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County suffers rare population exodus (San Diego County)
Sign On San Diego ^ | 3/17/06 | Lori Weisberg

Posted on 03/17/2006 5:07:37 PM PST by BurbankKarl

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To: q_an_a

Not if San Diego gets an even larger increase in immigration before the next Census.


21 posted on 03/17/2006 6:42:21 PM PST by clawrence3
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To: BurbankKarl
Something is very wrong with the census data.

They did not stop building homes in San Diegeo County. Houses did not disappear in San Diego County. Mexicans did not stop pouring into San Diego County. Birth rates are not down in San Diego County.

Something is wrong with the census data. You can take that to the bank!

22 posted on 03/17/2006 6:44:12 PM PST by Amerigomag
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To: BurbankKarl

This is not too surprising. A 30 year old 3 bedroom house costs well over half a million in San Diego. People who tend to have more children and therefore would like a bigger house, are the ones moving. I'll be moving later this year from Cali, almost solely to acquire a mansion with no mortgage. :^)


23 posted on 03/17/2006 6:50:27 PM PST by TheDon (The Democratic Party is the party of TREASON!)
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To: gondramB
That is what is supposed to happen when prices for a commodity get too high - people substitute and that lowers demand somewhat... if the government doesn't jump in to screw it up.

Don't you think the government has already been screwing with the housing market for decades?

24 posted on 03/17/2006 7:00:05 PM PST by Moonman62 (Federal creed: If it moves tax it. If it keeps moving regulate it. If it stops moving subsidize it)
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To: Czar

Four more months and I'm outta here.


25 posted on 03/17/2006 7:03:40 PM PST by Travis McGee
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To: Travis McGee
If I can convince Mrs. Lurkin - - - if - - - we'll be escaping in 2008 or thereabouts.
26 posted on 03/17/2006 7:08:08 PM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: BurbankKarl

That explains why my parents housein Palm Springs has gone up $135,000 since 2004


27 posted on 03/17/2006 7:10:32 PM PST by cmsgop ( I love Scotch. Scotchy, scotch, scotch)
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To: BenLurkin

I'm heading to NE Florida.


28 posted on 03/17/2006 7:18:56 PM PST by Travis McGee (--- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com ---)
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To: rockabyebaby

"LOL! Massachusetts has experienced a drop in population, seems many many people are exiting this State, can't imagine why, "

New Jersey too along with other NE areas. Its dieing - businesses and populations are moving out of the Land of Taxes!


29 posted on 03/17/2006 7:27:41 PM PST by spanalot
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To: clawrence3

You are correct. House prices are a small part of that decrease - after all, when somebody leaves the house, doesn't somebody else move in?

It is illegal immigration and Southern California's slow drift into Third World status that is driving everyone out.

But don't get too smug in the rest of America - those illegals are coming your way too.

Tienes que apprender espanol.


30 posted on 03/17/2006 8:12:15 PM PST by oldbill
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To: oldbill

Many houses remain vacant will being listed for sale, or for other reasons.

Ya sé español : )


31 posted on 03/17/2006 8:29:07 PM PST by clawrence3
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To: BurbankKarl

Most of the number listed as leaving San Diego still work here family here, etc.
Many of that number moved across the border to Riverside Co. as homes are cheaper. They don't consider the gas in the commute.
Some people have to live in 5 bdrm homes and big yard.
If that is what they want, they can't take it with them.

As far as the city gov. We just elected a Republican Mayor and his core group are cleaning house.
Most folks dis. the city gov. and don't know what it is really about also for a lot of folks who dis the city, that usually come from if you can't have it, dis it.


32 posted on 03/17/2006 8:46:03 PM PST by SoCalPol (Hillary kvetching is like Jack the Ripper moralizing to my neuro surgeon)
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To: SoCalPol

I used to make a 110 mile commute daily and "considered" the price of gas ALL THE TIME!!!


