.

“As an adjudicated insurrectionist, Trump is an illegitimate president according to Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, and therefore every official act as president will be illegitimate.”

–Mike Zonta, co-editor of OccupySF.net

The 14th Amendment states: “No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.”

Call your Congressperson and your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121

Inside the S.F. tower where biotech hackers and AI founders are trying to build our future

By Laura Waxmann, Staff Writer Updated June 21, 2026 (SFChronicle.com)

Gift Article

Frontier Tower members celebrate the first anniversary San Francisco incubator’s first anniversary in April. The previously vacant downtown building has become a “vertical village” for a variety of projects ranging from longevity to robotics. But members say a power struggle has developed.Giselle Garza Lerma/S.F. Chronicle

At the corner of Sixth and Market streets, a nondescript gray high-rise known as Frontier Tower blends into downtown San Francisco’s landscape of urban decay and reinvention. Inside the former office building is a microcosm of the city, a conglomeration of technologists and artists with idealistic visions of tomorrow. Most of them want to change some aspect of the world with their work, even if they can’t all agree on how. 

On some floors, occupants have created wet labs and artificial intelligence startups, or experimented with sparring humanoid robots. One space has been converted into a functional hyperbaric chamber. Elsewhere, jewelry that records conversations was built by a team that included a member who has been recording his life continuously for more than a decade.

And when biotech founder Elliot Roth wants to use the elevator to visit one of those stations, he presses his hand against the control panel, which reads the pill-size chip implanted under his skin.

Subdermal implants like the one in Roth’s hand aren’t required for those who work in the building. But that blend of experimentation, personal autonomy and futurism has defined much of the activity inside Frontier Tower, which emerged last year from the husk of a vacant office building at 995 Market St.

This grand experiment is run by a group of German investors who purchased the distressed tower for a steep discount to test new forms of social and professional life in the heart of the city. Instead of rent, Frontier Tower grants “citizenship” for $190 a month, selecting applicants based on what they plan to build inside. Each themed floor is supposed to govern itself, with designated leaders recruiting more occupants and organizing events. If accepted, applicants gain access to lab space, tools, shared tech infrastructure and a built-in professional network. More than 700 people have joined so far, and its founders plan to take the concept to other cities.

“We’re trying to rethink how people live, work and organize together in cities,” said co-founder Christian Nagel. “The vision is still to build a blueprint that can be replicated all over the world.” 

Another part of that vision was the creation of a decentralized, self-governed community oriented around pushing the boundaries of human potential in a future increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence. 

But in recent months, disagreements over management of Frontier Tower have fractured  this utopian vision. Several floors now sit empty amid simmering conflicts between floor leaders and founders over who ultimately controls and stands to gain from the future of the experiment, and whether Frontier Tower still supports earlier ambitions around co-ownership and community-led decision-making. 

It’s creating a familiar tension in tech-saturated San Francisco: The power struggle between profitability and purpose. Some who believed the tower could offer a different model just as AI startups begin reshaping the city now worry their community experiment is just a glorified version of a hacker house — or a regular office.

“That’s not why we all came in and gave our labor for free for a year,” said Mingzhu Heseri, a former floor co-leader. “They said there will be joint ownership. Instead, they have chased out the high-value communities that helped them build the space.”

14th floor: Human Flourishing

Hallway lights flicker unpredictably inside Frontier Tower, and many members opt for the stairs rather than enduring the slow elevator. A mural painted on the ground-level facade adds a splash of color to an otherwise bleak city block. 

Inside, cameras monitor common areas and workspaces, and many floors are locked behind key card access for research, private work and experimentation. 

For much of its first year, the tower operated with little centralized structure, its culture shaped floor to floor by the people occupying them. Appointed floor leads — like Roth — were charged with building out their spaces, organizing events, recruiting more members and, in some cases, designing governance systems with minimal oversight from ownership.

The arrangement has helped cultivate the sense, repeated often inside the building, that Frontier Tower is not simply a co-working space but a live experiment in how urban communities might organize themselves in the age of tech innovation and changing work dynamics.  

