http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x5689099Oh my.
napi21 (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:13 AM
Original message
I see that only ONE of Arnold's proposals passed in last night's Special Election in California. Sp what happens now? I don't know a lot about what's going on in Ca. but I got the impression from the talking heads that the State was in really deep "Sh**" if these proposals failed.
Well, I'm hoping it means Doug's ex-wife's own state representative has to give up her taxpayer-paid-and-maintained luxury vehicle.
That blew my mind, when I learned of it.
In California, mere state representatives, the bottom rung of the legislative ladder, get taxpayer-paid-and-maintained luxury vehicles for their personal use.
State representatives; barely above the status of janitors.
Geezuz.
Gormy Cuss (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:17 AM
Response to Original message
1. The state's in deep trouble anyway.
Had Arnold's proposals passed the budget deficit would have dropped by about one quarter, but either way it's a serious deficit -- 21 billion without the Props,and 15 billion dollars had they passed.
pnutbutr (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:21 AM
Response to Original message
2. repost of my post in another thread on this
Californians shooting themselves in the foot
We won't pay any more in taxes to reduce the $21.3 billion deficit but go ahead and cut hundreds and even thousands of firefighters which we rely on every year to put out our wild fires and save our lives. Lets cut the police who deal with the violent gangs and dangerous drugs like crack and heroin which always go up during recessions and hard economic times. Lets cut access to healthcare despite the healthcare crisis the entire nation is feeling right now. Lets cut the school budget despite it being severely underfunded already. Lets just make our state the shittiest in the nation even below ****ing Texas.
WTF is wrong with Californians?
What's wrong with Californians is that they don't like high taxes that provide them little, if any, governmental goods and services.
That's all there is to it.
lunatica (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:27 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. Hey, no cuts are necessary if Ahrnuld stops the tax cuts to the wealthy Republicans
Californians are tired of bailing the state government out while the wealthy get tax cuts. It's that simple. We're tired of the partisan politics and the fact that our legislators refuse to try to work together to fix the problems and then just put the false fix on the people.
Both our feet are already shot. You want us to do it again? Every time we've bailed the non bi-partisan legislature out we've shot ourselves in the foot. No more.
Remember, where California goes so goes the nation. This is the people saying it's enough. Force the legislators to stop expecting the citizens to bail them out while they do nothing to put yet another temporary fix on the problems with more bailouts. Ahrnuld always borrows like this and promises to pay it back to the state coffers and then when the time comes he says he actually needs more and can't pay anything back. He loves to take it to the people while begging for bailouts. It's just not working anymore. It's happened too many times and nothing ever gets fixed. Things actually get worse.
Isn't Bags Streisand one of those wealthy Californians?
pnutbutr (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:39 AM
Response to Reply #4
6. gotta ask
for a link to tax cuts for wealthy republicans. The proposals that got voted down would have been temporary tax increases on all Californians.
Luminous Animal (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 11:11 AM
Response to Reply #6
15. In 1996 the 2 top tax brackets were eliminated. Now someone making $40,000 a year is in the same bracket as someone making $4 million a year.
In California the bottom 20% pay 12% of their income in sales & income taxes. The top pay 7% of their income in sales & income taxes.
Just curious here.
Who was governor of California in 1996?
Which political party controlled the California legislature in 1996?
cabluedem (743 posts) Wed May-20-09 10:42 AM
Response to Reply #2
7. Firefighters: YES. police: No. We already pay them too much to collect fines from motorists to pad ....the coffers of their counties. They waste a lot of fuel with all the needless patroling by car when they could be walking the beat and become part of the community again, not strangers. The cops in my county are getting brand new patrol cars as I write this. Its cheaper to run their three year old cars another three years like the rest of us do. Phooey on that needlass expenditure.
ComtesseDeSpair (447 posts) Wed May-20-09 10:51 AM
Response to Reply #2
8. The Public Has Too Much Power There...which may sound backwards, after all isn't that democracy? But any state that makes it possible to amend the state constitution with a simple majority vote, that allows tax increases to be decided by popular vote, that makes it easy to recall their governor, that sets term limits on their representatives so that the committees are constantly being run by novices etc. is setting themselves up for failure.
People are selfish bastards who will not vote for propositions that hurt them, no matter how much they are needed. I saw it repeated all my life: everytime there was a local measure that increased taxes by even the tiniest fraction of a percent but brought about a greater public good, such as funding libraries or parks or other public services, I would vote Yes and 80% of my fellow citizens would vote HELL NO! This pattern has been repeated for years - ever since Proposition 13 and its disastrous legacy.
California is so dysfunctional. I live in Illinois now and I am amazed to see how much power the government has to make changes without consulting the public at all. They don't even have propositions here. It's quite the opposite of California - and it is ripe with its own abuses and frustrations. I think California has a better approach, overall, but they need to fine tune it so that they can actually accomplish things.
I suggest everyone read the above primitive comment once more, to be sure one knows exactly the sentiments really being expressed.
Johonny (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:56 AM
Response to Reply #8
9. I agree
The voters are to blame for the current budget mess. They're the ones that passed horrible proposition laws that hamstring the current California Government and make it impossible to handle either surpluses or deficits.
The government a victim of the people?
Throd (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 11:04 AM
Response to Reply #2
11. I voted no on all those bullshit measures.
Uh-oh.
pnutbutr (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 11:05 AM
Response to Reply #11
13. may I ask why?
Frances (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 10:37 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. My local paper recommended No on all amendments and a convention to write a new Constitution
As it is now, a minority of Republicans control the legislature. The majority has no power.
Also, the initiative process allows corporations to write the laws in the state. It takes HUGE money to pay people to gather enough signatures to get an initiative on the ballot. And it takes HUGE money to buy advertisements to get people to vote on the issue. I think there was an analysis showing that the way people vote on an initiative is directly related to how much money is spent advertising the issue.
In a small state, initiatives might work because people dedicated to a certain cause could collect enough signatures themselves. And the dedicated people could use word of mouth to get people to vote for their cause. California has too many people and too large an area for this to work.
I feel that I could best get my views represented by contacting my local representatives in the state legislature--IF that representative had any real power. But corporations would not be happy with that scenario because they would lose power.
What the fu.....dge, the primitive comment in bold, above.
sojourner (1000+ posts) Wed May-20-09 11:11 AM
Response to Original message
14. and you sure can trust those talking heads, right!
yes the state's in deep doo-doo. but the propositions were NOT written to help people. they were stealing from the poor to help other, more "popular" pockets of poor. they actually intended to cut services to the disabled, and to foster children! and boo-hoo! the legislature now has to "make do" with their salary when the state's in deficit. no 5% raise each and every year (while rest of the state -- workers AND programs, continue under freezes instituted eons ago! ask a state worker when he/she last got a COLA).