A local origami workshop is popping up in San Francisco, offering residents the rare chance to do something wholesome, screen-free, and — blessedly — unregulated by City Hall. No permits required to fold a crane. No environmental impact report needed for a paper boat. Just you, a square sheet of paper, and the quiet satisfaction of making something with your hands.
Look, we're not pivoting to arts and crafts coverage. But there's something worth noting here. Community events like these are the kind of low-cost, grassroots gatherings that actually build neighborhood connections — no $2 million city grant required. Nobody had to commission a feasibility study. Nobody convened a task force. Someone just… organized a workshop.
Origami is also, if you think about it, a pretty solid metaphor for good governance: you start with a clear plan, every fold matters, and if you get sloppy in the middle, the whole thing falls apart. San Francisco's budget process could learn a thing or two.
If you're looking for a reason to step away from the doom scroll and do something genuinely relaxing this week, this is it. Bring a friend. Bring your kids. Fold a tiny paper fox and remember what it feels like when a simple idea is just… executed well, without seven layers of bureaucratic approval.
We'll be back to our regularly scheduled programming of holding local government accountable tomorrow. But today? Today we fold.