Shoes were discouraged on the 14th floor, known as the Human Flourishing Floor, where rugs covered nearly every inch of space and couches and cushions outnumbered desks. The point was to allow its occupants to feel “a little bit more human and in our bodies,” said Judy Zhou, an early member of the floor. 

The work focused less on accelerating technology and more on managing its social consequences. On this floor, discussions about AI often drifted away from product development toward more social and philosophical topics: What happens to communities when jobs disappear? Who benefits from automation? And what would a healthier version of innovation look like? 

Heseri, who founded the floor and served as its co-lead, spoke of imagining alternatives to the culture that has long shaped Silicon Valley and restoring humanity by reinventing systems that optimized for speed and efficiency. It was this promise that drew her to the tower when it was just an idea being pitched by the founders without a physical home.

By most startup measures, the experiment has worked. Several companies connected to the building have raised significant venture funding, and Frontier Tower has become the latest gathering place for AI researchers, founders and investors as a new tech boom takes hold in San Francisco.

But building a community, Heseri said, does not lend itself easily to the logic of quotas and growth targets. 

Floors were expected to recruit more members, to reach roughly 80 by the end of 2025. But some, including the Human Flourishing floor, fell short. In Heseri’s view, Frontier Tower started to drift toward  more traditional landlord-tenant dynamics and away from the self-governing experiment it set out to be. 

“This project has, consciously or unconsciously, been captured by extractive capitalism,” Heseri said, despite “what might have been best intentions.” 

After Zhou joined Frontier Tower, she began hosting weekly tea ceremonies — gatherings where members would remove their shoes, sit together and talk. Over time, members organized conferences, community programming and collaborative projects that, in her view, became central to Frontier Tower’s identity and public image. Zhou said they also began questioning whether the people building the tower’s culture would ever meaningfully share in its upside. 

While floors are given room to self-organize, key aspects of the tower’s operations — such as space and funding allocations or revoking memberships — ultimately sit with a central team made up of the founders and a committee that includes outside experts and more members from various floors. 

“The only way to create sustainable stewardship of community is for the community to eventually own the thing they’re stewarding,” Zhou said. “I think it’s very difficult to not fall into an adversarial landlord versus tenant relationship if you don’t eventually create some pathway to co-ownership.”

Eighth floor: Biopunk

Roth typically flashes his key card implant to take the elevator to the eighth floor. Called Biopunk, it’s where members experiment with everything from lab automation to gene modification and microbial art, which uses bacteria and fungi to produce visually striking patterns. The floor hosts biosecurity hackathons and peptide raves, gatherings focused on experimenting with biology and chemical compounds like peptides. Visitors whisked into one room might find themselves suddenly strapped into a Kernel headset, a portable helmet that uses infrared light to scan brain activity.

Startups connected to the floor, which has more than 100 members, have already raised significant funding, including Zeon Systems, a lab-automation company that filmed its Y Combinator application video inside the tower and later raised roughly $5 million. Another, Muse Bio, a biotech startup focused on the use of menstrual stem cells for wellness products, recently raised more than $1 million.

Roth has spent years building independent community labs around the world in an effort to democratize bioscience. But he said Frontier Tower offers something he had not yet encountered: a “vertical village” where researchers, artists, engineers, nonprofit leaders and founders regularly cross paths. “That’s where new ideas come from,” he said, “at the intersection of different disciplines.” 

And yet, some of the people who had been deeply invested in its ideals no longer had a place in the tower. By June, the leaders and several members of three floors — Robotics and Hard Tech, the Makerspace and Human Flourishing — had departed from the building.

Nagel, the Frontier Tower co-founder, said some floors were always meant to rotate, as participants find success with their projects and move on. The group that helped launch the tower’s popular robot fighting events stepped back from its role leading the Robotics floor as the project grew, he said. The tower also ended its relationship with the Makerspace team several months ago. Nagel said new leaders were already being brought in for those spaces and added that all members of these floors were invited to stay.

Heseri, the Human Flourishing Floor lead, rejected the notion that community leaders inside the tower were meant to come and go. Her floor was terminated completely and will be merged with another floor. This was ultimately due to what Nagel referred to as issues over intellectual property rights and “mutual respect,” he said: “We didn’t feel like it was a match anymore.” 

