CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2014 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IF NOT SIX CALIFORNIAS,” HOW ABOUT ONE, SOVEREIGN CA?”
Two years from now, Californians will
not only be thinking about electing a U.S. senator, 53 members of Congress and
a President, but most likely also about the possibility of carving up their
state into six new ones.
The ballot initiative to do this is
the brainchild of billionaire venture capitalist Tim Draper, who observes to
reporters that “bad government is not to be tolerated” and that “California is
ungovernable.”
His idea of creating new states like
Silicon Valley, Jefferson and West California and possibly making state
capitals of places like Santa Ana, Redding and Fresno comes after many other
failed efforts to rip California apart, mostly motivated by water politics or
Republican frustration at living in a Democratic-dominated state.
But just as Californians for the next
two years will bandy about the idea of Balkanizing their state, some may also
want to consider using their state’s sheer size and scale to secede from the
Union.
Granted that the last time anyone made
a serious effort at something like this, a four-year Civil War resulted. But
still, California takes occasional stabs at semi-sovereignty and even manages
to pull some of them off.
One example is on smog, where the
federal government for 44 years has let this state set rules tougher than those
in force elsewhere.
California governors sometimes even
broach the topic of sovereignty. Example: On a July junket to Mexico City,
Jerry Brown observed that “Even though California is a mere sub-national
entity, it is equivalent to the eighth largest country in the world and we intend
to operate based on that…clout.”
Brown referred to gross domestic
product, where California ranks just behind Brazil and Russia, but is gaining
on them, and well ahead of prominent nations like Italy, India, Mexico and
Argentina.
Like his predecessors going back to
Goodwin Knight in the 1950s, Brown has signed international memoranda of
understanding on subjects like trade, environment and tourism. But MOUs don’t
have the force or standing of treaties, which a stand-alone California could
make.
A sovereign California also would no
longer have to pour money into the federal government’s sinkhole, getting back
only about 77 cents for every dollar its taxpayers put in while the likes of
Mississippi, West Virginia, Maryland and Florida get far more than a buck back
in federal spending for every one they kick in.
Six Californias would give the current
state 12 senators to the two it has now, guaranteeing that small states like
Wyoming, Delaware and Wyoming will fight to kill this idea. They could do that if
and when it comes up for congressional approval, as it must if the voters
approve Draper’s idea.
A sovereign California would also
avoid the pesky worries that plague the six-state idea, like how to split up
the state’s universities and how to finance states like Jefferson (northern
counties whose public services, including fire protection, are often subsidized
by the rest of California) and Central California, which would instantly become
America’s poorest state.
Right next door to the poorest state,
of course, would be the richest, Silicon Valley, perhaps making the Google
headquarters in Mountain View its Capitol building. That would likely be the de facto headquarters, anyway.
While there are questions about
whether six new states could stay afloat financially and intellectually, there
would be no such qualms about a sovereign California, which could create as
many senators as it wanted.
This,
after all, is the idea capital of the world, a place where world-changing
enterprises from the Google search engine to Apple’s family of i-Products
originate. It’s where film companies like Paramount and Warner Bros. and Disney
and Dreamworks create global dreams. It’s where public universities became
great and its farms feed much of the human race. As a nation, it would rank
sixth worldwide in producing solar power and boast the world’s fourth-highest
human development index score, while having only the 35th-highest
population.
But
splitting into six would create have- and have-not states with plenty of
foreseeable grudges and grievances against each other.
California
could avoid all that by becoming independent. Or, of course, by simply
remaining a single state.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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