Author Topic: California  (Read 326665 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Re: California
« Reply #600 on: April 11, 2017, 05:46:35 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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G M

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Re: $48 LA-SF
« Reply #602 on: May 14, 2017, 07:43:03 PM »
http://www.autoblog.com/2016/05/09/sleepbus-la-sf-overnight-official/

"To get the word out, the company is offering one-way trips for $48. That's expected to go up to $65 once things are fully up and running, but that's still cheaper than the cheapest nonpromotional airfare you're going to find, even on a budget carrier like Southwest. Add in the convenience of its pickup and drop-off locations at the Caltrain station in San Francisco and the Santa Monica Pier in LA and the SleepBus strikes us as a viable alternative to air travel, and a far better option than the Greyhound – at least until the high-speed train is complete."

Don't hold your breath on waiting on that.

Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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Re: California
« Reply #607 on: July 18, 2017, 07:42:56 AM »
"http://www.capoliticalreview.com/capoliticalnewsandviews/california-government-retirement-plans-are-more-than-50-underfunded/"

no biggie ; they will simply steal more money from the likes of me to fund their golden shutes

why not let Zuck fund them?

he believes in minimum wages!

but of course not the he should fund it.  Again just people the likes of me.

Little Prick.


Crafty_Dog

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NRA/CRPA make LA City Council blink
« Reply #608 on: August 30, 2017, 04:23:22 AM »
In response to pre-litigation demands from the NRA and CRPA, the Los Angeles City Council has voted to repeal a city ordinance prohibiting the sale or transfer of “ultracompact firearms” in Los Angeles.  The city ordinance defined “ultracompact firearms” as handguns with “an overall length of six and three quarter inches (6.75”) or less or an overall height of four and one half inches (4.5”) or less, as measured with the magazine detached.”

The repeal of the ordinance was a direct result of NRA and CRPA attorneys threatening legal action against the City.

Gun owners in California are already subject to the strictest gun-control laws in the country, including a statewide restriction on the sale of handguns that are not listed on DOJ’s “Roster of Handguns Certified for Sale.”  By banning the sale of certain handguns labeled “ultracompact” under the ordinance, the City prohibited the sale or transfer of certain handguns that are listed on DOJ’s roster—handguns that have been tested and are specifically approved for sale in California.  Because the ordinance conflicted with state law in this respect, the ordinance is “preempted” by the state law and invalid.

On September 20, 2016,NRA and CRPA attorneys submitted a pre-litigation demand letter to the City, pointing out that the ordinance was preempted because it conflicted with the state law regulating what handguns can be sold, and was therefore invalid. The City stalled the repeal, but NRA and CRPA attorneys submitted repeated public record requests, and relentlessly pushed the City attorney’s office until the City finally repealed the ordinance.

Significantly, this isn’t the only recent NRA/CRPA victory in Los Angeles worth celebrating.  In 2015, the City adopted an ordinance prohibiting the possession of magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds.  The NRA and CRPA filed a lawsuit challenging the restriction.  That lawsuit, titled Bosenko v. City of Los Angeles, included 30 duly elected California Sheriffs, two law enforcement organizations, CRPA, and a number of individual gun owners as plaintiffs.

The following year, both Proposition 63 and Senate Bill 1446 were enacted, making it a violation of state law to possess these standard capacity magazines.  As a result, the City’s ordinance was duplicative of and preempted by the state laws.  In exchange for dismissal of the Bosenko lawsuit the City agreed to amend their ordinance to include a “sunset” provision so the ordinance would expire and be invalid and unenforceable after July 1, 2017, the date which the new state laws were set to take effect.

The city ordinance has now expired.

Both Proposition 63 and Senate Bill 1446, however, suffered a major defeat in federal court after District Court Judge Roger T. Benitez issued a preliminary injunction in the NRA and CRPA supported case of Duncan v. Becerra. That injunction prohibits California from enforcing the state law banning the possession of standard capacity magazines that can hold over 10 rounds. Now that the state law has been enjoined, and because the Los Angeles ordinance is no longer in effect as of July 1, there is no law prohibiting the possession of standard capacity magazines in the City of Los Angeles.

This is welcome news for many California gun owners, including those who do not reside in Los Angeles.  Thousands of law-abiding gun owners routinely travel through city limits to reach popular ranges such as the Angeles Shooting Range and other destinations that require traveling through city limits with firearms and the magazines that would have been prohibited.

Please continue to check your inbox and the California Stand and Fight webpage for updates on issues impacting your Second Amendment rights and hunting heritage in California.

DougMacG

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California’s poverty rate remains nation’s highest
« Reply #609 on: September 14, 2017, 08:00:30 AM »
I don't mean to beat up on California; it's a great place.  My beef is with leftism and all their lies and their failures.

