People vs. Billionaires in San Francisco
Dani H blocks a Waymo pestering the demonstrators. Richard Marcantonio photo
Who would you rather see showing up in your neighborhood—heavily armed, masked men, snatching random neighbors peacefully going about their daily business, shoving them into unmarked cars and taking them away to unknown destinations? Or people in puffy fanciful animal costumes, surrounded by a crowd singing and dancing, carrying colorful banners and chanting funny slogans?
People living in a very wealthy neighborhood in San Francisco got the better of the deal on Saturday, November 15 when the second type of group appeared on the streets they call home. But then the rich usually get the better of any deal. This event, however, hinted that the deal wasn’t entirely favorable to them.
Three hundred marched through Pacific Heights.
Sharpening the message
Looking to sharpen the message of the growing resistance movement, a coalition of labor and community organizations, including East Bay DSA, opened up a San Francisco front for a worldwide day of action, People Over Billionaires, in swanky Pacific Heights last weekend. Although plans to stage parallel actions in Los Angeles and San Diego were washed away by a hard rainstorm and threat of floods, the northern California demo provided enough inspiration for people, and consternation among the rich residents in their fancy houses, to make up for it. (The southern California actions were rescheduled for December 6.)
Members of East Bay DSA, working in coalition with the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE), SEIU 1021, the San Francisco Labor Council, East Bay Indivisible, Tenants Together and the Oil and Gas Action Network (OGAN), among others, assembled in well-groomed Alta Plaza Park. In front of a boisterous crowd of three hundred, speakers called for taxing the rich, protecting immigrants, affordable housing, supporting federal workers under attack by the Trump administration, and saving the planet from climate destruction.
Then they marched several blocks through Pacific Heights to the rhythms of the Brass Liberation Orchestra, pausing in front of the homes of Larry Ellison, Oracle CEO; David Sacks, Trump’s crypto and AI adviser; and Shaun Maguire, right wing venture capitalist and DOGE wrecker. The crowd shared chants, songs, and ideas about whether billionaires should exist or not at each home before moving on. Here are a few images and comments from East Bay DSA comrades about their rally and march through one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in California.
Participant comments
David D., a retired union activist said, “Several hundred of us marched around Pacific Heights with banners and costumes and a brass band. We stopped, got loud and line-danced in front of Larry Ellison’s house. Pacific Heights doesn’t get a lot of marches, so a lot of heads turned. Quite a few people cheered us. There were more people of color at this than any anti-Trump event I’ve been to, mostly coming with ACCE.”
According to Aleigha L., a substitute teacher, “This was my first ever organized march and my first time volunteering! All the people who came seemed very warm, excited, and motivated to get started. Even as a newbie I felt like it was clear what our aims were: to let billionaires know that real people in their city were not okay with their priorities and that we see the very real fallout of their "profitable" decisions. Many people we encountered as part of safety crew [security detail—ed.] were interested in or supportive of what we were doing. Those that weren't were the uber-wealthy who weren't used to seeing their neighborhood reflect the dissatisfaction of the general population. I hope everyone who marched and everyone who witnessed it sees our dedication to improving life for all Americans, and pursuing more empathetic, supportive communities!”
“Orca-nizers” were prominent in the demonstration.
The diversity of the demonstration extended from people to the animal, mollusk and insect kingdoms.
Mo K., a climate activist, noted, “What was impressive was a diverse group of working people coming together on the grounds of the people who are exploiting all of our labor and resources. Taking it to the billionaires was an amazing thing, to be at their doors and say to them we have the power to tax you, we’re taking back the power that’s ours, and you’re not going to get away with living your life, having your dinner parties, pretending that everything is normal while you’re busy destroying our lives and the world around us. To do all of this while being dressed up as squids and orcas and frogs and chickens and in pink, playing wonderful live music, with people’s art surrounding us, it was just joyous.”
Emma Goldman would have enjoyed the line dancing.
And musician Bonnie L. added, “It was great to hear passionate, articulate rank-file union members and actual grassroots organizers speaking the truth that builds working class organization and power. It was fun to march with the participatory culture of our own brass band, flash dancers and street theater. This is the left wing, the class-based wing of the mobilizations that give us energy and hope. But I'd wager lots of us went away from this gathering of a few hundred wondering, ‘how do we build these politics, this working class culture into the current mass mobilizations of tens of thousands—and in turn, into organized power for a socialist future rather than an illusory democracy under Democratic Party leadership’?”
According to its organizers, this will not be the last event of this sort.