After the Giants game on May 4th, a Denver man took a nasty spill on an electric scooter somewhere near the ballpark. Head wound, pavement, the whole ugly scene. But before he could even process what happened, a group of strangers — regular San Franciscans heading home from the game — swarmed in to help. One called his wife in Colorado. Another literally took the sweatshirt off their back to wrap his bleeding head. Others kept him warm and calm until paramedics arrived.
His wife posted a public thank-you to the city this week, and honestly, it's the kind of thing that cuts through the noise. Her husband walked away with just a few stitches and some bruises. No broken bones. He flew home to Denver a few days later. She wanted San Francisco to know: you took care of my guy, and we love your city even more for it.
As one local put it, "Really glad that there are still people willing to help — you sometimes don't see that these days, especially in large cities."
Now, the libertarian in us has to say the quiet part out loud: this is a personal responsibility story too. The wife herself said it plainly — wear a helmet and don't ride scooters in unfamiliar cities after dark. That's not victim-blaming; that's just good advice. Electric scooters are convenient, sure, but they're also 40-pound machines on potholed streets with zero protection between your skull and the concrete. One SF resident recommended Bay Wheels bikes over scooters for tourists, and honestly, that's not bad advice either.
San Francisco doesn't need another layer of scooter regulation or a new municipal task force. What it needs is exactly what showed up that night: citizens who give a damn. No bureaucracy required — just a sweatshirt and a phone call.
Here's to a speedy recovery, Denver. Come back anytime. Maybe just grab a bike next round.