Experiments in Democracy  It turns out that the state fighting hardest against income inequality has the highest poverty rate.  The state that pays people the most to be poor has the most poor people.  Incentive economics working!  The regulations in housing that protect the haves, hurt the have nots.  Laws like minimum wage that knock people out of their first job, also knock them out of their second, third and fourth jobs too.  Who knew?  (us)

http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article172973181.html
California’s poverty rate remains nation’s highest

The state that bans drilling has no drilling revenues, and so on.  The state the promised pensions without revenues to pay them has budget challenges. 

The state that had no qualms, even linguistically, about making housing unaffordable with 'affordable housing laws' has the most homeless.

http://www.scpr.org/news/2017/09/12/75575/california-s-housing-costs-are-driving-its-no-1-po/
California's housing costs are driving its No. 1 poverty ranking

It's not like socialism is failing everywhere it's tried.  We still have the USSR and Chavez-Venezuela's shining examples...  okay, scrap that.

When will they ever learn? 

G M

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Re: California’s poverty rate remains nation’s highest
« Reply #610 on: September 14, 2017, 08:14:25 PM »
They will never learn. Every leftist thinks they will be the ones with the clipboards, telling others what to do.


I don't mean to beat up on California; it's a great place.  My beef is with leftism and all their lies and their failures.

Experiments in Democracy  It turns out that the state fighting hardest against income inequality has the highest poverty rate.  The state that pays people the most to be poor has the most poor people.  Incentive economics working!  The regulations in housing that protect the haves, hurt the have nots.  Laws like minimum wage that knock people out of their first job, also knock them out of their second, third and fourth jobs too.  Who knew?  (us)

http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article172973181.html
California’s poverty rate remains nation’s highest

The state that bans drilling has no drilling revenues, and so on.  The state the promised pensions without revenues to pay them has budget challenges. 

The state that had no qualms, even linguistically, about making housing unaffordable with 'affordable housing laws' has the most homeless.

http://www.scpr.org/news/2017/09/12/75575/california-s-housing-costs-are-driving-its-no-1-po/
California's housing costs are driving its No. 1 poverty ranking

It's not like socialism is failing everywhere it's tried.  We still have the USSR and Chavez-Venezuela's shining examples...  okay, scrap that.

When will they ever learn? 


Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: California, Sanctuary / sovereign state?
« Reply #613 on: October 06, 2017, 07:25:52 AM »
Jerry Brown signs sanctuary STATE bill into law.
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Jerry-Brown-signs-bill-making-California-a-12255884.php

They don't respect our laws.  How is this different than Roy Moore not implementing gay marriage passed by one swing vote activist Supreme Court Justice?
-------------------
ccp on Catalonia leaving Spain:  "Like California separating from US."

Okay, what if they did?

What if we respect self determination.  They already have split.  Let them go.  We will need some ports and to keep our military assets that they don't want anyway.  They can keep their share of the debt.  I'd like to see that repayment schedule.  Much of the state can stay, let them vote county by county or precinct by precinct, and let others join them.  Hopefully we can negotiate free trade and travel for anyone who was a citizen before the split.

Here is a political map as recent as 2000.  Note red and blue reversed!



Can we build ports in the 2000 'blue' areas?





ccp

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Gov. Brown signs bill giving jailed felons right to vote IN JAIL
« Reply #618 on: October 15, 2017, 04:22:50 PM »
   
"Gov. Brown signs bill giving jailed felons right to vote IN JAIL"

nice........       :?
« Last Edit: October 16, 2017, 12:38:50 PM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Five new gun laws in California
« Reply #619 on: October 16, 2017, 12:37:59 PM »
5 Bills Get Governor's Signature
 
This time every year, Gun Owners of California waits patiently to assess the damage of Governor Jerry Brown’s pen.  Speculating what he would sign or veto has always been a crapshoot of sorts, and this year was no exception; there were hints he would sign some bad ones and veto a few, but in the aftermath of the Las Vegas tragedy, the guessing stopped.  His deadline was midnight October 15, so when the clock struck 12 last night, we learned the good news – and the bad.
 
GOOD NEWS:
 
•   VETOED  SB 464 / HILL/ D  - That’s right – Governor Brown said NO to this bad boy, which was one of Gun Owners top legislative priorities.  SB 464 would have required firearm dealers to install security measures such as concrete pillars in front of stores/and or vaults that meet certain standards.  In spite of the veto, GOC will not forget that Big 5 Sporting Goods worked out a deal with the author to protect large retailers like themselves that would have put smaller dealers in financial jeopardy. In his veto message, the Governor stated “This bill would require additional security enhancements on the premises of all licensed firearms dealers in California. State law already requires that firearms dealers enact security measures to avoid theft. Local jurisdictions can-and have-gone further by adding additional specific requirements. I believe local authorities are in the best position to determine what, if any additional measures are needed in their jurisdictions.”
We agree; GOC lobbied the Legislature and the Governor heavily on this ill-conceived and costly proposal.
 