33 posted on 03/17/2006 9:01:40 PM PST by clawrence3
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To: dalereed

I was just going to say...being a county on the border I can guess why many of them are moving. Increased taxes, decreased services, lowering of wages and benefits all due to...did you say illegals? Bingo


34 posted on 03/17/2006 9:08:01 PM PST by Tammy8 (Build a Real Border Fence, and enforce Immigration Laws!!!)
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To: BurbankKarl
Considering:
  1. The maximum effort made to count illegal alien's into the census stats
  2. The exodus and shuttering of large businesses all over SD County, leaving CA for other states and offshore.

... the count of net taxpayers leaving versus net government dependents arriving, is probably even more stark.

Have been waiting for my kids to graduate from High School this year before we pulled the plug, but I may be too late (re: SD Real Estate market approaching "free fall"). Another life-long Kalifornian ready to leave the land of Gray Davis - oops the Govinator (is there a difference??) for anywhere else.

With the "tax and debt" spending policies of the Democrat controlled state in high gear, I expect that there'll be a major move to revoke Prop. 13 within five years. While many say it will never happen, I contend that when many in the generation now aged 20's and 30's figure out that they're paying property taxes (plus mandated HOA fees) 4-5 times higher than their Baby-boomer and post-Baby boomer neighbors, it'll be real easy to develop a majority to "balance the tax load". When 3% property taxes hit the current price of CA Real Estate (or the CA sales tax hits 15%) to pay for the debt that Arnold and his Legislative company are now creating, property values will crater in CA.

SFS

35 posted on 03/17/2006 9:32:05 PM PST by Steel and Fire and Stone
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To: oldbill
But don't get too smug in the rest of America - those illegals are coming your way too.

==============================================================================

.. and who cares, anyway, right?

Let me give you a practical case of WHY folks in "God's Country" (ya know, the red states?) need to be concerned about Mexico's "operation reconquistador", coming soon to every state in the union.

My daughter just spent two weeks in the hospital, and is still home in her second week of convalescence. Reason: Burst appendix.

Now, this was a complicated case. Diagnosis WAS difficult. I probably DID make a mistake of not taking her directly into the local ER (i.e. called her physician, typical symptom's of appendicitis did not "present", waited 4-5 more hours, took her to urgent care, they referred to ER, and etc.).

We arrived at ER on a Sunday, at about 2:30 PM. She was on the operating table at 11:00 PM. Why the delay?

Lots of reasons, but as must on the Western US realize, the local ER has become the "primary care" physician for illegal aliens. They cannot refuse service. There is no government agency to fund the care they provide, including expensive, long-term care (Medicare/medicaid sometimes applies). The bottom line is that ANY time we need to go to an ER, we can expect a 8 to 12 hour wait unless "life threatening systems" present. My daughter was in pain for over 24 hours with appendicitis, and spent the last 8 hours waiting for access to a physician and tests in ER, and her necrotic appendix burst. Three days after the first surgery, internal abscesses (infections) developed, and she had a second operation to clean up after the first. For the next nine days, she endured symptoms from nausea and discomfort to desperate pain. The nursing care was atrocious. And as I said, she's still home, now with a post-hospital virus (flu) because she lost so much weight and her immune system is so worn down from heavy doses of antibiotics.

Most of the battle was lost while my daughter waited in ER. However, the lack of treatment in ER and subsequent mistreatment by nursing was caused, in my opinion, by an understaffed and under funded hospital. Another example: When the surgeon briefed me after her first surgery, I was sitting next to three Hispanic folks from Mexico, who were waiting on a brother (I believe - my Spanish is weak). He was treated in Mexico a month before due to a leg injury, insufficient antibiotics were prescribed (or if prescribed, not taken), and after he migrated to North San Diego County, he developed severe symptoms of gangrene. The physician said he almost lost his life, had extensive surgery on his leg, but would probably not lose it. And of course, there would be months of hospital rehabilitation. My insurance paid over $150,000 for my daughter's care (we haven't seen all the bills yet, but yeah, $150K so far for appendicitis). That's probably $125K higher than it should have been with prompt, proper treatment, and of course, this will be absorbed by the insurance company and then charged back to the insured through higher premiums. But the Mexican gentleman's care? Will his country pick up the tab (i.e. the same country which sues American ranchers off their property in behalf of illegal, invading immigrants)? No, our local hospital just took another $1 million+ hit, which of course, will impact hopital and ER staffing.

