Why do Californians continue to vote for destructive
Democrats like Karen Bass, Gavin Newsom, and their political clones despite
their incompetence at basic duties like fighting fires and facilitating post-disaster
reconstruction? As Victor Davis Hanson
notes in devastating commentaries, the state has a third of the nation’s
welfare recipients, half its homeless, crumbling infrastructure, staggering
home and rent prices, massive social service expenditures for illegals, shocking
electricity rates, aging power lines that spark wildfires, and (until a voter
initiative last November reversed it) legalized looting. That’s a short list.
Recently the overwhelmingly Democrat state
legislature passed a bill that enabled a sixty-five cent increase in energy prices
based on the climate hysteria that infects the state’s coastal elites and journalists. That tax will doubtless fall primarily on gasoline
and other utilities. Predictably, a
group called California Environmental Voters Education Fund began running a
commercial for the state’s voters who sport an illiteracy rate near 25% among persons 15 and over. It blamed California’s high gas and
electricity prices on “dirty energy greed.”
It’s a slick 30-second spot that begins
with a printed warning: “Dirty energy companies are costing Californians” then
shows a lady sweating an electricity bill of $277. Next comes a gas pump reading
that spikes from $83 to $101. A final scene features oil company reps clapping happily
at Wall Street’s closing bell as superimposed profit figures rise from 166- to
over 200-billion dollars. A final plea
reads, “Don’t make Californians pay for dirty energy’s greed,” followed by the
website: “FightTheGreed.org.”
It’s
a message designed to appeal to semi-literates, stoners, Hollywood groupies,
and coastal elites who may know better but also know which party butters their
bread by providing a massive influx of illegal and H-1B labor. The spot isn’t meant for anyone sharp enough
to discuss California’s highest-in-the-nation 61 cent-per-gallon gas tax or to
ask why oil companies aren’t so greedy in other states, much less for anyone
who ponders the price to be paid for progressively eliminating California’s oil
production and refinery capacity.
You can be sure the Silicon Valley gang
will fund similar propaganda pieces for any legislation that threatens their
stranglehold on the 60/19 (House), 30/10 (Senate) Democrat majorities in
Sacramento. But you can also count on
local news programs to function as lapdogs for Democrat politicians. A Karen Bass press secretary could hardly
formulate more sympathetic and uncritical coverage for the mayor who partied in
Africa while her city burned, fired her DEI fire chief when the latter
criticized department budget cuts, and pretends that cleaning up rubble after seven
months constitutes lightning progress.
The same local news almost never identifies
criminal “migrants” as illegal, and needless to say, employs a consistent anti-ICE
narrative. ACLU lawyers are featured who
denounce the racist “targeting” and “kidnapping” of anyone who’s “brown.” And despite unavoidable coverage of the real
or attempted gunshot during ICE’s marijuana field raid last month, the news
slant was clear: “protestors” are defenders of “the community” and ICE is getting
what it deserves. Little or no mention is
made of the fact that the farm used hundreds of illegal aliens as laborers including,
according to government sources, fourteen
minors.
When I moved to the San Diego area in 1984,
Ronald Reagan was about to win the state’s presidential vote overwhelmingly (57%) and for the second time. Those POTUS
elections followed two terms served by The Gipper as governor (’67-’74). For sixteen straight years, from 1983 to 1998,
California had GOP Governors (Deukmejian and Wilson). Today no Republican has occupied any
statewide office since 2011 and, as noted above, Democrats possess
supermajorities in both state houses. So
what accounts for this radical shift? Primarily,
demographics.
In 2012 Ann Coulter noted that California’s non-Hispanic white
population over the prior half-century fell from 80% to half that number. By 2022 the percentage was pegged at 33.7%. Meanwhile the Latino population grew from less than 10% to over 40%, a
number that includes 2.6 million “undocumented immigrants” according to a 2022 estimate by Mayorkas’s
Department of Homeland Security—a figure
that doubtless grew over the final two years of Autopen’s open border.
So it wasn’t
necessary to change the minds of Californians.
Just change the population residing in the state and keep a large
percentage of them poor and uneducated—much like the pyramidal population of Mexico. The Democrat plan was to do the
same with Texas. So far that plan has
backfired as traditional Latinos along the Rio Grande rebelled against the
invasion that upended their lives via crime, drugs, and the sheer number of
strangers who ignored their property rights just like they ignored the American
border. Barring a catastrophe that makes
the L.A. fires look like a weenie roast or some dramatic and unexpected
political about-face by the state’s Latinos, it’s likely the poor,
ill-informed, 27% foreign-born population of California will continue
voting to Make California Mexico Again.
Richard Kirk is a freelance writer living in
Southern California whose book Moral Illiteracy:
"Who's to Say?" is also available
on Kindle
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