BAD NEWS:
 
•   SIGNED    AB 7 / GIPSON / D – Prohibits the open carrying of an unloaded long-gun in unincorporated areas of the state.  This is an unnecessary statewide mandate; this could have easily been addressed by local authorities.
 
•   SIGNED  AB 424 / MCCARTY/ D – Removes authority of school officials to authorize a CCW license holder to carry on school grounds.  Unfortunately, the Governor no longer believes this decision should left in the hands of those officials responsible for the safety of the students and staff.
 
•   SIGNED  AB 1525 / BAKER/ R – Requires additional statements on the dangers of owning a gun to be printed on the actual firearm packaging.
 
•   SIGNED   SB 536 / PAN / D – Requires the Department of Justice to provide information on gun violence restraining orders to anti-gun the Firearm Violence Research Center at the University of California; permits DOJ to cherry-pick who gets what data.

•   SIGNED   SB 620 / BRADFORD / D - After initially failing by a significant margin, this so called “criminal justice reform” bill passed after some serious arm twisting by the Democrat legislative leadership.  The Governor approved the bill which gives courts the discretion to NOT issue mandatory sentencing provisions for the felony use of a firearm.   In our opinion, SB 620 represents an extraordinary double-standard on guns and has the real potential of putting the safety of Californians in jeopardy.

(MARC:  What is the problem here?  Sounds to me like it allows for discretion for the judge in sympathetic cases , , ,)

The real good news is that the Governor, the Senate and the Assembly have done their damage for 2017, but this doesn’t mean that Gun Owners will be relaxing just because the politicians are taking a break.  We are busy working in the courts, are gearing up for the 2018 legislative session, and most importantly, next year’s elections.  Stay Armed and Informed with GOC!

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Adios California
« Reply #621 on: October 31, 2017, 09:24:41 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: California
« Reply #622 on: November 20, 2017, 09:14:34 AM »


Crafty_Dog

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Kafkaesque ammo issues
« Reply #624 on: January 03, 2018, 05:32:17 AM »
California: New Year and New Restrictions as the Legislature Convenes the 2018 Session
 

2018 is already off to a rough start in California as DOJ has failed to implement the necessary regulations to allow ammunition vendors to sell ammunition. As previously reported,  recent changes to California law require ammunition vendors, businesses that sell ammunition but who are not licensed to sell firearms, to be in possession of a valid ammunition vendor license by January 1, 2018 in order to continue selling ammunition in California. The law required DOJ to implement the necessary regulations no later than July 1, 2017, but DOJ failed to even propose the regulations until July 14, 2017. Those regulations are still pending as the Office of Administrative Law has until January 16 to render a decision. As a result, many ammunition vendors remain in limbo on how to conduct their business because of the failure to implement the necessary regulations in a timely manner.  Efforts by NRA and CRPA attorneys to have DOJ stay enforcement have fallen on deaf ears.

In addition to the new ammunition vendor requirements, school administrators no longer have the authority to allow carry by persons with concealed carry permits onto school campuses as a result of AB 424 passed in 2017.  Further, those with newly classified “assault weapons” have until July 1, 2018 to register their firearms as “assault weapons,” or convert them to compliant or featureless configurations. More information can be obtained by viewing one of our several webinars. Background checks on ammunition purchases do not go into effect until July 1, 2019.

The legislature will convene on Wednesday January 3. Continue to check your inbox and the California Stand and Fight webpage for updates on legislation as it is introduced and moves through the legislative process along with other issues impacting your Second Amendment rights and hunting heritage in California.
 
 



Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Dems propose gimmick to help rich avoid federal taxes
« Reply #627 on: January 13, 2018, 09:28:53 AM »


California’s Political Charity

Democrats propose a gimmick to help the rich avoid federal taxes.
by  The Editorial Board
Jan. 12, 2018 7:00 p.m. ET

Much has changed in Donald Trump’s first year as President, including some progressive principles. Lo, California Democrats in 2016 campaigned to extend a tax hike on the rich. Now they’re promoting a gimmick to help reduce their wealthy residents’ tax burden.

State Senate President Kevin de Leon, who is challenging U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein in the June primary, complained last week that the new GOP tax law “offers corporations and hedge fund managers massive tax breaks and expects California taxpayers to pick up the costs.” It’s the “worst tax policy in the history of this country. Perhaps the world.”


In fact, some California taxpayers are among the law’s biggest beneficiaries—to wit, Silicon Valley titans such as Apple, Facebook and Google. California tech companies are sitting on more than $500 billion in cash overseas, which they will now be able to repatriate at a discounted tax rate.

But speaking of bad tax policies, Mr. de Leon has proposed legislation to help high earners avoid the new $10,000 state-and-local tax deduction limit. Taxpayers would receive a dollar-for-dollar tax credit for contributions to a new California Excellence Fund, which they could then deduct as charity. Taxpayers can deduct up to 60% of their income for charitable contributions under the new federal reform.


