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The middle class is leaving California


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2012 Sep 30, 3:06am   68,485 views  170 comments

by Strategic Renter   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

http://northochousingnews.com/news/the-middle-class-is-leaving-california

I came here 2 years ago thinking this was the best state in the US and I had always dreamed of living here.
Well guess what it just isn't that good. The beaches are not as good as Florida's with the nice calm and warm gulf. The taxes here are killing me. My california taxes alone will pay the rent in most other states. gasoline high, Too many illegals ruining the schools and people begging everywhere.
I have now decided to leave and go to Henderson in Nevada which has just been voted the second most safe city in the US. With vegas on the doorstep I will never be stuck for something to do and the added benefit I will be able to buy a huge house to fit my 12x6 snooker table in and have a swimming pool.
California is living in a beach boys past and I am sorry to say it has had its day. You suckers who pay so much to live in a shack can have it

#housing

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94   37108605   2012 Oct 1, 2:47am  

lostand confused says

Reader says

I see NOW, you are one of those who do the famous didactic routine typical of your kind.

What is this Act One? Or Two?

LOL!! yeah, yeah-you bring up this being a free country and you can speak whatever you want-when no one asks you top be quiet. Then you are having fits when somenone questions you-amusing.

I am on to you now. There is no response. But don't try your didactic games with me they don't work.

95   FortWayne   2012 Oct 1, 2:48am  

freak80 says

But remember, Arizona is an evil place filled with racial profiling! ;-)

Well, there is a reason Arizona, especially Phoenix , are cheaper than dirt. And it ain't racial profiling.

96   37108605   2012 Oct 1, 2:48am  

FortWayne says

freak80 says

But remember, Arizona is an evil place filled with racial profiling! ;-)

Well, there is a reason Arizona, especially Phoenix , are cheaper than dirt. And it ain't racial profiling.

Freedom 1789-2012

Well, that is gravy.

97   Goran_K   2012 Oct 1, 2:50am  

I'm technically not part of the "middle" class of California from an income perspective, but I've thought of moving elsewhere (even out of country) more times than I can remember doing so than in previous years.

I'm just not convinced Governor Brown can do enough to turn this train wreck around. Obama has shown that he's ready to allow the FED to turn our dollars into the Congolese franc. We've become a country of welfare shiesters.

98   coriacci1   2012 Oct 1, 2:50am  

Reader says

Again, these firms need to 1. Cut gross overpayment to executives. 2. Let the smart people do their thing especially IT without some stupid bitch accountant or business graduate who doesn't know a computer from a can of hairspray trying to "manage" them.

Reader

sounds like a short laundry list of what can be done to improve the the US of A overall!

99   freak80   2012 Oct 1, 2:52am  

Goran_K says

Obama has shown that he's ready to allow the FED to turn our dollars into the Congolese franc.

He'll have to if CA goes bankrupt. Or is CA already bankrupt? I don't remember.

NY state isn't much better. Most of our "income" comes from taxes on the Jive-Finance sector down state.

100   37108605   2012 Oct 1, 2:54am  

freak80 says

Most of our "income" comes from taxes on the Jive-Finance sector down state.

FACT.

101   Goran_K   2012 Oct 1, 3:20am  

freak80 says

He'll have to if CA goes bankrupt. Or is CA already bankrupt? I don't remember.

NY state isn't much better. Most of our "income" comes from taxes on the Jive-Finance sector down state.

California is bankrupt for all intents and purposes under an enormous $167+ billion wall of debt. Government pension plans, welfare programs, and other compensation to state workers are literally crushing this state into cannibal anarchy.

Governor Brown is trying to push a bill to RAISE taxes and create $50 billion dollars of revenue over the next 7 years, as if taxes in CA weren't crushing enough. To make matters worse, this is like throwing a cup of water onto a raging building fire.

I honestly would have left California already if it weren't for so much of my business interest concentrated here in SoCal, and the SF Bay Area.

102   37108605   2012 Oct 1, 3:31am  

Goran_K says

California is bankrupt for all intents and purposes under an enormous $167+ billion wall of debt. Government pension plans, welfare programs, and other compensation to state workers are literally crushing this state into cannibal anarchy.

