Is California Over?

Authored by John Rubino via DollarCollapse.com,

By now it’s painfully obvious that we humans tend to ruin our favorite places by overrunning them. And no place makes this point better than California. An absolute paradise 25 million people ago, parts of it are now a hellscape of Mad Maxian proportions.

Consider:

Rolling blackouts due in part to bad planning and in part to overpopulation are disrupting businesses and making homes unbearable in 100-degree summer heat.

Wildfires, due in part to excess people being shunted into “suburbs” surrounded by brushland, are burning thousands of houses and roasting the unlucky wildlife that used to call those canyons and hillsides home. See Sanctuary for endangered condors burns in California wildfire.

As for California’s cities, well, here’s podcaster Joe Rogan’s brutal discussion of LA’s homeless situation:

And the above is just the physical manifestation of an unsustainable development model.

The financial side of things is even uglier. Public-sector unions now control state politics and have engineered pension plans that are both wildly overgenerous and catastrophically unfunded.

So even in the absence of fires, blackouts and rising homelessness, the state would be careening towards bankruptcy.

What is California’s solution? Retroactive wealth taxes that reach out and pick the pockets of people who have already left.

Now even the New York Times, which generally sympathizes with California’s political model, acknowledges that the left coast is sliding into the abyss. A snippet from NYT columnist Farhad Manjoo:

California, We Can’t Go On Like This

Across much of California in the last two weeks, many of my friends and neighbors have faced a dead-end choice: Is it safer to conduct your life outdoors and avoid the coronavirus, or should you rush inside, the better to escape the choking heat, toxic smoke and raining ash?

Such has been the gagging unwinnability of life in the nation’s most populous state in the sweltering summer of 2020, in what I have been assured is the greatest country ever to have existed. The virus begs you to open a window; the inferno forces you to keep it shut.

When the coronavirus first landed in America, California’s lawmakers responded quickly and effectively, becoming a model for the rest of the nation. But as the early wins faded and the cases spiked, each day this summer has felt like another slide down an inevitable spiral of failure. The virus keeps crashing into California’s many other longstanding dysfunctions, from housing to energy to climate change to disaster planning, and the compounding ruin is piling up like BMWs on the 405.

Consider: To keep the pestilence at bay, many of California’s children began attending school online last week. But to satisfy surging energy demand linked to record-shattering heat (and a host of other mysterious reasons), state utilities had to impose rolling blackouts, forcing schools to come up with energy contingency plans to add to their virus contingency plans, now that millions of students face the threat of intermittent electricity.

For decades, California has relied on conscripted prisoners as a cheap way to fight its raging fires. But to stave off coronavirus outbreaks in our long-overcrowded prisons, authorities released thousands of inmates earlier this year. Now, as climate change has ushered in a new era of “megafires” that includes some of the largest blazes the state has ever faced, the early release of inmates has left the state dangerously short of prisoners to exploit in battling the flames.

What is California’s fundamental trouble? Neither socialism nor Trumpian neglect and incompetence, but something more elemental to life in the Golden State: A refusal by many Californians to live sustainably and inclusively, to give up a little bit of their own convenience for the collective good.

Californian suburbia, the ideal of much of American suburbia, was built and sold on the promise of endless excess — everyone gets a car, a job, a single-family home and enough water and gasoline and electricity to light up the party.

But it is long past obvious that infinitude was a false promise. Traffic, sprawl, homelessness and ballooning housing costs are all consequences of our profligacy with the land and our other resources. In addition to a hotter, drier climate, the fires, too, are fanned by an unsustainable way of life. Many blazes were worsened by Californians moving into areas near forests known as the “urban-wildland interface.” Once people move near forested land, fires tend to follow — either because they deliberately or inadvertently ignite them, or because they need electricity, delivered by electrical wires that can cause sparks that turn into conflagrations.

As the fires blazed around us this time last year, I warned of the “end of California as we know it” — that if we didn’t begin to radically alter how we live, the climate and the high cost of living would make the state uninhabitable for large numbers of people.

The take-away?

Beyond a certain point even a place like California, blessed as it is with both Hollywood and Silicon Valley, can’t support the unsupportable. So either the state, along with most of its nearly-as-badly-managed peers, gets a bailout of historic proportions with all the currency crisis/moral hazard implications that that implies. Or California and its iconic car-centric/suburban lifestyle devolve into chaos.

