Party on!
You can say that the illegals are gonna have some pretty nice schools to attend.
You can say that in addition to being "generous," L.A. voters are either stupid or too intellectually lazy to figure out what they're voting for. Sadly, most of the people who favor this crap don't own any tasable property and they're too stupid to realize they'll pay higher taxes anyhow via increased rents.
I think this has something to do with the "cargo cult" mentality that seems to permeate Latin economic thought.
The place is populated with illiterate lemmings who are allowed to vote. When the mayors of Pocatello and Chubbuck tried to foist a $40 million bond on the property tax payers, the citizens revolted. It was placed on he ballot and received no votes of 71% in one city and 83% in the other. The citizens refused to encumber their properties to pay for a facility that offered no value to their residential property. The only beneficiaries were the banks (construction loans), builders (big building contracts), hotels and restaurants (from a minor increase in visitors to events at the arena). A small number of school events are held in the facility. The school district (via tax payer money) already pays for these events.
The builders and bankers ran a well funded campaign that they tried to hide behind the name of some benevolent sounding community organization. The names of the backers were ferreted out and widely publicized. The citizens recognized the fleecing that was intended. They said no.
These local tax issues are pushed by an unholy alliance of big labor, rat politicians, and select big businesses. The businesses often receive no bid contracts. Big labor gets favorable treatment on work. Politicians get lots of campaign cash. Unfortunately there is little organized opposition to most local tax grabs. The unholy alliance is a key factor in rat takeover in previously conservative states like Colorado.
However, there may be some small hope in the battle against this unholy alliance. Colorado passed an amendment to restrict lobbying by business and labor groups that will benefit from tax proposals. This amendment passed despite $30M spent by labor to defeat it. Hopefully our leftist state supreme court will not overturn the will of the voters.
“No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public.” — H.L. Mencken
Getting more expensive to deliver those anchor babies, ain’t it!
(everything free in A-mer- ee-ka)
The tax is supposed to generate money to fix the roads but those of us who voted against it seriously doubt that. It will be grabbed for other liberal feel good programs the left always wants.