According to David Andrews, a former Frontier Tower member, tensions grew over time as some floor leads questioned their roles despite helping build communities and representing the tower to prospective investors, without the promise of pay or equity.

The tower’s founders have said that 20% of revenue was allocated to floor leads as “startup capital” to help cultivate their communities and test sustainable operating models.

Andrews said the relationship began to fray when some members started reaching out to investors about launching a comparable project in another nearby building.

“I can appreciate from the founders’ side that it feels like disloyalty from the tower leads, but I think the backstory was this buildup of frustration,” he said. 

While members focused on developing life inside the tower, the founders were fundraising and pursuing expansion opportunities in San Francisco and abroad. A proposed Frontier project in London came close, but ultimately fell through, according to Nagel. Other spaces in San Francisco the team sought to acquire were lost in negotiations, he said.

“What drew a lot of us in was this vision of a self-governed village,” said tower member Chelsea Borruano, who is planning to exit the project. “The biggest point of failure is never really asking members what they needed.”

Zhou confirmed she recently founded Apollo Innovation Commons, which she described as “true community-owned infrastructure.” She also intends her project to take over a vacant space downtown. 

“I had started fundraising, and the deck got to apparently one of the investors that was investing in the Frontier Tower,” Zhou said. 

Borruano said that pitching the same investors wasn’t the only problem: “The reason it ended up here is based on months of them trying to work with the tower and getting constantly ignored.”

15th floor: Executive level

The growing disagreement inside Frontier Tower is not simply about a building. It reflects two competing ideas of what the building is: a community that occupies real estate, or a real-estate-backed institution designed to produce community at scale. 

The tension is partly rooted in Frontier Tower’s origin story. From the beginning, the project was conceived as infrastructure for a new kind of networked society. It emerged from many of the same crypto, AI and longevity networks that formed around Zuzalu, an experimental Montenegro pop-up city backed by Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin. These communities are often organized around ideals of decentralization, collective ownership and self-governance, using blockchain-based systems to distribute decision-making and reduce reliance on traditional institutions. One of the San Francisco tower’s floors is even dedicated to Buterin’s blockchain network. 

According to Frontier Tower CEO Xenofon Kontouris, the broader movement is partly driven by a desire to accelerate experimentation in areas such as longevity and biotechnology that face heavy regulation in the United States and elsewhere. 

“We started shifting from temporary hubs and pop-up cities to permanent hubs, and San Francisco was very interesting for many people,” Kontouris said. “The culture of working hard and of being healthy already exists here — it’s what has been tried to be replicated in these pop-up cities that I’ve been a part of.”

Frontier Tower’s co-founders themselves came out of many of those worlds. Nagel, Christian Peters and Jakob Drzazga brought backgrounds spanning venture capital, crypto and emerging technology, along with that shared interest in how physical spaces can shape communities.

While in their 20s, Nagel and Drzazga had operated a small co-living and community space in Leipzig, Germany, where they lived upstairs and ran a techno club below. The business was successful, and the experience stayed with them. Years later, after reconnecting at Burning Man, the former partners began discussing how to build what Nagel described  as a “functional community” organized around a shared purpose.

Then the pandemic and remote work reset real estate values in urban cores.

“In every metropolitan area in the United States, commercial real estate, after the pandemic, hasn’t recaptured the value and utility it once had,” Kontouris said. “We believe that we can have hundreds of properties that can create a very risk-balanced portfolio that would allow for our communities to build on top of.”

For its founders, Frontier Tower was never meant to be a single building: “10 towers by the end of 2026. 100 by 2027. 13 million citizens by 2028,” reads a manifesto they published last summer, framing Frontier Tower as the early infrastructure for a “network society.”

In recent months those ambitions have become more measured. Rather than racing to expand in other cities, the team focused on refining its San Francisco footprint.  

In October, Frontier Tower’s founders purchased the Commodore Hotel, a six-story building that previously housed art students in the Tenderloin. The property is being used for Frontier Tower’s residency program, which brings in founders from all over the world to use the tower’s infrastructure in exchange for equity stakes in companies that emerge from the program.