Jeez, and anyone need ask why some of us say stay the hell away from there?!

103   37108605   2012 Oct 1, 3:52am  

bgamall4 says

the bubble by cash

LMFO!

104   lostand confused   2012 Oct 1, 4:12am  

Reader says

I am on to you now. There is no response. But don't try your didactic games with me they don't work.

LOL!! Whatever.. Grow up

105   Goran_K   2012 Oct 1, 4:21am  

bgamall4 says

Did you know that Wall Street started the attack on government pension plans in order to be first in line before those pension plans if Cali cities go bankrupt?

Did you know you are being a tool of Wall Street when you make comments like that?

Did you know that big money is moving into chartered schools, from Wall Street, and that this money funds articles critical of California Teachers Union? Did you know that Froggy?

Wall Street is against us and that is the only battle that matters.

I have no love for Wall Street, but it's obvious that CalPERs funding is unsustainable, and attempting to continue this system will only lead to more instability in the CA economy. That isn't propaganda, it's fact.

106   37108605   2012 Oct 1, 4:44am  

lostand confused says

Reader says

I am on to you now. There is no response. But don't try your didactic games with me they don't work.

LOL!! Whatever.. Grow up

I am going to give you a gift, the gift of goodbye by hitting the IGNORE function next to your name.

107   lostand confused   2012 Oct 1, 4:49am  

Reader says

I am going to give you a gift, the gift of goodbye by hitting the IGNORE function next to your name.

You have to tell me that you are ignoring me. LOL!!!!!!!!!!!

108   drew_eckhardt   2012 Oct 1, 4:52am  

Strategic Renter says

I came here 2 years ago thinking this was the best state in the US and I had always dreamed of living here.

40% of all high-tech venture spending in America goes into the San Francisco Bay Area so being here maximizes one's chances of doing interesting things for a company with a viable business plan at the right point in its life cycle with a big enough equity share to stop needing to work for money.

Apart from having great sports medicine doctors to put you back together nothing matters more - not beaches, not taxes, not home prices.

As bonuses the weather makes for pleasant bicycling year round and the ethnic food is good.

109   lostand confused   2012 Oct 1, 4:53am  

Goran_K says

I have no love for Wall Street, but it's obvious that CalPERs funding is unsustainable, and attempting to continue this system will only lead to more instability in the CA economy. That isn't propaganda, it's fact.

Well something has to give. if you look at what happened in Stockton, I think we know what will happen if it ever comes to being unsustainable. The pensioners are going to have to take cuts-the same as all the airlines that dumped their pensions to the PBGC.

110   curious2   2012 Oct 1, 4:55am  

lostand confused says

You have to tell me that you are ignoring me. LOL!!!!!!!!!!!

Online behavior can be funny. I have a creep who pretends to Ignore me, but uses a separate browser to follow me, then replies to my comments while reminding me that he is still "ignoring" me. I think their intent is to tease like sticking their tongue out, but they only make themselves look ridiculous.

111   Philistine   2012 Oct 1, 9:24am  

joshuatrio says

Yes I have. Spent a considerable amount of time in FL with family in Miami and West Palm, and have been out west for almost 5 years.
Sure, SoCal is a cesspool, but the coastline and beaches beyond LA going North are gorgeous

Ehhh, not so much. The beaches north of LA are *nice* to look at, but they still have crappy sand and cold water. They are less crowded the further you go up the coast, but they all get more shitty the further up the coast.

Monterey, for example, is gorgeous to look at, but not much of a beach if you are trying to actually use it the way most people use a beach.

Florida beaches between St. Petersburg and Pensacola are profoundly beautiful--the sand in Pensacola squeaks under your feet it's so fine and powdery.

Sounds like you lived in South Florida on the Atlantic side, where the beaches are just okay compared to the gulf.

112   EBGuy   2012 Oct 1, 9:44am  

Goran K said: I'm just not convinced Governor Brown can do enough to turn this train wreck around.
You don't need Gov. Brown. Proposition 32 will go a long way towards righting the ship. It curbs special interest influence (and puts more money into the hands of working people).

