CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CONTARY TO ‘EXPERTS,’ CALIFORNIA DREAM FAR
FROM DEAD”
It happens almost every winter: pundits from eastern news
outlets make weeklong pilgrimages to California, interview top officials here
and generally report back that there’s something rotten in the state of the
Golden State, as Shakespeare might have put it.
Rarely have they had more fodder for pushing that narrative
than this year, when millions of Californians spent chunks of the last few
months without certain basics of modern civilization, including electricity and
the use of their longtime homes.
The implication of all this, they say, is that the
California Dream, the mythical force which drew millions here over the last 150
years, has somehow died.
Wrote a longtime contributor to the New Yorker magazine,
who fairly recently followed the old path from East Coast to West Coast, “The
problem with the dream is that it is
one, founded on a lie.” She cited a wildfire historian saying “California is
built to burn. And it’s built to burn explosively.”
No kidding. Most of California famously has stable weather,
with seasonal changes not nearly as obvious as in parts of America that often
spend their autumns coping with hurricanes and winters digging out from under
blizzards. But each year this state has a “fire season.” That’s been true for all
time.
The New Yorker’s Dana Goodyear seems surprised that a fire swept
through much of Malibu last year. But this happens almost every year, and for
often-repeated reasons like arson, poorly-maintained power lines, high winds,
low humidity and high temperatures during most Octobers and Novembers –
sometimes earlier.
“Until recently,” wrote Goodyear, “it was possible to
repress a sneaking awareness of the weather fallacy, stuff it in the back of
the closet, alongside the earthquake kit, and tell oneself that all was well in
paradise.”
What weather fallacy? While record cold and snow ravaged much of the East and Midwest this fall, temperatures in Los Angeles reached the 90s in late November and even foggy San Francisco saw highs mostly in the upper 60s.
Earthquakes? No one here hides that. It’s part of the bargain
most non-native Californians made when they moved here: They weighed the risk
of losing many of their material resources against the benefits of much warmer
weather than where they came from.
At about the same time as the New Yorker took its cheap shot
at California, just when it was suffering serious damage, the Wall Street
Journal did much the same.
On the state’s housing problems, “Politicians have
bulldozed market forces.” But as documented in this column several times,
market forces have not been “bulldozed” at all; rather, they are a big reason
for California’s housing difficulties: So many people want to buy in the
choicest parts of this state that prices are too high for many would-be buyers.
When buyers evaporate, prices normally drop. But there is no sign of that today.
This is market forces at work, as expensive properties do actually sell.
On the “public safety power shutoffs”: “Californians are learning
to live like the Amish.” If so, that’s partly the fault of politicians, but mostly
of utility executives who redirected maintenance money paid by electric
customers for decades, rather than using it to fireproof their transmission
lines and other equipment.
On high gasoline prices, “Blame Democrats.” Are most oil
company executives Democrats?
This is merely the latest installment of eastern-based
fiction about California, which is anything but on its knees. In fact,
construction is booming all over California, from fire areas where rebuilds
abound to big cities where new, large housing projects aiming to ease shortages
are underway.
And what if a few thousand more Californians departed
California in recent years than have arrived here? One thing that does is
alleviate California’s housing and traffic problems just a little. Not enough,
as anyone who has house shopped or driven a freeway in the last year knows.
But there is no way the California Dream is dead, or even
seriously threatened. That’s because the concept of a better life here has
never been absolute, but always tempered by the fact that there can be trouble
in paradise, as seen lately via high winds, arsonists, degenerating power lines
and the big fires they combine to push.
-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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