deleriumtremor
Well-Known Member
I probably might take offense to your post, if you knew anything about what you are pontificating on, but you clearly don’t, so will instead try and educate you on the subject.This will sound rude and I do not mean to offend others. However, it is difficult for me to feel bad for California. For decades California has been off the rails in terms of politics and finances. Folks that live, work, and vote in California are getting the fruits of what has been planted. I know many people do not like and did not want or support the things happening in California. That is fine, I understand. But, do not leave California and go to other states and bring the same flawed ways and issues with you. Things that are happening in California and now other states as well do not even seem to be things that could be true in the United States. I cannot speak for others but I can say Texas has had more than enough of influx and is starting to suffer with the same problems the west coast has. I expect Texas to be in bad shape ten years from now. Do not know where I would flee too lol. As far as forced EV goes I will not risk a comment, I like the folks here too much.
The majority of California by land mass is conservative. It is the denser more coastal urban areas that make up the majority of the population that votes liberal/progressive. These areas control all of state political speaking.
There are counties inland in CA (at least it was when I lived there) where there is no emissions tests for automobiles, where a concealed carry permit is no big deal for the local sheriff to process, where a quick scan through the radio dial (both AM and FM) have as many Christian stations as anything else.
Like Walter, I was born and raised in CA. The cities like SF and its surroundings were always a little liberal (at least Democrat voting wise), as they were solid union towns. The people that lived in those places when I was a kid and through my early teens were what they later called Reagan Democrats, they were conservative socially and liberal as it pertained to collective bargaining, etc. Most generally staunch patriots, most having served their country honorably in wars and conditions modern American war fighters couldn't even imagine.
When I lived in San Francisco as an adult, all of our friends and acquaintances save one guy were Democrat voters, many what they now call Progressives (socialists). The reason so many were of this political bent was because most grew up in places other than CA, almost all with advanced college degrees, all having moved to CA because it is a great place to live geographically and the jobs for such people were plentiful.
When we left (my wife and I), of the people who were born in CA with which we socialized, there was exactly one, me.
What is happening in CA isn't the fault of Californian's who are conservative or even centrist Democrats. The dominant strain of politics that control things in CA came largely from out of state, took control by sheer mass in the coastal urban areas and have driven many who called CA their birth state out because their vote doesn't count living where they live.
So climb back down off that very high horse before you fall and break something. You see, there are a lot of us who have moved from CA and we really have kind of a short fuse when it comes to somebody trying to tell us how to be politically. You see, we already had that the last place we lived.
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