“We’re exploring dedicated venue spaces, more hotels, more lab space,” Nagel said. “We’re also trying to get deeper into frontier technology and the research side of things.” 

He acknowledged that Frontier Tower’s growth has forced it to confront a familiar question intentional communities eventually face: How should a self-organizing community govern itself? 

“We have made some adjustments,” he said, including limiting the number of nonmembers who may attend free events in the tower. 

“They essentially wanted to be a pop-up city that lasted forever,” said Gage Olesen, a painter who helps operate the arts and music floor inside the tower. “What they found was that this is problematic. Through community stress testing the idea, we identified the problems and found ways to solve them.”

Heseri, from the Human Flourishing Floor, was drawn to the project for its attempt to rethink the structure of tech communities. But she grew concerned that, without a more intentional guiding ethos, the tower risked perpetuating old problems. “If we default to the same dynamics, we can’t build new systems,” she said. 

The warning proved to be a dividing line. By mid-June, Heseri and Zhou had been banned from the tower. 

Sixth floor: Arts and music

During his first day at Frontier Tower last month, game developer Jarory de Jesus wandered onto the sixth floor, an arts and music space that is one of the few areas in the building accessible to all members and visitors.

De Jesus said he works remotely and had been searching for a sense of community since moving to San Francisco a year and a half ago, describing many social and creative spaces in the city as difficult to access without existing connections. 

“I don’t want to be home alone all day,” he said. “I’m a musician and a poet as well as a game developer, but I don’t really have a place to play music with other people.”

Olesen said the arts and music floor was designed to make possible these informal encounters between people who would not normally meet in the city’s more siloed creative and tech circles. 

But he also acknowledged that bringing San Francisco’s working artists into the tower has not been straightforward. Many remain wary of spaces fueled by venture capital or startup culture, he said, burned by years of seeing art used as branding or an afterthought rather than infrastructure. Building trust takes time and consistency, he said, adding that Frontier Tower still offers a chance to move against that broader trend.

“When arts, tech and humanities properly interact, beautiful things happen. But there is always a moment of misalignment of incentives, especially when people are solving for profit primarily, which is inherent to tech,” Olesen said. 

“The ethos when I came here was not controlling artists, but giving them space.”

June 21, 2026|Updated June 21, 2026 9:33 a.m.

Laura Waxmann

Reporter

Laura Waxmann covers the business community with a focus on commercial real estate, development, retail and the future of San Francisco’s downtown. Prior to joining The Chronicle in 2023, she reported on San Francisco’s changing real estate and economic landscape in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic for the San Francisco Business Times.

Waxmann was born and raised in Frankfurt, Germany, but has called San Francisco home since 2007. She’s reported on a variety of topics including housing, homelessness, education and local politics for the San Francisco Examiner, Mission Local and El Tecolote.

Your weekly to-dos

  1. Phonebank for Indivisible endorsed candidate Julie Gonzales (CO-Sen) tomorrow, Tuesday, June 23 (7:30pm ET/4:30pm PT). Gonzales is up against a Democratic incumbent who has voted to confirm more of Trump’s cabinet nominees than any other Democrat not named Fetterman. Coloradans deserve a progressive fighter in the battle against authoritarianism, not a centrist. Gonzales’ primary is in just over a week on June 30, so your calls can make a big difference right now. Paid for by Indivisible Action. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate committee.
  2. Continue to urge your Members of Congress to demand dignity for detained immigrants at Delaney Hall and detention centers across the US. Just last week, Members of Congress were denied access to immigrants detained at Delaney Hall during an oversight visit after previously being allowed to speak with people inside. We must insist that Members of Congress do everything in their power to escalate their oversight actions and bring attention to the horrifying conditions and human rights abuses at Delaney Hall and Trump’s concentration camps around the country.
  3. Keep calling your US senators and urge them to oppose AI mass surveillance. FISA, an infamous spying law that opened the door for warrantless surveillance of American citizens, expired earlier this month. Unless our Members of Congress want to be complicit in the continued chilling of our freedom of speech, they must hold the line for our civil liberties.
  4. Once you’ve called your US senators, call your US representative and demand the same. Given FISA’s potential to be supercharged by AI and abused by this regime, serious guardrails on this legislation are more important than ever. You can follow up with a quick email to all of your Members of Congress.
  5. Register for our Immigrant Justice Summer Training Series, beginning July 9, to learn how to build a safe, hyper-local, immigrant-aligned response when ICE comes to your community. ICE announced it’s offloading 7 of the 11 warehouses it bought for mass detention after communities across the country organized, sued, and showed up. With $70 billion in new DHS funding, the fight isn’t over. We need to be prepared on how to respond in our own communities. Immigrant Justice Summer will give you the tools you need.

