San Francisco delivered one of its trademark stunners last night — a jaw-dropping sunset that painted the skyline in shades of amber, pink, and deep violet. No permits were required. No environmental impact report was filed. No sixteen-member commission voted on it. It just… happened.
For a city that can't seem to build a bus shelter without a decade of deliberation, it's a nice reminder that some of the best things in life remain gloriously outside the reach of City Hall. The fog, the light, the way the sun dips behind the Pacific and turns the Golden Gate into a silhouette — this is the stuff that keeps people here even when the cost of living makes absolutely no rational sense.
And let's be honest: we need these moments. Between budget deficits, encampment debates, and whatever fresh disaster SFMTA is cooking up, a gorgeous sunset is basically free therapy for a city that could desperately use some. Zero cost to the taxpayer, infinite return on investment. If only our supervisors understood that ratio.
So if you caught it — from Dolores Park, the Sunset, Twin Peaks, or your overpriced apartment window — consider yourself lucky. San Francisco has a lot of problems, but its natural beauty has never been one of them. The sunsets here hit different, and no amount of municipal dysfunction can ruin that.
File this one under the rare win that nobody in government can take credit for and nobody in government can screw up. Yet.