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16 Reasons Not To Live In California
TEC ^ | 03/12/2017 | Michael Snyder

Posted on 03/12/2017 8:23:01 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Authored by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,

It has been said that “as California goes, so goes the nation”.  That is why it is such a shame what is happening to that once great state.  At one time, California seemed to be the epicenter of the American Dream.  Featuring some of the most beautiful natural landscapes in the entire world, the gorgeous weather and booming economy of the state inspired people from all over the world to move to the state.  But now people are moving out of the state by the millions, because life in California has literally become a nightmare for so many people.

I certainly don’t have anything against the state personally.  My brother and sister were both born there, and I spent a number of my childhood years in stunning northern California.  When I was younger I would sometimes dream of getting a place on the coast eventually, but for reasons I will discuss below I no longer think that would be advisable.

In fact, if I was living in California today I would be immediately looking for a way to move out of the state unless I specifically felt called to stay.  The following are 16 reasons why you shouldn’t live in California…

#1 The entire California coastline is part of the “Ring of Fire” seismic zone that roughly encircles the Pacific Ocean.  The San Andreas Fault has been described as a “time bomb“, and at some point there will be a catastrophic earthquake that absolutely devastates the entire region.  In fact, a study that was just released says that a “major earthquake” on the San Andreas Fault “is way overdue”

A recently published study reveals new evidence that a major earthquake is way overdue on a 100 mile stretch of the San Andreas Fault from the Antelope Valley to the Tejon Pass and beyond.

 

Researchers with the U.S. Geological Survey released the results of the years-long study warning a major earthquake could strike soon.

#2 Out of all 50 states, the state of California has been ranked as the worst state for business for 12 years in a row

In what is sounding like a broken record, California once again ranked dead last in Chief Executive magazine’s annual Best and Worst States for Business survey of CEOs – as it has all 12 years the survey has been conducted. Texas, meanwhile, earned the top spot for the 12th straight year.

 

Among the survey’s subcategories, the 513 CEOs from across the nation ranked California 50th in taxation and regulation, 35th in workforce quality and 26th in living environment, which includes cost of living, the education system and state and local attitudes toward business. Notably, California placed worst among the nine states in the Western region in all three categories.

#3 California has the highest state income tax rates in the entire nation.  For many Americans, the difference between what you would have to pay if you lived in California and what you would have to pay if you lived in Texas could literally buy a car every single year.

#4 The state government in Sacramento seems to go a little bit more insane with each passing session.  This time around, they are talking about going to a single-payer healthcare system for the entire state that would cost California taxpayers 40 billion dollars a year

On Friday, State Senator Ricardo Lara introduced legislation that would transition California’s healthcare into a single-payer system. (RELATED: Read what a retired colonel said about the real purpose of Obamacare). The system would be very similar to the healthcare system currently in place in Canada and would cost California taxpayers roughly $40 billion for the first year alone. Given the poor economic climate California has already created for itself, this will no doubt be just one more burden on the people of California, and one step closer towards total bankruptcy.

 

Micah Weinberg, the president of the Economic Institute at the Bay Area Council, raised concerns over the financial consequences of the proposed legislation. “Where are they going to come up with the $40 billion?” he asked. He went on to suggest that adopting a state level single-payer system is “just not feasible to do as a state.”

#5 The traffic in the major cities just keeps getting worse and worse.  According to USA Today, Los Angeles now has the worst traffic in the entire world, and San Francisco is not far behind.

#6 A lot of money is being made in Silicon Valley these days (at least for now), but poverty is also exploding in the state.  In desperation, homeless people are banding together to create large tent cities all over the state, and the L.A. City Council recently asked Governor Jerry Brown “to declare homelessness a statewide emergency“.

#7 Thanks to unchecked illegal immigration, crime is on the rise in many California cities.  The drug war that has been raging for years in Mexico is increasingly spilling over the border, and many families have moved out of the state for this reason alone.

#8 California is one of the most litigious states in the entire nation.  According to the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform, the “lawsuit climate” in California is ranked 47th out of all 50 states.

#9 Every year wildfires and mudslides wreak havoc in the state.  Erosion is particularly bad along the coast, and I have previously written about how some portions of the California coastline are literally falling into the ocean.

#10 California has some of the most ridiculous housing prices in the entire country.  Due to a lack of affordable housing rents have soared to wild extremes in San Francisco, where one poor engineer was actually paying $1,400 a month to live in a closet.

#11 All over the state, key infrastructure is literally falling to pieces.  Governor Jerry Brown recently issued a list of key projects that needed to be done as soon as possible, and the total price tag for that list was 100 billion dollars.  Of course that list didn’t even include the Oroville Dam, and we all saw what happened there.

#12 Radiation from the ongoing Fukushima nuclear disaster continues to cross the ocean and wash up along the California coastline.  The impact of this crisis on the health of those living along the west coast could potentially be felt for generations.

#13 Illegal drug use in the state is on the rise again, and emergency rooms are being flooded by heroin overdose victims.