Your Power in Action: What You Can Do Today

People Power United

Why the Grassroots Resistance Can’t Wait.

The movement for freedom over fascism, progress, and power to the people starts here.

Fox host shouts down Dem over married women losing their vote: ‘What’s the problem?’

Matthew Chapman

June 18, 2026 (RawStory.com)

Fox host shouts down Dem over married women losing their vote: 'What's the problem?'

A Fox Business segment on Thursday morning devolved into shouting as anchor Maria Bartiromo tried to talk over the objections of Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) to certain provisions of the SAVE America Act, the controversial Trump-backed legislation that would put extreme new restrictions on voting rights and effectively give the Department of Homeland Security oversight of state voting rolls.

Khanna focused on the fact that under the terms of the law, married women who had legal name changes would face significant obstacles to voting because they can’t use the name on their birth certificate to verify their citizenship — but Bartiromo, who is known for embracing conspiracy theories on air, didn’t see any issue with this.

” Elections have been lost by a couple of votes,” said Bartiromo heatedly. “So just to say, oh, [the fraud is] not a lot, that’s not an answer, sir.”

ALSO READ: Fury as fourth postal worker dies at flagship USPS facility that has no phones

“But people have been fearmongering that when it’s not an issue in the election, and the reality is you have cases of people who are married, you want them if they’ve changed their name to have to prove with their birth certificate?” said Khanna.

“What’s the problem?” Bartiromo said, talking over him. “Yes. Get your birth certificate. You can’t vote if you’re not an American citizen.”

The SAVE America Act has no path to passage in the Senate, where it cannot overcome the 60-vote cloture threshold to defeat a Democratic filibuster.

Trump has spent months demanding Republicans either tack the bill onto some other must-pass measure or do away with the filibuster entirely to get it through, neither of which has support from the Senate GOP. The disagreement has caused a growing rift between Trump and Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD).

Privately, a number of Republicans are sick of debating the legislation and want Trump to let them move on from it.

America celebrates its 250th birthday

Obama Foundation Streamed live on Jun 18, 2026 Livestream of the Grand Opening Ceremony of the Obama Presidential Center on June 18, 2026 in Chicago, IL. Featuring speeches from President Barack Obama, Michelle Obama and performances by Bruce Springsteen, Christina Aguilera, Common, Eddie Vedder, Guitars Over Guns, Illinois Army National Color Guard, Jennifer Hudson, John Legend, Marc Anthony, Stevie Wonder, Tems, The Roots, U2’s Bono and The Edge,. and Uniting Voices Chicago An invocation led by Pastor Joel Hunter and Joshua DuBois. Remarks and special appearances from Marsai Martin, Marty Nesbitt, and Valerie Jarrett.

Your Power in Action: What You Can Do Today

People Power United

The movement for freedom over fascism, progress, and power to the people starts here.

The View Turns JD Vance Into A Couch Cushion

“50 people have died in ICE custody. There are 6,200 children who are being held in places like Dilley Detention Center….”

Host of The View

The Rational National Jun 16, 2026 Vice President JD Vance’s appearance on The View did not go well for him. Merch: http://TheRationalNational.com/merch Patreon: http://TheRationalNational.com/Join YouTube membership:    / @therationalnational  

Why cities go socialist

June 19, 2026 (Prospect.org)

MEYERSON ON TAP

Why cities go socialist

Here comes a generation of DSA big-city mayors.In the course of my roughly three-quarters-of-a-century-long life, I’ve lived in just three cities: Los Angeles, New York, and Washington, D.C. By year’s end, there’s a decent chance that all three of those cities will have a socialist mayor.

