregate their workers?”

Please see: Is Segregation The New 'Gentrification'? SF Sweeps Locals From Twitter's Doorstep