The Senate leader cites as his model private-school scholarship tax-credit programs in other states that function like vouchers. However, these charitable contributions help nonprofits or parents who want to send children to private schools. Mr. de Leon’s “excellence fund” would exist within the General Fund, and donations would be appropriated by the legislature. The only beneficiaries of this “charity” would be the donating taxpayer—and politicians.

In other words, Democrats in Sacramento want to help the rich dodge federal taxes. According to IRS data, California’s 71,000 taxpayers with million-dollar incomes deducted on average $462,500 in 2015 compared to $6,940 for individuals making between $50,000 and $100,000. Few California middle-class taxpayers will be harmed by the $10,000 deduction cap since the standard deduction has doubled to $12,000.

Neither the IRS nor federal courts are likely to allow this charity dodge. The IRS disallows deductions for charitable contributions to the extent that a taxpayer benefits—for example, paying $10,000 at a charity auction for an artwork valued at $8,000 would only yield a $2,000 deduction. In 1989 the Supreme Court ruled that contributions “made to such recipients with some expectation of a quid pro quo” are not deductible.

The one reform Mr. de Leon isn’t proposing is a cut in California’s top marginal tax rate of 13.3%, including the three percentage-point increase that Democrats pushed in a 2012 referendum. Rates on individuals making more than $250,000 also increased. Democrats successfully pushed to extend the tax hikes through 2030 in November 2016. The federal GOP tax reform means that the effective top state and federal combined marginal rate for Californians increases by 2.7-percentage points in 2018—to 50.3% from 47.6%.

Revenues are soaring due to strong income and capital-gains growth. Gov. Jerry Brown on Wednesday proposed a $132 billion budget that forecasts a $6 billion surplus. While the Governor wants to add some revenue to the state’s $8 billion rainy day fund, this will quickly vanish in the next recession—unless Democrats raid it first after he leaves office. State tax revenues fell cumulatively by more than $70 billion following each of the past two recessions.

California’s steeply progressive tax code has encouraged a boom-bust revenue and spending cycle. Reducing taxes on high earners would impose spending discipline and ameliorate the effects of the limitation of the state-and-local tax deduction. Alas, Democrats in Sacramento seem mainly interested in boosting their favorite charity—themselves.

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Re: California to close last (carbon-free) nuclear power plant, Diablo Canyon
« Reply #629 on: January 16, 2018, 02:22:18 PM »
http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2018/01/the-devil-is-in-the-diablo.php

California Public Utilities Commission ratified the plan to shut down California’s last nuclear power plant, Diablo Canyon, even though, as one of the last nuclear power plants built, it could easily be re-licensed for another 20 years.  Diablo Canyon produces twice a much electricity as all of California’s solar panels, and PG & E is closing Diablo Canyon largely because of the state political mandate that electric utilities source 50 percent of their power from “renewable” sources by the year 2030, and nuclear power doesn’t count.
------------------------------

Nuclear energy is carbon-free, you idiots.
https://grist.org/article/its-time-to-go-nuclear-in-the-fight-against-climate-change/

The Green or whatever you call far left climate alarmists are driving carbon emissions up!  Germany eliminated nuclear, burns more coal.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/robertwilson190/328841/why-germanys-nuclear-phase-out-leading-more-coal-burning

Do they ever acknowledge that nuclear is carbon free and has the best safety record? 

Diablo is designed to withstand a 7.5 magnitude earthquake.  If unacceptable earthquake risk is the reason for closure, why not close it now?

Crafty_Dog

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Census in California
« Reply #630 on: January 18, 2018, 11:33:43 AM »

DougMacG

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California to ration water PERMANENTLY!
« Reply #631 on: January 19, 2018, 01:36:59 PM »
https://californiapolicycenter.org/permanent-water-rationing-coming-california/

Meanwhile in MN, Lake Superior is holding 555 Billion gallons of water (for sale) per inch of depth.  The Great Lakes added 5.1 trillion gallons in 12 days last April.
http://www.mlive.com/weather/index.ssf/2017/04/great_lakes_gain_mind-boggling.html

The drought isn't global - or year-round.



Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: From $27B deficit to $6B surplus projected
« Reply #634 on: January 27, 2018, 07:05:47 AM »
We have been quite hard and critical on California here, yet the WSJ is reporting a Gov. Brown turning a $27B deficit into a $6B surplus for this coming year?

How did this happen?

How did we miss this?

==============================================================



Jerry Brown’s Legacy: A $6.1 Billion Budget Surplus in California

The governor hopes to avoid the fate of predecessors who left office with big deficits
 


California Governor Jerry Brown took office in 2011 with a $27 billion deficit and drastically slashed spending. In 2012, he staked his governorship on a tax increase that voters approved that year and reauthorized in 2016.
By Alejandro Lazo and
Jan. 10, 2018 5:40 p.m. ET

LOS ANGELES—California Gov. Jerry Brown appears poised to exit office next year with a top political priority in hand: free from the massive budget deficits that had weighed on his predecessors.

