7/7/2016 -
Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
There was more of the same old, same old California news recently.
Some 62 percent of state roads have been rated poor or mediocre. There were
more predictions of huge cost overruns and yearly losses on
high-speed rail -- before the first mile of track has been laid. One-third
of Bay Area residents were polled as hoping to leave the area soon.
Such pessimism is daily fare, and for good reason.
The basket of California state taxes -- sales, income and gasoline
-- rates among the highest in the U.S. Yet California roads and K-12 education
rank near the bottom.
After years of drought, California has not built a single new
reservoir. Instead, scarce fresh aqueduct water is still being diverted to sea.
Thousands of rural central California homes, in Dust Bowl fashion, have been
abandoned due to a sinking aquifer and dry wells.
One in three American welfare recipients resides in California.
Almost a quarter of the state population lives below or near the poverty line.
Yet the state's gas and electricity prices are among the nation's highest.
One in four state residents was not born in the U.S. Current
state-funded pension programs are not sustainable.
California depends on a tiny elite class for about half of its
income tax revenue. Yet many of these wealthy taxpayers are fleeing the
40-million-person state, angry over paying 12 percent of their income for lousy
public services.
Public health costs have soared as one-third of California
residents admitted to state hospitals for any causes suffer from diabetes, a
sometimes-lethal disease often predicated on poor diet, lack of exercise and
excessive weight.
Nearly half of all traffic accidents in the Los Angeles area are
classified as hit-and-run collisions.
Grass-roots voter pushbacks are seen as pointless. Progressive
state and federal courts have overturned a multitude of reform measures of the
last 20 years that had passed with ample majorities
In impoverished central California towns such as Mendota, where
thousands of acres were idled due to water cutoffs, once-busy farmworkers live
in shacks. But even in opulent San Francisco, the sidewalks full of homeless
people do not look much different.
What caused the California paradise to squander its rich natural
inheritance?
Excessive state regulations and expanding government, massive
illegal immigration from impoverished nations, and the rise of unimaginable
wealth in the tech industry and coastal retirement communities created two
antithetical Californias.
One is an elite, out-of-touch caste along the fashionable Pacific
Ocean corridor that runs the state and has the money to escape the real-life
consequences of its own unworkable agendas.
The other is a huge underclass in central, rural and foothill
California that cannot flee to the coast and suffers the bulk of the fallout
from Byzantine state regulations, poor schools and the failure to assimilate
recent immigrants from some of the poorest areas in the world.
The result is Connecticut and Alabama combined in one state. A
house in Menlo Park may sell for more than $1,000 a square foot. In Madera
three hours away, the cost is about one-tenth of that.
In response, state government practices escapism, haggling over
transgendered restroom issues and the aquatic environment of a 3-inch baitfish
rather than dealing with a sinking state.
What could save California?
Blue-ribbon committees for years have offered bipartisan plans to
simplify and reduce the state tax code, prune burdensome regulations, reform
schools, encourage assimilation and unity of culture, and offer incentives to
build reasonably priced housing.
Instead, hypocrisy abounds in the two Californias.
If Facebook billionaire Mark Zuckerberg wants to continue
lecturing Californians about their xenophobia, he at least should stop turning
his estates into sanctuaries with walls and security patrols. And if faculty
economists at the University of California at Berkeley keep hectoring the state
about fixing income inequality, they might first acknowledge that the state
pays them more than $300,000 per year -- putting them among the top 2 percent
of the university's salaried employees.
Immigrants to a diverse state where there is no ethnic majority
should welcome assimilation into a culture and a political matrix that is
usually the direct opposite of what they fled from.
More unity and integration would help. So why not encourage
liberal Google to move some of its operations inland to needy Fresno, or lobby
the wealthy Silicon Valley to encourage affordable housing in the
near-wide-open spaces along the nearby I-280 corridor north to San Francisco?
Finally, state bureaucrats should remember that even cool
Californians cannot drink Facebook, eat Google, drive on Oracle or live in
Apple. The distant people who make and grow things still matter.
Elites need to go back and restudy the state's
can-do confidence of the 1950s and 1960s to rediscover good state government --
at least if everyday Californians are ever again to have affordable gas,
electricity and homes, safe roads and competitive schools.
No comments:
Post a Comment