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  • http://www.nationalreview.com/corner...is-hanson#more
    Can California Be Fixed?
    By Victor Davis Hanson

    Recently, I was driving down pot-holed, two-lane, non-freeway 101 near Monterey (unchanged since the 1960s) when the radio blared that on a recent science test administered to public schools, California scored 47th in the nation. As I looked at the congested traffic on the decrepit highway and digested the idea that our public schools are competitive only with Mississippi and Alabama, I wondered — is that what we get for a more than 10 percent income tax, 10 percent state and local sales taxes, and the highest gas taxes in the nation?
    ...
    In the last two decades, the number added to the prison rolls (ca. 115,000) was not that much smaller than the number of new tax-filers (150,000). And of the last 10 million added to the state’s population, 7 million are on Medicaid.

    But California being California, such reductionist thinking is taboo, and we are not allowed to make any suggestion that there is a connection between fleeing entrepreneurs, massive and illegal influxes of undocumented foreign nationals in recent years, and record public salaries and unfunded pensions.

    So that said, are there any out-of-the-box things California might do to save or make a few billion dollars, other than the obvious measures of slashing spending and dismantling burdensome regulations?

    1) Slap a user tax on the some $10–15 billion that is estimated to leave the state in remittances to foreign countries, or at least through executive action make foreign cash remittances grounds for disqualification from state public assistance.

    2) Cancel high speed-rail asap.

    3) Open up immediately the estimated now off-limits 35 billion barrels of oil off the central California coast, the vast majority of which can be safely and cleanly exploited by on-shore horizontal drilling.

    4) Cap the amount one can receive from a California public pension, or multiple pensions at $100,000.

    5) Eliminate three-quarters of the thousands of public California board members, who stymie commerce and are mostly costly and unproductive term-limited insider politicians.
    ...
    7) Cut by 75 percent the number of administrators at the UC and CSU systems (their numbers from 1993 have grown by 212 percent), and pay them at the commensurate twelve-month faculty rate.

    8) Clamp down on the vast underground and untaxed cash economy that has exploded to the point that one can buy tax-free almost anything needed, from a new lawn mower to a four-course meal, at roadside emporia and canteens.

    9) Deport the 20,000 plus illegal-alien felons now in California state prisons to their countries of origin.
    ...

    Comment


    • 10) Legalize Pot and Tax the hell out of it.

      Comment


      • Those are some really dumb ideas.
        "There is no creature more arrogant than a self-righteous libertarian on the web, am I right? Those folks are just intolerable."
        "It's no secret that the great American pastime is no longer baseball. Now it's sanctimony." -- Guy Periwinkle, The Nix.
        "Juilliardk N I ibuprofen Hyu I U unhurt u" - creekster

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Jeff Lebowski View Post
          Those are some really dumb ideas.
          Some of them seem like very good ideas to me. Especially collecting taxes from new oil, reducing the cost of higher ed by reducing administrators, capping pension benefits, stop spending vast amounts on projects they can't afford, like high-speed rail.
          In other words, act more like Texas. There's a reason you live in Texas, right?

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Jacob View Post
            There's a reason you live in Texas, right?
            Except he doesn't.
            Last edited by creekster; 05-15-2012, 11:31 AM.
            PLesa excuse the tpyos.

            Comment


            • http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...988018824.html

              I didn't know Jerry Brown's previous stint was when collective bargaining rights were given to public employee unions. I'm glad that worked out so well for the state. Now he's back in office and having to deal with the consequences of his decisions from over 30 years ago.
              Part of it is based on academic grounds. Among major conferences, the Pac-10 is the best academically, largely because of Stanford, Cal and UCLA. “Colorado is on a par with Oregon,” he said. “Utah isn’t even in the picture.”

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Jeff Lebowski View Post
                Those are some really dumb ideas.
                Not dumb, but most of them aren't terribly consequential.

                VDH has some common themes in his columns about California. IIRC, he lives near Fresno on a family farm that has been in his family for 3-4 generations. There are parts of California, particularly around where he lives, that are beginning to look equally as bad as the deep south. California, at least around where he lives and I suspect in other places like Riverside, San Bernardino, Bakersfield, Sacramento, etc, has become a place where the state preys upon the law-abiding while only prosecuting the violent criminals and many property-related crimes either go uninvestigated and/or unpunished. Onerous regulations and taxes are placed on those with good jobs and businesses and they're looked at merely as sources of tax revenue. The non-violent, but non law-abiding are allowed to continue business as usual because the state doesn't seem them as sources of revenue and they don't want to bother clamping down on them (this is why he mentions the rampant black market in California).

                I noticed some similar things in New York where you frequently see people on the street selling pirated DVDs and knock-off purses. If a police officer strolls by these people just bundle everything up quickly and walk up a block and start displaying everything again. The police officer obviously saw what was going on, but there are bigger fish to fry.

                Now imagine if something like that happened right outside of LES a half hour before kickoff, do you think the Provo police would just let that one slide?

                This kind of stuff happening in Manhattan or San Francisco is one thing. But when brazen property theft, selling counterfeit goods, etc. happens in a place like Fresno, then you've got a problem. There's an enormous amount of wealth in Manhattan and most people are hard-working professionals and it neutralizes the element that sits out in the open selling knock off copies of The Avengers. But when you don't have the wealth and the professionals to counter the thieves, then things start breaking down like they are in some parts of California.
                Part of it is based on academic grounds. Among major conferences, the Pac-10 is the best academically, largely because of Stanford, Cal and UCLA. “Colorado is on a par with Oregon,” he said. “Utah isn’t even in the picture.”