Buoyed by tax increases passed under his administration and a strong economy, Mr. Brown said Wednesday that the state is projecting a $6.1 billion surplus for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1.


The governor proposed socking most of the money away in a rainy-day fund whose creation he pushed for in 2014. Nearly 70% of the state’s projected revenue of about $135 billion next fiscal year is derived from personal income taxes, according to the governor’s office.

The state’s fiscal health is especially crucial as it faces myriad challenges: record natural disasters, housing shortages and changes to federal tax regulation—all while it ramps up opposition to the Trump administration on several major policy fronts.

As is his custom, the governor warned of an inevitable economic slowdown.

“California has faced 10 recessions since World War II, and we must prepare for the 11th,” he said. “Let’s not blow it now.”

Mr. Brown has been preaching frugality for years—he kicked off one past budget talk with Aesop’s fable about the thrifty ant and the lazy grasshopper.


Mr. Brown took office in 2011 with a $27 billion deficit and drastically slashed spending. In 2012, he staked his governorship on a tax increase that voters approved that year and reauthorized in 2016.

His spending plan for 2018 calls for $131.7 billion of general fund spending. Including special funds and bonds, which are pools of restricted money that can only be used for specific projects, total proposed spending next fiscal year is $190.3 billion.

The governor’s budget document marks the start of roughly six months of negotiations with the Democratic-controlled legislature.

The state’s budget must be approved by June 15, so it can be enacted July 1.

Many in Mr. Brown’s party, which wields the power to raise taxes with two-thirds majorities in both state houses, have pushed for increased spending on social programs as the state has recovered from the last recession.

On Wednesday, Republicans called on the governor to return some of the budget surplus to voters—saying they were overtaxed.

Assemblyman Vince Fong, a Republican from Kern County and a former staffer of House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, said the forecast windfall was evidence that a gasoline tax increase passed by Democrats last year was unnecessary.

“We do not have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem,” Mr. Fong said. “Taxpayers work hard for their income—we should work just as hard to protect it.”

State officials and economists said planning for the 2018-2019 budget cycle had been particularly difficult this year.

They said state finances are facing a notably volatile period, given changes to federal tax law poised to hit California especially hard.

“I think there’s more financial uncertainty between Washington and Sacramento than in the past,” said Jerry Nickelsburg, director of the University of California, Los Angeles Anderson Forecast, a leading forecaster.

California, along with other high-cost and high-tax states, is considering ways to lessen the impact of the federal tax overhaul, which will raise taxes on a significant number of high-earners in the state.





State senate leader Kevin de León introduced legislation last week that would allow California taxpayers to donate to a fund and deduct 100% of the donation, essentially turning state tax payments into a deductible charitable contribution.

Other Democratic-led states, including New Jersey, are considering similar tactics to push back against what their leaders see as an unfair politically motivated move by the Trump administration against blue states.

While Mr. Brown warned of a slowdown Wednesday, he also touted increased funding in the state’s public schools and infrastructure programs as well as his efforts to pay down debt taken on by previous administrations.

Mr. Brown’s two most immediate predecessors were consumed by state budget woes at the end of their tenures. Democrat Gray Davis was recalled from office in 2003 after a recession, an energy crisis and controversial cuts led his popularity to sink.

Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger defeated Mr. Davis in the recall election, but he too was consumed with deficits as state coffers were pummeled by the last recession.

“One thing governors don’t like is to be presiding over a hemorrhaging budget because people do blame them,” Mr. Brown said Wednesday. “And for that reason, if none other, we are going to keep this steady as we go.”


DougMacG

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Re: WSJ: From $27B deficit to $6B surplus projected
« Reply #636 on: January 27, 2018, 12:29:44 PM »
quote author=Crafty_Dog
We have been quite hard and critical on California here, yet the WSJ is reporting a Gov. Brown turning a $27B deficit into a $6B surplus for this coming year?

How did this happen?

How did we miss this?

======================================================

"California’s finances are only in order if one ignores the trillion-dollar gorilla in the room, which is the state’s gigantic unfunded pension liability for which taxpayers are on the hook.."
https://www.forbes.com/sites/patrickgleason/2016/07/26/camyth/#1c1e0db27113
http://www.pensiontracker.org/index.php

Economists and public finance experts point out that more realistic assumptions about rates of return put the state’s unfunded pension liabilities at nearly $1 trillion, or eight times the current general fund. That’s just the state’s unfunded pension liability. Unfunded retiree health benefits are another daunting challenge for California.

“Retiree health care expenses are largely unfunded but are an obligation for the state’s taxpayers just like pension benefits,” notes the California Policy Center’s Bill Fletcher “The best estimate we’ve seen for unfunded retiree health care is $150 billion,
https://californiapolicycenter.org/tag/unfunded-pension-liabilities/

Half of Calif tax revenues (48%) come from the top 1%, the most volatile sector.  That is up with the markets and up with tech, but potentially catastrophic in the ordinary course of peaks and valleys.