Just to be clear, despite the fact that I’ve been an avowed democratic socialist in all three cities—for all of my adult life, in fact—I’m claiming no credit for their new socialist proclivities.

Yesterday, the candidate running second in Tuesday’s D.C. Democratic mayoral primary conceded the race to the front-runner, city council and DSA member Janeese Lewis George. With three-quarters of the ballots counted, Lewis George has a 53 percent to 37 percent lead over the second-place finisher. (If she falls beneath 50 percent, the tabulators have to tally the results of the ranked-choice voting, but so far, she’s held steady at 53 percent and is sure to win even if her first-choice votes drop below 50 percent.)

As at least 90 percent of D.C. voters invariably cast their ballots for Democrats in partisan November runoffs, Lewis George is assured of becoming D.C.’s next mayor.
As such, she’ll join New York’s Zohran Mamdani as a socialist atop city government—and as a candidate whose victory was made possible, in significant part, by the precinct walking and phone-banking of DSA members. That said, Lewis George’s ability to govern effectively will lag Mamdani’s, as D.C. is still under the sway of federal control, which Donald Trump will only intensify once a socialist is nominally in power. (For that matter, New York City was compelled to cede the power to enact taxes to New York state during its near-bankruptcy in the 1970s, an impediment to local control that Mamdani has been forced to navigate.)
In Los Angeles, the results of this month’s mayoral jungle primary pit DSA and city council member Nithya Raman against incumbent mayor Karen Bass in the November runoff. It’s not actually clear that Raman, if elected, would govern in a way that’s any more socialistic than the way Bass has been governing. Bass has brought her left values and her long history as a progressive community organizer to her subsequent political career (Speaker of the State Assembly, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, and four years as mayor), and Raman was one of her leading allies on the city council. Raman’s three council colleagues who are also DSA members have endorsed Bass for re-election—as did Raman until it became clear that Bass, though widely unpopular ever since she was out of the country when fires swept the Pacific Palisades, would run effectively unopposed for re-election unless Raman jumped in. Los Angeles DSA has yet to endorse Raman, as it’s dissatisfied with her decisions to keep funding the police and limiting the scope of the city’s tax on the sale of high-value properties.

But the only real reason why Raman is a DSA member and Bass is not is generational. Raman is 44; Bass is 72. When Bass was young, there was no viable socialist movement in the United States and most of the New Deal’s guardrails against capitalism running amok were still in place. Raman came of age when capitalism’s amok-ness was plain for all politically and economically sentient to see, and when Bernie Sanders had put democratic socialism on the American political map. When Bass was Raman’s current age, DSA had roughly 5,000 members and didn’t play in big-city elections. Today, it has about 100,000 members—enough to make it a player in any number of cities.

But Mamdani’s, Lewis George’s, and Raman’s political base isn’t confined to DSA members. DSA had 10,000 members pounding the pavement for Mamdani in last year’s mayoral election, but they comprised just 10 percent of the total number of Zohran’s volunteers. In that sense, DSA is just the tip of the spear of urban Gen Z and millennial voters—those young enough to be shelved in jobs for which they’re both overqualified and underpaid, and to be locked out of homeowning. The two issues that both Mamdani and Lewis George most stressed were making child care and homes affordable: issues that all but define the politics of young city residents, issues that highlight the market failures of current American capitalism and the need for higher taxes on the wealthy to provide badly needed social necessities.
Which is why the future of most American big cities—most certainly, those that attract younger residents—is likely to be social democratic and often run by avowed socialists. The Bernies, Mamdanis, and AOCs won’t be the Democratic Party’s lonesome ends; they’ll be the party’s urban wing. The sooner the Democrats understand that—and the sooner they embrace many of that wing’s policies, however they choose to label them (and themselves)—the better.
Harold Meyerson
Editor at Large