Yesterday's March for an End to Violence involved hundreds of Tenderloin residents. Religious leaders like Rev. Norman Fong spoke to the well-organized and peaceful marchers. The crowd went to the site of three recent murders before ending up at City Hall just before the start of a Board of Supervisors meeting. Their basic point, besides getting more police attention to crime in their neighborhood, is that the Tenderloin is now a community in a different way than it was before. So, the organizers and marchers feel that any policy of containing crime in one neighborhood isn't fair. Community organizer Dina Hilliard said that it's time for The New Tenderloin where residents don't have to deal with increasing violence. We'll see.