The Dems number one measure of economic success is income inequality where California ranks first meaning worst.
http://money.cnn.com/2015/05/05/news/economy/california-unequal/index.html
http://www.measureofamerica.org/congressional-districts-2015/
They fail by their own standard.  Does it make you feel better in Central Valley that Google and Apple are doing well?

Cost of living: Incomes in the richest areas of California need to adjusted for purchasing power parity (PPP).  In other words, does $70,000 of income go further in a city where houses cost a million than 50,000 goes where houses cost 150,000.  You need to adjust for AFTER TAX INCOME and cost of living to compare incomes in different areas.

The poor areas of California are just poor.


DougMacG

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California, L.A.'s homelessness surged 75% in six years
« Reply #638 on: February 01, 2018, 11:45:41 AM »
Stories of the poor getting poorer in Calif do not refute other stories of the rich getting richer in Calif or that income inequality is getter wider.
http://dogbrothers.com/phpBB2/index.php?topic=1897.msg108411#msg108411

L.A.'s homelessness surged 75% in six years.
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-homeless-how-we-got-here-20180201-story.html
"We are moving more homeless families and adults into housing," said Phil Ansell, director of the Los Angeles County Homeless Initiative. "What we have less control over is the inflow...

"We are dealing with historical consequences of bad decisions made 10 years ago to guarantee a right to sidewalks..."


« Last Edit: February 01, 2018, 11:48:16 AM by DougMacG »


Crafty_Dog

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Gov. Brown signs bill ending mandatory penalty for gun use in crime
« Reply #640 on: February 16, 2018, 09:54:06 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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California-- one way U-Haul rates
« Reply #642 on: February 22, 2018, 10:41:08 AM »
In serious geopolitical economics,  this is the measure of assets leaving a state, the comparative one-way u-haul costs:



Up to 16 times less cost to haul into Calif than out reflect huge difference in demand.

https://fee.org/articles/so-many-people-are-fleeing-the-san-francisco-bay-area-its-hard-to-find-a-u-haul/
« Last Edit: February 22, 2018, 11:34:02 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: California
« Reply #643 on: February 22, 2018, 11:36:04 AM »
That is quite potent.

ccp

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Re: California
« Reply #644 on: February 22, 2018, 05:46:41 PM »
"  Up to 16 times less cost to haul into Calif than out reflect huge difference in demand."

Funny .  Yet

The pop of California population keeps soaring.

Are the illegals driving the uUauls back to California stuffed with more illegals ?

https://www.statista.com/statistics/206097/resident-population-in-california/
« Last Edit: February 22, 2018, 05:59:33 PM by ccp »

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DougMacG

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Re: California
« Reply #646 on: February 23, 2018, 01:49:50 PM »
"  Up to 16 times less cost to haul into Calif than out reflect huge difference in demand."
------
Funny .  Yet
The pop of California population keeps soaring.
Are the illegals driving the uUauls back to California stuffed with more illegals ?
https://www.statista.com/statistics/206097/resident-population-in-california/
------

Yes, the population  is still increasing  but the people bringing assets in by the (expensive) truckload exceed the reverse by more than 16 to 1.  Income and wealth are also no doubt increasing, it is still the home of Silicon Valley, the financial center of San Fran, the entertainment industry in L.A., Napa valley and a whole lot of other things including Dog Brothers Martial Arts.

They have a balanced state budget only when you don't count a world full of unfunded liabilities.  They have many of the richest people in the world and they have the most illegal aliens and widest income inequality in the nation.

My view is that they are past the inflection point.  Eventually they will lose their near monopoly on those industries, like venture capital.  It will always be one of the most beautiful places to live and work anywhere but the business climate is better in other areas. 

Such a dichotomy.  Unimaginable wealth and success along with 10 million immigrants, 4.5 million households on public assistance, and no one knows how many public sector employees at what wage rate and how many retired public employees still receiving checks in escalating sizes.
http://www.ppic.org/press-release/one-quarter-of-california-families-receive-welfare-benefits/

Can they keep going like this?

Crafty_Dog

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State of California ID trickery
« Reply #647 on: February 26, 2018, 04:19:51 PM »

Links in following article found here
https://mailchi.mp/0506378be8bf/follow-up-special-alertfirearm-purchases-and-identification-issued-by-ca-dmv?e=0332f322fa

Follow Up Special Alert:
Firearm Purchases and Identification Issued by CA DMV
 
 
In our last alert discussing California driver licenses and the Real ID Act, we mentioned that the California Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”) had told Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”) ATF that the non-REAL ID licenses issued to lawful California residents would be different than those issued to undocumented individuals.
 
It has come to our attention that DMV is issuing identification to lawful California residents that are identical to those issued to individuals who are unable to provide proof of their lawful presence in the United States. In other words, DMV provided ATF with bad information.
 
