from the site :  New Geography
 
The Golden State Is Crumbling 

 
by _Joel Kotkin_ (http://www.newgeography.com/users/joel-kotkin)  
09/04/2011 


 
The recent announcement that California's unemployment again nudged up to 
12  percent—second worst in the nation behind its evil twin, Nevada—should 
have come  as a surprise but frankly did not. From the beginning of the 
recession, the  Golden State has been stuck bringing up a humbled nation's rear 
and seems mired  in that less-than-illustrious position. 
What has happened to my adopted home state of over last decade is a 
tragedy,  both for Californians and for America. For most of the past century, 
California  has been "golden" not only in name but in every kind of superlative—
a global  leader in agriculture, energy, entertainment, technology, and most 
important of  all, human aspiration. 
In its modern origins California was paean to progress in the best sense of 
 the word. In 1872, the second president of the University of California, 
Daniel  Coit Gilman, said science was "the mother of California." Today, 
California may  worship at the altar of science, but increasingly in the most 
regressive,  hysterical, and reactionary way. 
California's dominant ruling class—consisting of public-employee unions,  
green jihadis, and Democratic machine politicians—has no real use for science 
as  Gilman saw it: as a way to create prosperity for its citizens. Instead, 
the  prevailing credo of the state has been how to do everything possible 
to return  to its pre-settlement condition, with little regard for what that 
means to the  average Californian. 
Nowhere was California's old technological ethos more pronounced than in  
agriculture, where great Californians such as William Mulholland, creator of 
the  Los Angeles Aqueduct, and Pat Brown, who forged the state water 
project, created  the greatest water-delivery system since the Roman Empire. 
Their 
effort brought  water from the ice-bound Sierra Nevada mountains down to the 
state's dry but  fertile valleys and to the great desert metropolis of 
Southern California. Now,  largely at the behest of greens, California 
agriculture is being systematically  cut down by regulation. In an attempt to 
protect 
a small fish called the Delta  smelt, upward of 200,000 acres of prime 
farmland have been idled, according to  the state's Department of Conservation. 
Even in the current "wet" cycle,  California's agricultural industry, which 
exports roughly $14 billion annually,  is slowly being decimated. 
Unemployment in some Central Valley towns tops 30  percent, and in cases even 
40 
percent. 
And now, notes my friend, Salinas Mayor Dennis Donohue, green regulators 
are  imposing new groundwater regulations that may force the shutdown of 
production  even in areas like his that have their own ample water supplies. 
Salinas was the home town of John Steinbeck, author of The Grapes of Wrath  
and great chronicler of Depression-era California. Today for many in  
hardscrabble, majority-Latino Salinas, home to 150,000 people, The Grapes of  
Wrath is less lyrical than real. "California," notes Donohue, a lifelong  
Democrat, "remains intent on job destruction and continued  hyper-regulation." 
California's pain is not restricted to farming towns. The state's 
regulatory  vigilantes have erected a labyrinth of rules that increasingly 
makes 
doing  almost anything that might contribute to increased carbon  emissions—
manufacturing, conventional energy, home construction—extraordinarily  onerous. 
Not surprisingly, the state has not gained middle-skilled jobs (those  
requiring two years of college or more) for a decade, while the nation boosted  
them by 5 percent and archrival Texas by a stunning 16 percent over the same  
time period. 
There is little chance that the jobs lost in these fields will ever be  
recovered under the current regime. As decent blue-collar and midlevel jobs  
disappear, California has gone from a rate of inequality about the national  
average in 1970, to among the most unequal in terms of income. The supposed  
solution to this—Gov. Jerry Brown's promise of 500,000 "green jobs"—is 
being  shown for what it really is, the kind of fantasy you tell young children 
so they  will go to sleep. 
Many Californians who aren't slumbering are moving out of the state—and not 
 only the pathetic remains of the old Reaganite majority. According to the 
most  recent census, those leaving the state include old boomers, 
middle-aged  families, and increasingly, many Latinos as well. Outmigration 
rates from 
places  like Los Angeles and the Bay Area now rival those of such cities as 
Detroit. In  the last decade, California’s population grew only 10 percent, 
about the  national average, largely due to immigrants and their offspring. 
Population  increases in the Bay Area were less than half that rate, while 
the City of Los  Angeles gained fewer new residents—less than 100,000—than 
in any decade since  the turn of the last century! 
Increasingly, California no longer beckons ambitious newcomers, except for 
a  handful of the most affluent, best educated, and well connected. Through 
the  1980s and even through the late '90s, the aspirational classes came to  
California. Now they head to other, more opportunity-friendly places like  
Austin, Houston, Dallas, Raleigh-Durham, even former “dust bowl” burghs 
like Des  Moines, Omaha, and Oklahoma City. Meanwhile, Golden California, 
particularly its  expensive, ultragreen coast, gets older and older. Marin 
County, the onetime  home of the Grateful Dead and countless former hippies, is 
now one of the  grayest urban counties in the country, with a median age of 
44. 
Of course, the self-described "progressive" mafia that runs California will 
 point to Silicon Valley and its impressive array of startups. But for the 
most  part, firms like Google, Twitter, and Facebook employ only a small 
cadre of  highly educated workers. Overall, during the past decade the state's 
high-tech  employment fell by almost 4 percent, while Texas's science-based 
employment grew  by a healthy 11 percent. The sad reality is that turning 
T-shirt-wearing kids  like Mark Zuckerberg into multibillionaires doesn't do 
much to reduce  unemployment, which even in San Jose—the largely blue-collar 
"capital" of  Silicon Valley—now hovers around 10 percent. 
Magazine cover stories and movies cannot obscure the fact that  
entrepreneurial growth—the state’s most critical economic asset—has now 
stalled.  In 
fact, according to a study by Economic Modeling Specialists Inc., last year  
the Golden State ranked 50th among the states in creating new businesses. 
California remains rich in promise, home to spectacular scenery; a great  
Pacific location; leading firms like Apple and Disney; and a still-impressive 
 residue of talented, diverse, entrepreneurial, and ingenious people. But 
the  state will never return until the success of the current crop of puerile 
 billionaires can be extended to enrich the wider citizenry. Until the 
current  regime is toppled, California's decline—in moral as well as economic 
terms—will  continue, to the consternation of those of us who embraced it as 
our home for so  many years. 
This piece originally appeared at The Daily Beast. 
Joel Kotkin is executive editor of NewGeography.com and is a  distinguished 
presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University, and an  adjunct 
fellow of the Legatum Institute in London. He is author of _The City: A 
Global History_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0375756515?ie=UTF8&tag=newgeogrcom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0375756515)
 . His 
newest book is _The Next Hundred Million: America in 2050_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1594202443?ie=UTF8&tag=newgeogrcom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=178
9&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1594202443) , released in  February, 2010.

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