113   anonymous   2012 Oct 1, 11:08am  

if/when we have children we're leaving CA at once. i could never do that to my kids. they need more than a closet for a house, need teachers that actually give a crap, need a safe neighborhood where the cops do more than write tickets, need me to be level-headed and not stressed out about a huge debt with little job security, etc. if i stay here, i'll be giving them a much worse life than i had growing up. at least, i would like to give them an equal childhood to what i had.

the kool-aid has always been bite the bullet and enjoy the outdoors... but when every other fucker is also outdoors and crowding the surf breaks it doesn't add up. it's a fine place to be a DINK, i guess. but even so, your housing sucks for the money compared with other places. and if i move inland i still have high taxes and gas prices and traffic... yikes.

getting tired of the temporary workforce bullshit, too. having to change jobs every 18 months is stupid depressing. even if salary increases each time it's a strain. it's not stable.

seems to me the only middle class folks who survive out here with kids are the ones who have parental assistance, or are leveraged to the hills. i don't, and refuse to be.

114   Waitingtobuy   2012 Oct 1, 12:36pm  

landtof says

if/when we have children we're leaving CA at once. i could never do that to my kids. they need more than a closet for a house, need teachers that actually give a crap, need a safe neighborhood where the cops do more than write tickets, need me to be level-headed and not stressed out about a huge debt with little job security, etc. if i stay here, i'll be giving them a much worse life than i had growing up. at least, i would like to give them an equal childhood to what i had.

Wow, generalize much? Do you really think all teachers in CA don't give a crap and all police just write tickets? I guess you live in an area completely different than ours.

And no, Prop 32 is not the solution. Read up on it...it's a power grab. If it pertained to ALL corporations and ALL unions, I might be for it. It isn't. Super PACS, Wall St firms, hedge funds, and LLCs are all exempt from the law.

The solution is repeal the commercial portion of Prop 13. That's a joke and it's the original reason for the Prop 13 (Jarvis and the Landlord association), not poor grandma losing her home. The people that pushed that law could have care less if anyone was tossed out on their butt...and the rest of us are paying dearly for ir. California hasn't been the same since.

This is one of the worst threads I've seen in a while on Patrick.net.

115   mr green   2012 Oct 1, 12:49pm  

California is bankrupt. The dems have destroyed the state. So what's the solution? Keep electing more dems. Are there any sane people who have not left California? Once they're all gone, illegals will be on their own, there will be no one to tax and the state will collapse. Brad and his friends will be holding the bag and he will have to pull his mom from under the bus and apologize.

116   bmwman91   2012 Oct 1, 2:49pm  

Waitingtobuy says

Wow, generalize much? Do you really think all teachers in CA don't give a crap and all police just write tickets? I guess you live in an area completely different than ours.

And no, Prop 32 is not the solution. Read up on it...it's a power grab. If it pertained to ALL corporations and ALL unions, I might be for it. It isn't. Super PACS, Wall St firms, hedge funds, and LLCs are all exempt from the law.

The solution is repeal the commercial portion of Prop 13. That's a joke and it's the original reason for the Prop 13 (Jarvis and the Landlord association), not poor grandma losing her home. The people that pushed that law could have care less if anyone was tossed out on their butt...and the rest of us are paying dearly for ir. California hasn't been the same since.

This is one of the worst threads I've seen in a while on Patrick.net.

Except that if you check the link for prop 32 showing the major donors, you will see that the CA teachers union alone has donated as much against it as all of the proponents combined. Yes, there are exceptions, but looking at who is actually throwing money at this tells me all that I need to know. Nearly all of the top donors are various unions, and the unions have done far more damage to CA than private enterprise. If private enterprise was really going to score on this one, they would be tossing cash at it like crazy too. But no, the CA teachers union has dropped nearly $17M fighting it. The unions in CA are what is destroying the state right now and their influence needs to be curtailed. If the unions actually acted in the best interests of teachers, police and firefighters then I might feel differently. But, the unions make short term promises that sound good to those that they claim to represent while guzzling money needlessly and ensuring that there is no actual long-term benefit to their existence.

Total campaign cash:
For: $9MM
Against: $41MM

The labor groups already have VASTLY more representation in CA government, and we have the results for all to see. This would dial down their influence to a level closer to that of the "nefarious, evil" private enterprise boogeymen that the opponents all love to name-drop.