This means there is no distinction between an AB 60 license and a non-REAL ID, despite what the ATF previously attested to in communications with NRA and CRPA attorneys. As a result, California licensed firearm dealers are currently prohibited from accepting non-REAL IDs for the purposes of firearm transfers due to ATF’s current policy.
 
NRA and CRPA attorneys have reached out to ATF and DMV for further clarification but have yet to receive a response. Make sure you are subscribed to NRA and CRPA email alerts to be notified of any updates on this issue as it develops.
 


In addition, NRA and CRPA attorneys have received word from at least one firearms dealer that the California Department of Justice (“CA DOJ”) has taken the position that any license with the words “FEDERAL LIMTS APPLY” is not acceptable for the purposes of purchasing or transferring firearms, regardless of any additional language on the back of the license. This appears to be an unlawful overreach by CA DOJ because the question of lawful presence in the United States as it relates to firearm purchases falls directly under ATF’s control.
 
Under California law, one only needs to provide “clear evidence of the person’s identity and age” when attempting to acquire a firearm from a California licensed dealer. “Clear evidence” is defined as a valid California Driver’s License or Identification Card. Because both AB 60 licenses and non-REAL IDs are considered valid California identification, regardless if they satisfy federal requirements or not, both satisfy California’s requirement of “clear evidence of the person’s identity and age.”
 
Following additional clarification from ATF and DMV, NRA and CRPA attorneys will address CA DOJ’s position should they still insist that such licenses are restricted. Until then, we recommend our members hold off on renewing their California identification if possible or apply for and obtain a REAL ID.




G M

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Re: State of California ID trickery
« Reply #648 on: February 26, 2018, 05:35:44 PM »
https://www.atf.gov/firearms/qa/what-form-identification-must-licensee-obtain-transferee-firearm

It is well worth.having a passport for a variety of reasons, this being one.



Links in following article found here
https://mailchi.mp/0506378be8bf/follow-up-special-alertfirearm-purchases-and-identification-issued-by-ca-dmv?e=0332f322fa

Follow Up Special Alert:
Firearm Purchases and Identification Issued by CA DMV
 
 
In our last alert discussing California driver licenses and the Real ID Act, we mentioned that the California Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”) had told Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”) ATF that the non-REAL ID licenses issued to lawful California residents would be different than those issued to undocumented individuals.
 
It has come to our attention that DMV is issuing identification to lawful California residents that are identical to those issued to individuals who are unable to provide proof of their lawful presence in the United States. In other words, DMV provided ATF with bad information.
 
This means there is no distinction between an AB 60 license and a non-REAL ID, despite what the ATF previously attested to in communications with NRA and CRPA attorneys. As a result, California licensed firearm dealers are currently prohibited from accepting non-REAL IDs for the purposes of firearm transfers due to ATF’s current policy.
 
NRA and CRPA attorneys have reached out to ATF and DMV for further clarification but have yet to receive a response. Make sure you are subscribed to NRA and CRPA email alerts to be notified of any updates on this issue as it develops.
 


In addition, NRA and CRPA attorneys have received word from at least one firearms dealer that the California Department of Justice (“CA DOJ”) has taken the position that any license with the words “FEDERAL LIMTS APPLY” is not acceptable for the purposes of purchasing or transferring firearms, regardless of any additional language on the back of the license. This appears to be an unlawful overreach by CA DOJ because the question of lawful presence in the United States as it relates to firearm purchases falls directly under ATF’s control.
 
Under California law, one only needs to provide “clear evidence of the person’s identity and age” when attempting to acquire a firearm from a California licensed dealer. “Clear evidence” is defined as a valid California Driver’s License or Identification Card. Because both AB 60 licenses and non-REAL IDs are considered valid California identification, regardless if they satisfy federal requirements or not, both satisfy California’s requirement of “clear evidence of the person’s identity and age.”
 
Following additional clarification from ATF and DMV, NRA and CRPA attorneys will address CA DOJ’s position should they still insist that such licenses are restricted. Until then, we recommend our members hold off on renewing their California identification if possible or apply for and obtain a REAL ID.





Crafty_Dog

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California's Bullet Train to Fiscal Oblivion
« Reply #649 on: March 15, 2018, 05:22:49 AM »
California’s Bullet Train To Fiscal Oblivion
March 13, 2018 By Stephen Frank 7 Comments

    We were told the cost of the choo choo to nowhere was going to be $38 billion—and the private sector would pay half.  We were told the ridership was going to be double what they think it will now be—and the route presented has long since been forgotten.  We were told it would open in 2019—now it will open in 2029, at the earliest—if they can find the building capital.  If they do, they will have NO money to operate the train.

    “The original promise, made in a proposition voted on in 2008, called for the entire “high-speed” rail system to be built at a cost of just $37 billion and to be finished by 2020.  It would carry 120,000 riders a day at a cost of $55 a ticket — far less than it costs on average to fly. And it would zip riders to their destinations in just a few hours. Nice.

