Comment Re:Term Limits (Score 1) 94
California's crime rate is significantly higher than 2019 in virtually every major city. Check out Oakland and LA city crime stats, which you "forgot" to cite.
Still near record lows. Minor variations from year to year are not a trend.
Plus note that you "mysteriously" chose 1979 as the baseline instead of the far more logical 2019 which was just before your failed "defund the police" experiment started.
Why would that be "far more logical"? Crime rates vary from year to year. You need to average over five or ten years just to have a number you can do anything with. Your approach involves comparing two noisy values, so you're getting noise as the output.
Most Oakland crime rates are in about the same range as they have been for the last decade or more. Car thefts are up, presumably because of gentrification.
Thus far, there's no indication that the decision to reduce planned funding increases for police and divert it to other agencies that help people in crisis has had a meaningful impact on the crime rate, unless you think that somehow more police would have prevented car thefts, which isn't all that likely. You can't be everywhere at once.
"California's K-12 schools are only ranked lower than the rest of the country because California has a much larger non-native speaker population. When you exclude scores from people who are still learning English, it is pretty much average."
You're making excuses for the abysmal drop in California's rankings without considering the full context that the drop started after instituting self defeating policies like handing out jobs and diplomas based on identity, canceling advanced classes, deemphasizing standardized testing as "racism", mainstreaming, whole word learning, "Seattle Math", etc -- particularly in inner cities that, in California, have no natural defenses against progressive shenanigans.
Citation needed.
Similar cohorts in Florida K-12 do far better despite Florida spending half as much.
Similar cohorts in Florida don't have California's cost of living or building maintenance. Spending twice as much in California as Florida is, on a cost-of-living-adjusted basis, spending about the same amount. And this assumes your similar cohorts really are similar. Because of that cost of living difference, they probably are not so similar, because their parents have to work two jobs in California to keep a roof over their heads.
A lot of California's problems are directly caused by affordability.
"California's homeless population grew by just 3% in 2024. The national average was 18%. California is doing way better than most of the country in that area."
You are playing with date ranges again. California homelessness is up a whopping 40% over the last ten years - since it started implementing progressive decriminalization "solutions" while Florida dropped 40%.
California's homeless population was growing at a faster rate in the 2010s than in the 2020s. So it certainly sounds like those "solutions" you're complaining about actually were solutions, at least to some degree. They haven't solved the problem, because housing costs too much, but they're a start.
Meanwhile, Florida still has the nation's third largest homeless population even after that 40% drop. That's not exactly doing well. It's really all about cost of living.
Furthermore, in a dramatic reversal, and against Gavin's recommendations, California's citizens just passed statewide ballot initiatives to recriminalize repeated shoplifting and other petty crimes that encourage homelessness and contribute to overall crime increases.
Yes. It was a stupid idea, and a lot of us said it was a stupid idea at the time. But it has very little to do with homelessness, except insofar as arresting people for shoplifting has a tendency to put them in jail, where they would no longer be homeless. That's not a solution for the homelessness crisis. It is largely orthogonal. Most homeless people are not shoplifters, though they do shoplift more than average.
The reason we passed the ballot initiative is because that idiotic prior law change created a huge surge in car break-ins from people stealing things. As long as it was under $1,000, the police weren't willing to investigate it, and so you ended up with this huge organized crime network breaking into cars all over the Bay Area and pawning off the stolen goods. This was all entirely predictable.
The idea behind the original law change was well-meaning, but it ignored human nature.
"California would love to prevent wildfires, but they can't stop you from driving your gasoline-powered cars and contributing to the climate change that is fueling the droughts that have turned the state into a tinderbox. And although they are forcing power companies to improve their power lines, it takes time."
No. It dug its own grave. Power companies were prevented from clearing brush and trees in order to "save the environment".
Citation needed. If you mean the story about being fined for damaging an endangered plant species during power line maintenance in SoCal, they did the maintenance. They were fined for bulldozing the trail that led up to the work area without properly doing the environmental study and avoiding the endangered plants, not for clearing brush under the lines. Even if the endangered species had been under the lines, they still could have gotten permission from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to transplant it away from the lines. They just would not have been allowed to blindly bulldoze it.
A critical reservoir was left empty due to similar bungling.
The critical reservoir was left empty because of scheduled maintenance. Infrastructure has to be repaired sometimes. If you don't repair it, worse things happen. And they did it during winter when fires don't usually happen. I wouldn't call that bungling. I'd call that incredibly bad luck. Maybe the maintenance took longer than it should have, and if so, there should be answers about why that is the case, but it doesn't seem like it was down because of any sort of general policy problem.
They also failed to build critically needed new reservoirs due to more bureaucratic bungling despite many years of having budgeted for them.
In Southern California? There were planned reservoirs in the Central Valley that have been pushed back because of that sort of problem, but that's hundreds of miles away. The only reservoir that could have helped was the one that was down, and only by providing water pressure. If they had been able to fly helicopters (the weather prevented this), they would have just scooped up water from the ocean. It's a lot closer than any reservoir would have been.
So consider Florida? It's trending quite well in all of the categories California struggles with.
How's that? The hurricanes seem to be getting worse and more frequent, and it has the second-highest rate of fraud in the country, behind only Georgia. (In most years, Florida has been the worst.)
Fraud has nothing to do with hurricanes.
I never said it did. But you're saying Florida is great on crime, whereas it's actually a place where the elderly to go get preyed upon by scammers. You're saying California is bad because of natural disasters while Florida is great in spite of them. See why I'm rolling my eyes now?
Your context free reference is simply designed to hide the fact that, for example, Miami is one of the only major cities that didn't "defund", and that saw its crime rate significantly drop since 2019.
I don't disagree that the "defund the police" movement resulted in many cities going too far. But the point remains that the crime rate hasn't gone up *that* much in most of California, even with those questionable decisions. And that was my point. You're giving a sky-is-falling narrative that just doesn't match reality.
As for Miami, there's no reason to believe that "defunding" versus not doing so was the reason Miami's crime rate dropped. Looking at some of the graphs, I'm pretty sure Miami's crime rate has been trending down faster than the national average for decades.
Post hoc ergo proper hoc is still a fallacy.
Not coincidentally, it has a Republican mayor that was recently reelected in a bipartisan landslide, and it benefits from having a Republican governor that was recently reelected in a bipartisan landslide.
Even if that first part true (I haven't checked), that has approximately nothing to do with the state of Florida as a whole. And no, the Republican governor was most certainly NOT reelected in a bipartisan way. See below.
Back to hurricanes: there is zero evidence that frequency has significantly increased over the last centuries. Your "increasing frequency" studies all pull the timeline trick of using a recent lull as the baseline. What is true is that we have gotten far better at predicting, tracking, reporting, and handling them. Resulting deaths have dropped by orders of magnitude despite a far higher population in their paths today.
We can't know about previous centuries. We only know recorded history. It's not a timeline trick. It's the only data we have.
How is DeSantis popular on a bipartisan basis? He has only a 10% approval rating and a 72% disapproval rating among Democrats according to a poll from a month ago.
If you want a state with a governor that is actually liked by both parties, try Kentucky.
Elections are the polls that matter most, and, as I just noted, DeSantis was reelected in a bipartisan landslide.
No, he wasn't. 59.4% to 40% is not a bipartisan landslide when only 31% of registered voters are Democrats. From those numbers, it looks like, to within the margin of error, approximately no Democrats voted for DeSantis, and slightly more independents voted for him than voted for Trump (56%).
...unless your definition of "bipartisan" means "Republican and Libertarian", in which case, maybe.