117   RealEstateIsBetterThanStocks   2012 Oct 1, 3:18pm  

here are the people who are getting out of CA:

1) Blacks, because illegal immigrants
2) Poor White trash because they can't compete with immigrant workers

the rest are doing fine. not everywhere in CA is a dump.

118   bmwman91   2012 Oct 1, 3:29pm  

Not really.

I work at a very large tech company with its HQ in Washington. A lot of people have transferred up to the main campus specifically because of the cost of living and the mediocre schools. These are college-educated engineers and managers. Still others have taken jobs in AZ and CO because they can take a 30% pay cut and a corresponding 70% cost of living cut.

If it was just the leaches that you mention leaving, CA would actually be getting into a better position. The people that this place NEEDS are the ones leaving.

119   coriacci1   2012 Oct 2, 12:26am  

mr green says

The dems have destroyed the state.

prop 13 destroyed the state. that's right! big money has won again!

120   MyView   2012 Oct 2, 12:38am  

Yes, the Democrats, Prop 13, Mello Roos, local governments (city of Bell!)... all have destroyed California Dream!

121   freak80   2012 Oct 2, 1:37am  

bmwman91 says

The labor groups already have VASTLY more representation in CA government, and we have the results for all to see. This would dial down their influence to a level closer to that of the "nefarious, evil" private enterprise boogeymen that the opponents all love to name-drop.

We have a similar political dynamic here in the Rust Belt. Any attempt to dial back the power of *public sector* unions is seen as an attack on *all unions.*

"You don't want teachers to strike? Well then, you're no different than a Pinkerton thug at the Battle of Homestead!"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestead_Strike

122   Goran_K   2012 Oct 2, 2:32am  

bgamall4 says

You have been brainwashed by Wall Street. Pension funding can be easily fixed by upping the contributions of current workers. Wall Street wants one thing, power to get the money before Calpers, who has the legal right according to the laws of California.

Most of the websites who are actively bashing Calpers have an adgenda or get funded by Wall Street. That also is fact.

Edit: one more thing, most of the publications opposing calpers are for privatization of all government, and that is also Wall Street.

The CalPERs fund only returned 1% last year, thanks to Benanke, equities are pretty much finished as an asset class for pension funds.

Yes, you could ask for more contributions, but you might have better luck getting blood from a rock. Most cities in California already have budget problems with the current contributions, and are having to layoff CURRENT workers just to support those who are already retired. CalPERs is already doomed despite what you, or I, might argue.

That's not "brain washing", that's simple math. CalPERs doesn't sound like a system that is fiscally maintainable, and no one in their right mind would want to keep it around unless they were part of that system, or already retired.

123   Nospam   2012 Oct 2, 3:44am  

Another middle class taxpayer leaving. First week of November I'm moving my family out of state. I can't imagine inflicting the Los Angeles school system on my kids. My state tax burden will be cut in half. I'm moving to a property that's got 20 times the land and 3x the living space for the same money. My wife and I will no longer be criminals for carrying firearms for self defense. Also, my vote will actually make a difference in elections. I always wanted to live in California, but 15 years after moving here, I'm just done.

124   37108605   2012 Oct 2, 3:47am  

Nospam says

Another middle class taxpayer leaving. First week of November I'm moving my family out of state. I can't imagine inflicting the Los Angeles school system on my kids. My state tax burden will be cut in half. I'm moving to a property that's got 20 times the land and 3x the living space for the same money. My wife and I will no longer be criminals for carrying firearms for self defense. Also, my vote will actually make a difference in elections. I always wanted to live in California, but 15 years after moving here, I'm just done.

Best to you and yours. Smart move.

125   dublin hillz   2012 Oct 2, 4:05am  

Goran_K says

The CalPERs fund only returned 1% last year, thanks to Benanke, equities are pretty much finished as an asset class for pension funds.

I thought that with their investment mix that they are counting on a typical 7% annual return. What gives?

126   anonymous   2012 Oct 2, 4:07am  

pfft. CA schools are terrible, or below average as the reports put it. That's not a generalization that's a fact.

