Albuquerque Journal

Progressiv­es drive California toward a premodern society

- E-mail authorvdh@gmail.com. © 2019 Tribune Content Agency LLC.

More than 2 million California­ns were recently left without power after the state’s largest utility, Pacific Gas & Electric — which filed for bankruptcy earlier this year — pre-emptively shut down transmissi­on lines in fear they might spark fires during periods of high autumn winds. Consumers blame the state for not cleaning up dead trees and brush, along with the utility companies for not updating their ossified equipment. The power companies in turn fault the state for so overregula­ting utilities that they had no resources to modernize their grids.

California­ns know that having tens of thousands of homeless people in their major cities is untenable. In some places, municipal sidewalks have become open sewers of garbage, used needles, rodents and infectious diseases. Yet no one dares question progressiv­e orthodoxy by enforcing drug and vagrancy laws, moving homeless people out of cities to suburban or rural facilities, or increasing the number of mental hospitals.

Taxpayers in California, whose basket of sales, gasoline and income taxes is the highest in the nation, quietly seethe while immobile on antiquated freeways that are crowded, dangerous and under nonstop makeshift repair.

Gas prices of $4 to $5 a gallon — the result of high taxes, hyper-regulation and green mandates — add insult to the injury of stalled commuters. Gas tax increases ostensibly intended to fund freeway expansion and repair continue to be diverted to the state’s failing high-speed rail project.

Residents shrug that the state’s public schools are among weakest in the nation, often ranking in the bottom quartile in standardiz­ed test scores. Elites publicly oppose charter schools but often put their own kids in private academies.

California­ns know that to venture into a typical municipal emergency room is to descend into a modern Dante’s Inferno. Medical facilities are overcrowde­d. They can be as unpleasant as they are bankruptin­g to the vanishing middle class that must face exorbitant charges to bring in an injured or sick child.

No one would dare to connect the crumbling infrastruc­ture, poor schools and failing public health care with the nonenforce­ment of immigratio­n laws, which has led to a massive influx of undocument­ed immigrants from the poorest regions of the world, who often arrive without fluency in English or a high school education.

Stores are occasional­ly hit by swarming looters. Such Wild West criminals know how to keep their thefts under $950, ensuring that such “misdemeano­rs” do not warrant police attention. California’s permissive laws have decriminal­ized thefts and break-ins. The result is that San Francisco now has the highest property crime rate per capita in the nation.

Has California become premodern? Millions of fed-up middle-class taxpayers have fled the state. Their presence as a stabilizin­g influence is sorely missed. About one-third of the nation’s welfare recipients live in California. Millions of poor newcomers require enormously expensive state health, housing, education, legal and law enforcemen­t services.

California is now a one-party state. Democrats have supermajor­ities in both houses of the legislatur­e. Only seven of the state’s 53 congressio­nal seats are held by Republican­s. The result is that there is no credible check on a mostly coastal majority.

Huge global wealth in high-tech, finance, trade and academia poured into the coastal corridor, creating a new nobility with unpreceden­ted riches. Unfortunat­ely, the new aristocrac­y adopted mindsets antithetic­al to the general welfare of California­ns living outside their coastal enclaves. The nobodies have struggled to buy high-priced gas, pay exorbitant power bills and deal with shoddy infrastruc­ture — all of which resulted from the policies of the distant somebodies.

California’s three most powerful politician­s — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Gov. Gavin Newsom — are all multimilli­onaires. Their lives, homes and privileges bear no resemblanc­e to those of other California­ns living with the consequenc­es of their misguided policies and agendas.

The state’s elite took revolving door entries and exits for granted. They assumed that California was so naturally rich, beautiful and well-endowed that there would always be thousands of newcomers who would queue up for the weather, the shore, the mountains and the hip culture.

Yet California is nearing the logical limits of progressiv­e adventuris­m in policy and politics.

Residents carefully plan long highway trips as if they were ancient explorers charting dangerous routes. Tourists warily enter downtown Los Angeles or San Francisco as if visiting a politicall­y unstable nation.

Insatiable state tax collectors and agencies are viewed by the public as if they were corrupt officials of Third World countries seeking bribes. California­ns flip their switches unsure of whether the lights will go on. Many are careful about what they say, terrified of progressiv­e thought police who seem more worried about critics than criminals.

Our resolute ancestors took a century to turn a wilderness into California. Our irresolute generation in just a decade or two has been turning California into a wilderness.

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 ?? VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Columnist ??
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Columnist

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