Here’s hoping for the latter, which will at least provide a cautionary tale for other places now traveling the same road.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
13 Comments
Jim in Va.
Jim in Va.
August 28, 2020 8:27 am

China will probably end up with it. Good time for it to fall into the ocean….

overthecliff
overthecliff
August 28, 2020 8:30 am

California has not hit bottom yet. We will know when it happens. It is when the Mexicans start sneaking back across the border.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
  overthecliff
August 28, 2020 12:28 pm

Good observation.

daniel
daniel
  overthecliff
August 29, 2020 2:57 pm

oops.
(also dont actually click because it’s vice. the title should suffice)

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/k7q58m/migrants-giving-up-on-america-are-using-coyotes-to-smuggle-them-home

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
August 28, 2020 8:58 am

Happy to have been born there. Happy to have enjoyed the 60s, 70s, 80s, and most of the 90s there (although it was getting bad near the end). Happy to have left there with my (also CA native) wife 23 years ago. Happy that both of our mothers left the state before they passed away and that neither of us have any financial/property ties to the state. We still have a few relatives and friends who continue to live there, but we will never return. The Pacific is a beautiful ocean and I enjoyed living at it in college. The desert is a most wonderful place to visit, especially to see the Milky Way at night. The Redwoods, Sequoias, Yosemite, and the countless other natural wonders are something everyone should see in their lifetime. Rid the state of most of the current human infestation and they would all be even nicer to visit. At least I have some good memories, as the future for the state will be something nobody will want to remember.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  MrLiberty
August 28, 2020 9:44 am

I too was raised here, down in Victor Davis Hanson territory in the Central Valley. To give you an idea of how long ago that was, people in the Bay Area still used to laugh at the crappy traffic in LA and wonder how anyone put up with it. But that was 20 million people ago. No one in the Bay Area is laughing anymore.

Auntie Kriest
Auntie Kriest
  Anonymous
August 28, 2020 11:33 am

Nancy Pelosi is laughing, especially after a successful walk through the needle and shit strewn streets of her Congressional district and not falling into a pile of excrement or the loving embrace of a piss soaked homeless junkie.

anarchyst
anarchyst
August 28, 2020 9:58 am

The so-called “environmentalists” must take a large part of the blame for California’s “wildfire” problem. In most of these communities, it is illegal to clear-cut around one’s residence due to “environmental protections” that are accorded to animals, humans be damned. Saving a snail or a cougar must take precedence over humans.
Most people are unaware that the Los Angeles basin has suffered from air pollution for centuries, not from human activities, but due to its unique geographical nature. Being situated between the Pacific ocean and mountain ranges, it is an ideal situation for stagnant, non-moving air, which exacerbates the pollution problems. In fact the native Americans who populated the area called it “the valley of smoke” due to its propensity to “bottle up” air pollution.

Glock 1911 M1A .308
Glock 1911 M1A .308
August 28, 2020 10:24 am

California was doomed when the entertainment industry moved its headquarters there. Artists, actors, musicians and politicians make neither a suitable brain trust, nor a group from which public policy should be dictated. And, at this point its California, so who cares? California’s plight bothers me little more than the eastern seaboard’s plight.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Glock 1911 M1A .308
August 28, 2020 4:33 pm

Actually, William Mulholland’s corrupt theft of water from northern California for L.A. set the stage for massive amounts of corruption that encircled every major industry that came to town, from Hollywood to Real Estate (especially), to the defense contractors (located there for the weather and to be far away from German threats in WW2), to the numerous sports franchises and the music industry.

daniel
daniel
August 28, 2020 12:08 pm

correction: “absolute paradise 25 million [non-white] people ago”

Anonymous1
Anonymous1
August 28, 2020 1:42 pm

Let’s see, there are 50 US states, all have huge transmission lines crossing throughout the landscape, but only CA has constant forest fires blamed on the transmission lines, along with rolling blackouts.

is that the story you want us to believe?

Some people tell lies because their truth is just too far fetched to believe.

Stan Sylvester
Stan Sylvester
August 29, 2020 10:34 am

The elephant in sky, geoengineering is first and foremost the main reason for the wildfires. We have been involved in climate control for decades. This is not what is pawned off as climate change. The climate is changing but not because of how much co2 man puts into the air. It is not helpful, for sure, but nothing compares to the damage done by the powers that be with geoengineering. Weather warfare is the crown jewel of the military industrial complex. The droughts provide the tinder like conditions that explain fires that the firefighters have said are worse than ever. For more info see geoengineeringwatch.org. Dane Wigington has been fighting this for at least 10 years. Those streaks jets leaving in the sky are sprays of aluminum, baruim and other items.