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Color Me Badd Fan View Post
                  Not dumb, but most of them aren't terribly consequential.

                  VDH has some common themes in his columns about California. IIRC, he lives near Fresno on a family farm that has been in his family for 3-4 generations. There are parts of California, particularly around where he lives, that are beginning to look equally as bad as the deep south. California, at least around where he lives and I suspect in other places like Riverside, San Bernardino, Bakersfield, Sacramento, etc, has become a place where the state preys upon the law-abiding while only prosecuting the violent criminals and many property-related crimes either go uninvestigated and/or unpunished. Onerous regulations and taxes are placed on those with good jobs and businesses and they're looked at merely as sources of tax revenue. The non-violent, but non law-abiding are allowed to continue business as usual because the state doesn't seem them as sources of revenue and they don't want to bother clamping down on them (this is why he mentions the rampant black market in California).

                  I noticed some similar things in New York where you frequently see people on the street selling pirated DVDs and knock-off purses. If a police officer strolls by these people just bundle everything up quickly and walk up a block and start displaying everything again. The police officer obviously saw what was going on, but there are bigger fish to fry.

                  Now imagine if something like that happened right outside of LES a half hour before kickoff, do you think the Provo police would just let that one slide?

                  This kind of stuff happening in Manhattan or San Francisco is one thing. But when brazen property theft, selling counterfeit goods, etc. happens in a place like Fresno, then you've got a problem. There's an enormous amount of wealth in Manhattan and most people are hard-working professionals and it neutralizes the element that sits out in the open selling knock off copies of The Avengers. But when you don't have the wealth and the professionals to counter the thieves, then things start breaking down like they are in some parts of California.
                  Yeah, it just seemed to me that several of his suggestions were unrealistic, too simplistic, or would have little effect. Deport the felons? Yeah right.
                  "There is no creature more arrogant than a self-righteous libertarian on the web, am I right? Those folks are just intolerable."
                  "It's no secret that the great American pastime is no longer baseball. Now it's sanctimony." -- Guy Periwinkle, The Nix.
                  "Juilliardk N I ibuprofen Hyu I U unhurt u" - creekster

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Jeff Lebowski View Post
                    Yeah, it just seemed to me that several of his suggestions were unrealistic, too simplistic, or would have little effect. Deport the felons? Yeah right.
                    Drug, Firearm and Aggravated Felonies should lead to deportation under current CA law anyway, so it's already on the books. Thousands of felons are deported from CA every year.

                    Comment


                    • Chris Christie for Governor (of California).

                      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...988018824.html
                      Ute-ī sunt fīmī differtī

                      It can't all be wedding cake.

                      Comment


                      • Take note america. Its the difference between obama and romney.

                        Sent from my SGH-T839 using Tapatalk 2
                        "Be a philosopher. A man can compromise to gain a point. It has become apparent that a man can, within limits, follow his inclinations within the arms of the Church if he does so discreetly." - The Walking Drum

                        "And here’s what life comes down to—not how many years you live, but how many of those years are filled with bullshit that doesn’t amount to anything to satisfy the requirements of some dickhead you’ll never get the pleasure of punching in the face." – Adam Carolla

                        Comment


                        • More band aids that will only make things worse.
                          "Be a philosopher. A man can compromise to gain a point. It has become apparent that a man can, within limits, follow his inclinations within the arms of the Church if he does so discreetly." - The Walking Drum

                          "And here’s what life comes down to—not how many years you live, but how many of those years are filled with bullshit that doesn’t amount to anything to satisfy the requirements of some dickhead you’ll never get the pleasure of punching in the face." – Adam Carolla

                          Comment


                          • If I recall correctly, the Utah state government evaluated the results of their move to a 4-day work week and found that they did not end up saving any money.
                            "It's devastating, because we lost to a team that's not even in the Pac-12. To lose to Utah State is horrible." - John White IV

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by kccougar View Post
                              If I recall correctly, the Utah state government evaluated the results of their move to a 4-day work week and found that they did not end up saving any money.
                              It was a 4 x 10 schedule. The logic was that there would be savings in overhead and it was a benefit for employees as it was enacted when gas prices were spinning out of control. The CA option is a cut in total hours worked from 40 to 38 accompanied with a cut in salary and benefits, Utah did not cut salary but hoped to save money from not having the lights in the office on as many days of the week.
                              Do Your Damnedest In An Ostentatious Manner All The Time!
                              -General George S. Patton

                              I'm choosing to mostly ignore your fatuity here and instead overwhelm you with so much data that you'll maybe, just maybe, realize that you have reams to read on this subject before you can contribute meaningfully to any conversation on this topic.
                              -DOCTOR Wuap

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Goatnapper'96 View Post
                                It was a 4 x 10 schedule. The logic was that there would be savings in overhead and it was a benefit for employees as it was enacted when gas prices were spinning out of control. The CA option is a cut in total hours worked from 40 to 38 accompanied with a cut in salary and benefits, Utah did not cut salary but hoped to save money from not having the lights in the office on as many days of the week.
                                You are correct. Gov Huntsman had proposed a $3M cost savings with the 4x10 schedule and the audit determined they'd saved about $1M. They also noted, for a sense of scale, that while productivity was hard to quantify, a 1% decrease in productivity from working longer hours would cost the state $15M.
                                "It's devastating, because we lost to a team that's not even in the Pac-12. To lose to Utah State is horrible." - John White IV

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