I care very deeply about the poor, and the poor on the other side of the border. I NEVER look at illegal-alien-Mexican's wandering our streets with disdain or hate. But I'm also realistic about the cost; I only have to look in my daughter's bedroom to see it first hand.

I probably should have started a "vanity" thread to discuss this stuff, but ....

.. it's also a reason I'm getting to h*ll out of California.

SFS

36 posted on 03/17/2006 9:54:43 PM PST by Steel and Fire and Stone
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To: Amerigomag
Something is very wrong with the census data.

They did not stop building homes in San Diego County. Houses did not disappear in San Diego County. Mexicans did not stop pouring into San Diego County. Birth rates are not down in San Diego County.

Something is wrong with the census data. You can take that to the bank!

Something is definitely wrong with their counting. With such an exodus, housing prices ought to have dropped and those new housing units should have had to be auctioned off or offered for attractive leases; these did not happen. Supermarkets and other stores should have been closing, which I haven't noticed. Traffic didn't get any better, either.

37 posted on 03/17/2006 11:58:35 PM PST by heleny
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To: BurbankKarl
I'm surprised more people aren't moving to the Shasta Mountain region in North Central California. I vacationed there once: it's a beautiful area.
38 posted on 03/18/2006 1:24:41 PM PST by A Jovial Cad ("If you kill enough of them, they stop fighting." -General Curtis LeMay)
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To: Steel and Fire and Stone

This may be a little off topic, but may portend the future. In Mexico property seizure of Americans who had bought Mexican real estate was a major news topic in the 90's. Americans who had leased land there to retire had their property seized after they had made extensive property improvements, such as homes, etc.

Given the large Mexican illegal immigrant population, clamoring for the same rights as Americans in the Southwest, it would not be at all surprising if the property seizure process continued stateside for "non-Mexicans" sometime in the future if things continue as they are. The reason, of course, is the stated objective of many of them, which is a reconquest of the Southwest. If you really get to know these people, they are keeping to themselves, unlike other generations of immigrants, because liberal politically correct policies are not encouraging assimilation. They are not adopting English as their primary language, on balance, and they are not socializing with other Americans, as they had in the past. This says volumes about their private thoughts on the "reconquista" issue.

Of course, the U. S. Government's position on illegal immigration is that they are doing work "that Americans won't do". This all has the smell of a very sinister conspiracy on the sovereignty of the country and property rights of legal American citizens by the Administration and the U. S. Supreme Court when combined with the illegal immigration issue. I refer you to the recent U. S. Supreme Court decision affirming the right to use eminent domain to seize private property, then pass it on to a private developer, ostensibly because doing so would revitalize the area, thus increasing tax receipts.

If you look at Mexican law on the issue of property rights you will find that only under certain circumstances can foreigners own property in Mexico. Furthermore, having traveled in Mexico, I'm aware of how those who work for the Mexican government have been able to obtain property not available to foreigners, or even their own citizenry, because of the special advantages they have for working within the government when it comes to acquiring real estate.

http://www.ricardobarraza.com/legal.html

We Americans are inviting the same sort of corrupt practices in our own country if this issue is not resolved.

In my view the best way to do this is through the employment verification process, which, by the way, is vociferously being fought by immigrant rights groups because they know this is a solution that would work. It would be self funding through employer fines levied at amounts that would discourage future violations. It could be done humanely by forcing employers to pay the illegal aliens in their employ the going wage for their work. The aliens could have deducted from this the U. S. Government's deportation costs before they receive their net pay.


39 posted on 03/18/2006 4:27:06 PM PST by A Ruminor
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To: clawrence3
So I guess your willing to cede control to the Dems for the next 50+ years in exchange for more mexicans in the country. Youre very loyal to your country.
40 posted on 03/18/2006 7:32:15 PM PST by mthom
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