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Upscale beach communities tend to end around Sea Ranch or so, because above SF, the Pacific is cold, foggy, rainy, and tempestuous, the coast is treacherous and rocky, and it is hard to just gad about in that shit. Santa Cruz faces South, and can be an island of sun when the rest of the coast is fogged in, so it is perhaps the last outpost of anything resembling Southern California beach bimbo Mediterranean. The RickFucks like to swan, and they can't swan in slickers and wellies.
Santa Cruz has achieved the distinction of being the second most expensive rental market in the country, SF being the first (in spite of descending ever deeper into shithole status). That's probably because of all the TechFucks who can work remotely and would like to be around the beach.
I once tried to go to Sea Ranch once along the coast up from Guerneville. You drive past the Bohemian Grove (site of Masonic Elitist GloboHomo rituals). The road was along rocky cliffs, narrow, lots of corners, really a bit scary, and the wind nearly blew me off the road, so I gave up and went back. The land route is much longer, so that area isn't exactly convenient access.
I have an out of state question and it’s a damn important one in IMO.
My dad has an extensive gun collection.
I took two from him on an inter familial transfer…that is, in California it’s ok to transfer to immediate blood relative though you must complete the transfer.
Nevada has no registration requirement and since my dads collection is so extensive, some of them may or may not be registered. All were legally obtained. My dad is way up there in age. Over 80. I am likely retiring out of state in 7-8 years. I could theoretically take possession of those firearms, transport them to my residence out of state, and if that state is Nevada, never register them. Some may or may not have been registered in my dads name at one time. From there I could pass those on to one of my nephews and assuming those nephews live in a state that doesn’t require registering the gun, there would essentially be no accurate accounting by the government of where those firea...
I have an out of state question and it’s a damn important one in IMO.
My dad has an extensive gun collection.
I took two from him on an inter familial transfer…that is, in California it’s ok to transfer to immediate blood relative though you must complete the transfer.
Nevada has no registration requirement and since my dads collection is so extensive, some of them may or may not be registered. All were legally obtained. My dad is way up there in age. Over 80. I am likely retiring out of state in 7-8 years. I could theoretically take possession of those firearms, transport them to my residence out of state, and if that state is Nevada, never register them. Some may or may not have been registered in my dads name at one time. From there I could pass those on to one of my nephews and assuming those nephews live in a state that doesn’t require registering the gun, there would essentially be no accurate accounting by the government of where those firea...
there would essentially be no accurate accounting by the government of where those firearms were located. Is that correct?
FuckTheMainstreamMedia says
there would essentially be no accurate accounting by the government of where those firearms were located. Is that correct?
It's really sad that your father lost all his guns in that boating accident.
Until then, just make sure you lock up your weapons to keep them from any tweakers who might try to rob you.
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Took my west coast salary and profitable LLC with me - after I pay 2015 taxes to CA, the state won't get another dime from me.
Ended up moving to the Southeast. It's pretty nice here. Gas is dirt cheap, tons of food options, lots of jobs, good gun laws, friendly people, low taxes and seems like a decent place to set up shop. While the traffic sucks, I'm near bike trails that will get me directly to work.
I'll be paying cash for a house in the next few months, and then quitting my day job to pursue my own ventures. It's a lot easier to do that out here. No more slumlords.
F U California. And damn it feels good to finally get out of that state after 8 years. I'll miss your coastline, but nothing else.