#14 On top of everything else, it is being reported that Russia is “quietly ‘seeding’ the U.S. shoreline with nuclear ‘mole’ missiles”.  The following comes from retired colonel and former Russian defense ministry spokesman Viktor Baranetz

“What are these mysterious ‘asymmetrical responses’ that our politicians and generals speak about so often? Maybe it’s a myth or a pretty turn of phrase? No! Our asymmetrical response is nuclear warheads that can modify their course and height so that no computer can calculate their trajectory. Or, for example, the Americans are deploying their tanks, airplanes and special forces battalions along the Russian border. And we are quietly ‘seeding’ the U.S. shoreline with nuclear ‘mole’ missiles (they dig themselves in and ‘sleep’ until they are given the command)[…]

 

“Oh, it seems I’ve said too much. I should hold my tongue.”

Hopefully what Baranetz is claiming is not accurate, because if it is even partly true the implications are absolutely staggering.

#15 North Korea is a major nuclear threat as well.  It is being reported that the North Koreans are developing an ICBM that could potentially reach the west coast of the United States…

Defense officials have warned that North Korea is on the brink of producing an ICBM that could target the United States. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un announced in January during his New Year’s address that Pyongyang had “entered the final stage of preparations to test-launch” an ICBM that could reach parts of the United States.

#16 Someday a very large earthquake will produce a major tsunami on the west coast.  According to the Los Angeles Times, one study found that a magnitude 9.0 earthquake along the Cascadia fault could potentially produce a massive tsunami that would “wash away coastal towns”…

If a 9.0 earthquake were to strike along California’s sparsely populated North Coast, it would have a catastrophic ripple effect.

 

A giant tsunami created by the quake would wash away coastal towns, destroy U.S. 101 and cause $70 billion in damage over a large swath of the Pacific coast. More than 100 bridges would be lost, power lines toppled and coastal towns isolated. Residents would have as few as 15 minutes notice to flee to higher ground, and as many as 10,000 would perish.

 

Scientists last year published this grim scenario for a massive rupture along the Cascadia fault system, which runs 700 miles off shore from Northern California to Vancouver Island.

Over the past decade, approximately five million people have moved away from California.

After reading this article, perhaps you have a better understanding why so many people are getting out while they still can.

Once again, I don’t have anything against California or the people that live there.  It is such a beautiful place, and it once held so much promise.

Unfortunately that promise has been shattered, and there is a mass exodus out of the state as families flee the horrific nightmare that California is in the process of becoming.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Society
KEYWORDS: california
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To: SeekAndFind

Only 16?


41 posted on 03/12/2017 11:26:55 PM PDT by Disambiguator (Keepin' it analog.)
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To: gubamyster

Completely agree. I’m in Santa Barbara and live in complete and utter perpetual heaven. Reagan Ranch Center is up here. So although I don’t attend as many events as I’d like, I do give money and they have some great conservative connections here.


42 posted on 03/12/2017 11:28:33 PM PDT by GOP Poet
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To: SeekAndFind

Lots of good points. However, the author jumps the shark
with #15. If the NORKS launch nukes on California they
would be committing suicide. The US would make toast
of them, China be damned. And, this would be just as
true if California had seceded from the US by the time
of the North Korean attack. The ‘nation of California’
would, at the least, be just as important to the US
as either Australia or Japan.


43 posted on 03/12/2017 11:30:31 PM PDT by Sivad (The Federalist #46)
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To: Jyotishi

“Better than Hawaii?”

Oh there’s no comparison. In Hawaii, for much of the year it can be miserable because of the humidity. If the trades stop, it’s awful. You are sweating most of the time, even small things like doing housework can leave you drenched. Ninety degrees in Hawaii is like 110 degrees in California because of the humidity. A lot of the time, the weather is such where it will rain 10 or 15 minutes then the sun will come out, then it will rain, then the sun, etc. It turns the air into a sauna.

Then in the winter it’s cooler, but because of the humidity you start seeing mold and mildew growing on your walls and other places. The heat, rain and humidity take a huge toll on your house, as well as the roads which are something out of a third-world country with all the holes, cracks and bumps.

And did I mention the vog? If the tradewinds stop, within a day the state is not only a sauna, it is covered with ugly brown volcanic haze which gets worse and worse the longer the winds don’t blow, and which leaves most people coughing and sneezing, with itchy or teary eyes. It’s worse than L.A. used to be on a bad day.

I’ve lived in either Hawaii or California my whole life, and I would take California weather in a heartbeat. That being said, even though Hawaii suffers with a lot of the same problems as California (and the homeless situation is unbelievable), I don’t think it is as messed up as California is now. California once was doing a lot better than Hawaii, but once Pete Wilson left office it’s been straight downhill ever since.


44 posted on 03/12/2017 11:44:03 PM PDT by kaehurowing
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To: SeekAndFind

California of the Dark Ages
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3391415/posts


45 posted on 03/12/2017 11:56:59 PM PDT by Mozilla (Truth Is Stranger than Fiction.)
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To: GOP Poet
I’m in Santa Barbara and live in complete and utter perpetual heaven.