    But none of those things are even remotely true.

    Just last week, the state’s rail authority announced that the system will now cost $77.3 billion, 20% more than the $64 billion estimated a mere two years ago. And, oh yes, instead of being done in 2029, it will be done in 2033. But they also admitted that costs might soar to $98 billion. If you’re in a betting pool, take the over on that one.”

    By 2033 most of the cars on the road will be electric/self driving—no need to worry about traffic, accidents or getting tired driving the car.  The high speed rail is the technology of the 20th century.

    high speed rail train

California’s Bullet Train To Fiscal Oblivion

Investors Business Daily, 3/12/2018

Golden State: California’s bullet train project, also known as Jerry Brown’s Folly, has turned into a fiscal nightmare for the Golden State. Not only are the cost estimates soaring, but the time table has once more been shifted back. Based on current estimates, it may turn out to be the biggest fraud in the history of public works.

When you lie about money in the private sector, it’s called fraud; when you lie about money in the public sector, it’s called politics or “public policy.” California’s bullet train is a perfect example of this.

Early on, planners warned that the cost would be more than $100 billion. But Jerry Brown, California’s governor, didn’t like that estimate. So, like Canute commanding the tide to recede, he sought new estimates. He sold those lower estimates to a gullible, and frankly foolish, public.

The original promise, made in a proposition voted on in 2008, called for the entire “high-speed” rail system to be built at a cost of just $37 billion and to be finished by 2020.  It would carry 120,000 riders a day at a cost of $55 a ticket — far less than it costs on average to fly. And it would zip riders to their destinations in just a few hours. Nice.

But none of those things are even remotely true.

Just last week, the state’s rail authority announced that the system will now cost $77.3 billion, 20% more than the $64 billion estimated a mere two years ago. And, oh yes, instead of being done in 2029, it will be done in 2033. But they also admitted that costs might soar to $98 billion. If you’re in a betting pool, take the over on that one.

And the ticket costs they now estimate will be $93 a pop, not $55. Big difference.

As Breitbart News notes, “only 6,132 passengers a day take the 1 hour, 39 minute flight (from Los Angeles to San Francisco) and there are lots of plan-ahead fares as low as $25.” The idea that the “high-speed” trains, which by the way will never achieve true bullet-train speeds of over 100 miles per hour, will carry 120,000 passengers a day is a total fantasy with no basis — none — in any statistical reality.

In short, there is already a low-cost, high-speed transport system between Los Angeles and San Francisco. It’s called “jet planes.” They are a 20th century technology, not a 19th century technology, as trains are.

By the way, this isn’t the first time the costs have been ratcheted up, nor will it be the last.

Just last month, the bureaucracy in charge of the rail project announced it would cost $10.8 billion for the firs 119 miles of rail (the route will ultimately cover over 500 miles). That might not sound so bad, but the initial estimate was $6 billion, so that’s a more than 70% increase. And this stretch is over flat land in what is by far the easiest part of the route to build, California’s agriculturally rich Central Valley.

But the state doesn’t have either an actual route, local community support or environmental clearance for the rest of the rail’s trip to Los Angeles, making it prohibitively expensive to build. Already, local communities in the southern part of the state are organizing to oppose having this white-elephant on wheels ripping through their communities.

So state bureaucrats, to avoid the political fallout, have begun talking about grandiose mega-construction plans, such as burrowing tunnels through two high mountain ranges surrounding L.A. This is more insanity.

Aside from the cost, that area is riddled with seismically active fault lines, which will make any attempt at building a lengthy tunnel dangerous at best. The San Andreas Fault  — due, seismologists say, for an 8.0 or even higher quake — is right in the area they would have to tunnel.

Here’s the bad part: Everyone involved in the project knew from the very first the cost would be astronomical, but ignored it. This was to be Gov. Brown’s lasting political monument, apparently working off some kind of psychic competition with his father, the late former Gov. Pat Brown, who built much of the state’s water infrastructure and its freeways.

Jerry’s dad built things that Californians actually needed. An old-style Democrat, he was keen on people getting ahead and, to coin a phrase, making California great. Jerry Brown, his son, is more into leaving a lasting legacy of futility that all Californians will  pay for. It’s a fraud, from start to finish. And, in a perverse way, this misbegotten rail system will actually serve as Brown’s legacy — one of waste, ego-driven public policy, and refusal to recognize basic fiscal realities.

If Brown has his way, this train-to-nowhere will lead to massive tax hikes and bitter voter anger at the people who built it. It might even bankrupt the state, which is already technically insolvent due to its outlandishly enormous pension obligations and plans for a “single-payer” health care program that dwarfs the rail project in size.

As it is now, the state comes up about $40 billion short in what it needs to fund the rail project, and that’s a very optimistic estimate.

But don’t worry: The Democrats in this one-party state will find a scapegoat, as they always have, when the bills come due. They’ll blame the Republicans.