127   Strategic Renter   2012 Oct 2, 4:12am  

Nospam says

Another middle class taxpayer leaving. First week of November I'm moving my family out of state. I can't imagine inflicting the Los Angeles school system on my kids. My state tax burden will be cut in half. I'm moving to a property that's got 20 times the land and 3x the living space for the same money. My wife and I will no longer be criminals for carrying firearms for self defense. Also, my vote will actually make a difference in elections. I always wanted to live in California, but 15 years after moving here, I'm just done.

Enjoy your major quality of life upgrade and all the extra money you will now have to spend. I am suprised you managed to stick it out for 15 years in this dump.

128   Goran_K   2012 Oct 2, 4:40am  

dublin hillz says

I thought that with their investment mix that they are counting on a typical 7% annual return. What gives?

Remember, the CalPERs fund returned 1% NOMINALLY, meaning in real terms, it actually lost a lot money.

Retirement funds, both public and private, are now seriously underfunded because their investments have failed to produce profits.

The problem with CalPErs is that state and local governments are obliged to make up the difference. A safety net if you will. This is why there is a crisis in public retirement funding. Private funds simply go away.

CalPERS is merely the biggest canary in the coal mine. Arguing about whether CalPERs needs to go away is like arguing about a corpse on the road that's been hit with an 18-wheeler, on whether it will walk again. CalPERs died in 2008. What is left is a heavy stinky shell of what it used to be, and it needs to be put into the garbage where it belongs before it makes things worse.

129   37108605   2012 Oct 2, 4:48am  

Goran_K says

Retirement funds, both public and private, are now seriously underfunded because their investments have failed to produce profits.

I don't believe in anyone but myself handing my family money and this is a reason I would never go to a so-called advisor for any funds or stocks.

Yes, they have failed to produce profits but certain organized theives have surely known how to push people into such shite, take their cut while many have lost everything.

The term financial advisor to me is so arsehole ridiculous. My take is if that person knows so much about making money they wouldn't be telling others how to do it for a fee, they would do it themselves with their own money.

130   Goran_K   2012 Oct 2, 5:21am  

Reader says

I don't believe in anyone but myself handing my family money and this is a reason I would never go to a so-called advisor for any funds or stocks.

Yes, they have failed to produce profits but certain organized theives have surely known how to push people into such shite, take their cut while many have lost everything.

The term financial advisor to me is so arsehole ridiculous. My take is if that person knows so much about making money they wouldn't be telling others how to do it for a fee, they would do it themselves with their own money.

Well to be fair, some funds are well run, by people interested in making their clients money. This is proven by their year by year performance numbers.

The biggest problem with CalPERs is that it has a public safety net built into it. If CalPERs were simply allowed to prosper or perish on the weight of its accomplishments, then I would have no problem with it, but to put the burden of its failures on tax payers is ridiculous.

131   EBGuy   2012 Oct 2, 5:23am  

Waitingtobuy said: And no, Prop 32 is not the solution. Read up on it...it's a power grab. If it pertained to ALL corporations and ALL unions, I might be for it. It isn't. Super PACS, Wall St firms, hedge funds, and LLCs are all exempt from the law.
Now you're being a bit silly. Nobody is exempted. Citizens United allows ANY entity (union, corporation, person) to contribute to a SuperPAC. Your beef is with the US Supreme Court, not Prop 32 (and BTW, I will join you in protesting Citizens United).
"I've sat in all of those backroom meetings," she says. "That thing, if walls could talk, well think of me as a wall, and I'm talking. I've had it... Ms. Romero believes the only way to bring down the public unions—and "they will be brought down, they must be brought down"—is to go after "what feeds the beast." In other words: payroll deductions." former state senator Gloria Romero of Democrats for Education Reform, Prop 32 supporter.

132   37108605   2012 Oct 2, 5:26am  

Goran_K says

The biggest problem with CalPERs

I see, but I know nothing about CalPERs. In general you see I just don't trust anyone handling my money for a fee.

133   freak80   2012 Oct 2, 5:28am  

Reader says

The term financial advisor to me is so arsehole ridiculous. My take is if that person knows so much about making money they wouldn't be telling others how to do it for a fee, they would do it themselves with their own money.

That's why I do not have a "financial advisor." :-)

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