March 22, 2017 The Skanner Page 9 News Lefties, Techies Long at Odds in SF, Team Up Against Trump The city has been roiled by gentrification and dissent over income inequality amid tech boom — but tech companies and activists are looking for common ground SAN FRANCISCO — Before Donald Trump’s election, Laurence Berland viewed political protest as a sort of cu- riosity. He was in a good place to see it: San Francisco’s Mission District, once an immigrant enclave in the country’s heartland of radicalism that is increas- ingly populated by people like him — successful tech workers driving up rents while enjoying a daily commute to Silicon Valley on luxury motor coaches. Berland regarded the activism of his adopted city with a mix of empathy and bemusement, checking out Occupy Wall Street demonstrations and pro- tests against the gentrification of his own neighborhood. But now there is less distance between him and activists on the street. On a recent day Berland stood with about 100 others — from software engineers like himself to those who work in tech company cafe- terias — outside a downtown museum “ AP PHOTO/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ By NICHOLAS RICCARDI Associated Press Members of the Orchard City Indivisible Group recite the pledge of allegiance during a city council meeting where they would speak against the policies of President Trump Tuesday, March 7, 2017, in Campbell, Calif. Old-school, anti-capitalist activists and new-school, free-enterprise techies are pushing aside their differences to take on a common foe. a bullhorn pressed to her lips. The crowd closed in around a banner read- ing “Workers in Tech Say No Ban No It’s not about the business of we were here first. We’re about the business of how can we support? Division at this time is not helpful’ for a rally against President Trump. “Everyone come closer! We’re going to practice some chanting, and we’re going to get to know each other,” called a woman wearing a union T-shirt with Wall.” A clipboard-carrying organizer approached Berland to ask if he wanted to join a network of grassroots activ- ists, but Berland waved him away. He had already signed up. In the place that fought against the Vietnam War and for gay rights and, more recently, has been roiled by dis- sent over the technology industry’s impact on economic inequality, an unlikely alliance has formed in the left’s resistance against Trump. Old- school, anti-capitalist activists and new-school, free-enterprise techies are pushing aside their differences to take on a common foe. For years, these two strands of liber- al America have been at each other’s throats. There’ve been protests against evictions of those who can’t afford the Bay Area’s ever-soaring rents. And think back, not so long ago, to the rau- cous rallies to block those fancy buses shuttling tech workers from city neigh- borhoods to the Silicon Valley campus- es of Yahoo, Facebook, Apple and Goo- gle, where Berland once worked. Cat Brooks, a Black Lives Matter ac- tivist in Oakland, has seen the toll the tech industry has taken on some. Her daughter’s elementary school teacher just moved to a distant suburb after her rent skyrocketed, and Brooks thinks more tech money must find its way into local communities. She nevertheless welcomes the infusion of new energy to the protest arena. “It’s not about the business of we were here first,” Brooks said. “We’re about the business of how can we support? Division at this time is not helpful.” Such improbable partnerships scramble the historical protest mod- el that used to pit working-class peo- ple against everyone else, said Rory McVeigh, director of the Center for the Study of Social Movements at the Uni- versity of Notre Dame. “There are new cleavages that can produce alliances that weren’t possible before,” McVeigh said. “When you feel all of you are being threatened but in different ways ... trade-offs are mini- mized. You realize at times such as that that you need allies more than ever be- See JUMP on page 11