#1
DOJ is corrupt and in the tank for anyone who is a friend of Obumble(FOO). If Hillary is still a FOO, nothing will happen. The other possibility is Hillary have something on Obama. These fokkers play hard ball with each other too.
#2
Maybe we will get lucky and their Climate Change/GW god will cause California to slide into the ocean. At least the shrill and carping voices would stop.
#3
Give Frank G and a few others that hang about here some fair warning before that occurs, JohnQC.
Posted by: Mullah Richard ||
04/02/2015 9:14 Comments ||
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#4
When the Spanish got to Alto California, they didn't find a whole lot of natives as they had in Mexico/Central America. The reason was because it was a desert. When the US absorb the southwest, there were only around 10,000 Hispanics divided largely between settlements glued to the west coast and the Rio Grand River valley. The reason was because the place was a desert. The nature of the land was that it wasn't intended to support tens if not hundreds of millions of human beings. It was in the latter portion of the 20th Century that man made constructs of canals, damns, viaducts made the otherwise desert bloom. The same people who for decades now who believed in the magic money tree have also acted as though the endless spring existed someplace. Don't tell me the 'Tragedy of the Commons' doesn't exist and play out time and time again.
#5
Maybe we will get lucky and their Climate Change/GW god will cause California to slide into the ocean. At least the shrill and carping voices would stop.
And the Democratic Patrty would lose a lot of Grand Electors for the Presidential elections.
#7
P2K has it right. This is a desert. Watch the movie Chinatown next time you have a chance. It's all about greed and corruption. They can blame it on global warming or climate change or drought or whatever they want but it's all bullshit. The politicians know, or should now, that there is a number out there somewhere of the number of people who can live here without having to drink from their toilets. Now it seems that we are getting close to that number. We cannot keep bringing people into this state without significant negative impacts to the quality of life for those of us who already live here. But they are still building vast housing tracts that will consume more water. The reason for this is greed and corruption. Developers make vast fortunes and that money corrupts the politicians. These same politicians have overloaded our schools, hospitals and freeways. Now they have overloaded our water resources. It's been a long time since I've been to Tijuana but IIRC from the times I have the streets are all dusty and there are no lawns, just dry dirt. The cars all look like they need to be washed. That's Moonbeam's vision for California.
Frank G will probably tell you that he is a California native but of our generation he is one of the very few. People came to this state from all across the rest of the country. You can talk all you want about how looney we are but we are you and you are us. Then there are the people who came to this state illegally from, well, you know where they came from. That's a problem for all of us because the US government is responsible for immigration both legal and illegal. You must share the blame for that.
I'll let LATIMES columnist George Skelton tell you about the farmers.
Oh, by the way, sorry to tell this to all of you folks from the rest of the country but we won't be falling into the ocean any time soon. When the tectonic plate shifts the Rocky Mountains will get higher and California will shift to the east. We'll actually get closer to you! And, hey, if we don't have water to drink we'll probably have to move to other states that do...places like New York and New Jersey which is where a lot of us came from in the first place.
Posted by: Abu Uluque ||
04/02/2015 11:53 Comments ||
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#8
yep - native San Diegan
Posted by: Frank G ||
04/02/2015 11:57 Comments ||
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#9
From Abu's Farmers link - In one area of the San Joaquin Valley, Boxall reported, the "land has been sinking at the staggering rate of a foot a year." And the groundwater table has plunged 150 feet in the last 15 years
Now, if someone could tie that to global warming, instead of making cheap vegetables for the other 300 million of us, they'd be on to something.
Posted by: Bobby ||
04/02/2015 13:19 Comments ||
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#10
Sorry Frank G. and other Rantburgers who might have the misfortune to live in California. It has many beautiful places and still has a few sane people (maybe coniderably more than a few). Can't figure out why people rail about Climate Change/GW and yet live in a paradise albeit a desert. I lived there for a short time--before it seemed to go off the rails in politics and cultural departures.
#11
Native Californian (Grandfather worked for the Giants and dragged the family out from NY when the Giants moved to SF).
Carlsbad is building a desalinization plant. There is no reason we couldn't build more up and down the coast with nuclear plants or fracking oil to power them... Oh, there is a reason, or at least people, who would stop such a plan.
Gov Brown doesn't stop new building in his plan does he? Funny that.
#12
Also - native Californian. Born there and raised in SoCal, to parents also born and raised there, although the grandparents came from other places. It was a nice place, so my parents always said, when it was rural and mostly farms and orchards. And yes - a desert, with occasional temporary rivers and springs. It wasn't made to support huge numbers of people - just wasn't. The aqueduct built to supply LA in the 1920s or so absolutely ruined the farming districts, once water was diverted. The whole state was built on a careful program of diverting water where there was plenty of it to areas which had none.
One of my favorite (but sad) memories is of my father driving the whole family from the San Fernando Valley to Oxnard/Camarillo, and passing all the citrus orchards. Mile upon mile of them, like roofless rooms, with walls of eucalyptus trees to make a windbreak/shelter. And slowly, over the months and years, the orchards were destroyed, and made into housing developments. Which probably used more water than the agriculture that they replaced.
#14
Been here 40 years around deployments and watched it turn slowly from a paradise to a third world mess in many places, and governance by fools. Sadly looking to leave because it has past the tipping point and will only accelerate towards Guatemala-like conditions in larger and larger parts of the central valley and urban cores.
#4
"Maryland has the highest median household income in America...."
All because of public sector employment, lobbyists, lawyers, bureaucrats, and regulators in the counties surrounding DC. Funded by tax money, not productivity.
In other words, not real, productive work. Rather, money stolen from the heartland to create highly paid jobs that produce no wealth or real-world value.
The Dem vision for America. A wealthy, sustainable economy consisting of everyone filling out forms for everyone else. Pfffft.
I'll pass on O'Malley and that vision for America.
Posted by: no mo uro ||
04/02/2015 5:42 Comments ||
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#5
I live in Maryland. Each time he was elected I told people hold onto your wallets. Then each time he was elected up went the taxes. He had a surplus when he came into office and a deficit when he left. Tax and spend. More of the same. DC will love the guy. Party time.
[Kanuk Free Press] According to an Associated Press report, the Iranian nuke negotiations have engendered an agreement--to continue taking in hopes of reaching a final agreement by the end of June. As an unnamed senior U.S. official put it, talks between Iran and the P5+1 powers (the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia plus Germany) would continue past yesterday's deadline for the outline of an agreement if enough progress was made to justify that extension. By late yesterday that contention was confirmed: talks will continue through today.
As talks wound down in Lausanne, Switzerland, the words "framework agreement' had been softened to "framework of understanding" reflecting the reality that major issues remain unresolved. They include differences regarding the allowable scope of Iran's uranium enrichment program, where stockpiles of enriched uranium should be located, what limits on Iran's nuclear research and development should be imposed, and the timing and range of sanctions relief that would be granted in return.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.