Yes, Santa Barbara is also a wonderful area. I really like it up there. Sounds like you are quite content.

46 posted on 03/12/2017 11:57:12 PM PDT by gubamyster
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To: SeekAndFind

21st Century California Reverts Back to the Wild West
https://pjmedia.com/victordavishanson/california-21st-century-wild-west/


47 posted on 03/13/2017 12:09:30 AM PDT by Mozilla (Truth Is Stranger than Fiction.)
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To: gubamyster; All
Yup, incredible terrain, beautiful weather, one day you can be skiing up north in Tahoe or in the surf down south..

 photo IMG_1035_zpsczccmpi1.jpg

 photo IMG_0957_zpsk9wk87fo.jpg it's a shame Sacramento, San Francisco and LA politics have made it what it's become.

.

Gotta love Big Sur!

 photo IMG_0962_zpstx0lfuvm.jpg

48 posted on 03/13/2017 12:20:09 AM PDT by Cobra64 (Common sense isn't common any more.)
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To: gubamyster

I had to spend 6 months TDY, May-Oct, in SoCal while working on a DoD contract for my company in early ‘80s.

Weather was hot and miserable every day; no change until late in the evening when it got cool and everyone hit the heated Jacuzzi pool in the courtyard at our motel about 10-11pm, after spending a few hours at the bars. Breakfast for us at outdoor restaurant tables had space heaters every few feet. ...Having to wear suits and ties in the daytime was miserable.

I’ll take DFW area weather over that, even though the Northers that blow in do make it cold for a spell.


49 posted on 03/13/2017 12:24:21 AM PDT by octex
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To: SeekAndFind

Dreaming of life without the GOP? Welcome to California - where things are far from perfect
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3531145/posts


50 posted on 03/13/2017 12:28:30 AM PDT by Mozilla (Truth Is Stranger than Fiction.)
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To: SeekAndFind

There are some nice islands of good neighborhoods in Cali and if one can live in one of those, handle the extreme cost of living, the Marxist political climate that’s only getting worse, and handle the Hispanic invasion even if your island neighborhood is relatively unaffected then it’s probably a pretty good place to live.

I like to say I like it geographically but politically and demographically it sucks. It has always been expensive to rent or buy a house there but it’s ridiculous now unless you own a home outright or bought it when the prices were comparatively low and so is the payment and property tax.

The traffic and how people drive there is equally insane. I used to like to go back and visit friends and family but I don’t even do that anymore. Of all places I feel a need to be armed; it’s CA. I may lose but at least I’d take a few down with me.


51 posted on 03/13/2017 12:28:36 AM PDT by Boomer (The modern day leftist dems are the party of criminally insane propagandists.)
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To: Dilbert San Diego

It all depends on your criteria for judging.
********************************************
Good posting of common sense, Dil.


52 posted on 03/13/2017 12:56:12 AM PDT by octex
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To: octex

I’ll take So. Cal summer weather over DFW scorchers. Although it does rain in summer just a little bit vs zilch in So. Cal.


53 posted on 03/13/2017 3:25:05 AM PDT by tflabo (Truth or tyranny (agent Able Deplor))
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To: bigbob

“They paved Paradise and put up a parking lot”

It’s all Detroit’s fault.


54 posted on 03/13/2017 4:20:13 AM PDT by equaviator (There's nothing like the universe to bring you down to earth.)
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To: Mark17

Save me a spot in Arizona!


55 posted on 03/13/2017 4:22:36 AM PDT by Big Red Badger (UNSCANABLE in an IDIOCRACY!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Okay I see your 16 reasons and raise you 2.4 million reasons and on top of that add 7.9 million more reasons for a total raise of 10.3 million reasons of why not to live in Californ-I-A.


56 posted on 03/13/2017 4:35:54 AM PDT by zaxtres
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To: SeekAndFind

Saw it too.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1377367/posts


57 posted on 03/13/2017 6:14:03 AM PDT by Allen In Texas Hill Country
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To: octex

While in college, I spent 2 summers with my sister in Dallas. It was a nice & had a lot of fun, but very hot & humid. You go from an air conditioned house to your air conditioned car, to your air conditioned destination. Used to play golf with a friend and many times the club would fly out of my hand because it was so sweaty.

I lived in Houston for a year, and it was even more humid than Dallas.

I have lived in my house in Huntington Beach for 20 years and have never turned on the A/C or heater. For a few weeks during the summer we use the overhead fans.

I wear shorts & t-shirts pretty much 365 days a year. I put a sweatshirt in my car & put it on as necessary, but that is about all.


58 posted on 03/13/2017 7:08:22 AM PDT by gubamyster
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To: Cobra64

If you can get past the crazy politicians, it is a beautiful state & those pictures show it.


59 posted on 03/13/2017 7:18:46 AM PDT by gubamyster
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To: octex

thank you.

I appreciate what people are saying. California does have some serious problems. But I question whether it is all bad enough to pick up and move, when some other place you could move to will also have issues.


60 posted on 03/13/2017 7:36:10 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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