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California Audit Released 350 Days Past Deadline, Shows Conservatives Are Right About the State. LOL!

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Jul 17, 2023
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Forty years ago, President Ronald Reagan secured re-election with a 525-13 Electoral College shellacking of Democratic challenger Walter Mondale.

California, land of boundless opportunity and breathtaking natural beauty that seemed to symbolize Reagan's "Morning in America," helped its former Republican governor complete that historic near-sweep in the unforgettable 1984 presidential election.

Alas, everything has changed. California, by its own accounting, has degenerated into a failed state.

According to The Center Square \-- a news outlet focused on state and local governments -- California's belated Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2022, showed that the state had liabilities $55 billion in excess of its total resources.
Despite post-pandemic job growth in its lucrative tech industry, California still did not come close to achieving a balanced budget.

Nor does the future look promising. A $73 billion deficit confronts the state in 2024-25. With expanded, taxpayer-funded benefits to illegal immigrants, and with Texas' stepped-up border security diverting invaders to California, that number could increase, particularly in the face of much slower job growth.

Furthermore, according to Marc Joffe of the Cato Institute, California's pandemic-era profligacy included $29 billion in improper Unemployment Insurance payments that the state may have to repay to the federal government.

The 374-page state financial report included an overview that outlined the state's advantages to any sane and responsible group of elected officials.

"California's economy, the largest among the 50 states, accounted for 14.2% of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2022 and continued to rank fifth largest in the world (in terms of GDP) at the end of the year," the report read.

Considering all that productive capacity, it takes a special kind of incompetence to multiply liabilities.

Of course, California has just the man for the job. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, the state's virtue-signaler-in-chief, has presided over this accelerated decline.


"While Gavin Newsom’s California aspires to take on the world’s 'big, hairy, audacious goals,' it remains unable to reliably tackle the less glamorous challenge of running a transparent, financially responsible government," Joffe wrote.

But Joffe, while correct, understated the scope of the calamity.

In fact, if California's core problem lay only on its balance sheets, then it could still maintain hope of recovery. In that case, it would not yet qualify as a failed state.

California's elected officials, however, have compounded insolvency with lunacy.

Crime has skyrocketed. Illegal immigration remains not only unchecked, but encouraged by the state's progressive policies. Human waste covers city streets and public beaches alike.

And people have voted with their feet by leaving the state altogether.

As a result of the 2020 census, California lost an electoral vote. No other state west of the Mississippi River suffered population loss sufficient to diminish its national representation.

That exodus has continued into the current decade. One source, in fact, estimated a nearly $350 million loss in tax revenue from residents fleeing the state in 2021-22.

In terms of pure electoral math, exasperated Californians fleeing for states such as Texas and Florida would aid conservative causes. As deep-blue California grew bluer but smaller, red states would grow redder and larger.

On the other hand, that process would take decades. And in the meantime, the once-great Golden State will sink further into the progressive abyss.

Better, therefore, to contain the state's lunacy within its current boundaries and hope for a broader awakening.

 
This was bound to happen and unfortunately will continue to happen elsewhere when our government governs in a way that maximizes election success but ignores consequences and facts. Examples: Everyone knows no state or nation can allow millions of illegal immigrants to flood in and expect to be able to house/feed/etc. those people. Everyone knows paying people not to work is not feasible, everyone knows paying student loans of people who took out those loans and are more than capable of paying them off themselves is nonsensical and unsustainable, but in today's America where men can have babies common sense and reality are just a point of view.
 
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Forty years ago, President Ronald Reagan secured re-election with a 525-13 Electoral College shellacking of Democratic challenger Walter Mondale.

California, land of boundless opportunity and breathtaking natural beauty that seemed to symbolize Reagan's "Morning in America," helped its former Republican governor complete that historic near-sweep in the unforgettable 1984 presidential election.

Alas, everything has changed. California, by its own accounting, has degenerated into a failed state.

According to The Center Square \-- a news outlet focused on state and local governments -- California's belated Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2022, showed that the state had liabilities $55 billion in excess of its total resources.
Despite post-pandemic job growth in its lucrative tech industry, California still did not come close to achieving a balanced budget.

Nor does the future look promising. A $73 billion deficit confronts the state in 2024-25. With expanded, taxpayer-funded benefits to illegal immigrants, and with Texas' stepped-up border security diverting invaders to California, that number could increase, particularly in the face of much slower job growth.

Furthermore, according to Marc Joffe of the Cato Institute, California's pandemic-era profligacy included $29 billion in improper Unemployment Insurance payments that the state may have to repay to the federal government.

The 374-page state financial report included an overview that outlined the state's advantages to any sane and responsible group of elected officials.

"California's economy, the largest among the 50 states, accounted for 14.2% of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2022 and continued to rank fifth largest in the world (in terms of GDP) at the end of the year," the report read.

Considering all that productive capacity, it takes a special kind of incompetence to multiply liabilities.

Of course, California has just the man for the job. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, the state's virtue-signaler-in-chief, has presided over this accelerated decline.


"While Gavin Newsom’s California aspires to take on the world’s 'big, hairy, audacious goals,' it remains unable to reliably tackle the less glamorous challenge of running a transparent, financially responsible government," Joffe wrote.

But Joffe, while correct, understated the scope of the calamity.

In fact, if California's core problem lay only on its balance sheets, then it could still maintain hope of recovery. In that case, it would not yet qualify as a failed state.

California's elected officials, however, have compounded insolvency with lunacy.

Crime has skyrocketed. Illegal immigration remains not only unchecked, but encouraged by the state's progressive policies. Human waste covers city streets and public beaches alike.

And people have voted with their feet by leaving the state altogether.

As a result of the 2020 census, California lost an electoral vote. No other state west of the Mississippi River suffered population loss sufficient to diminish its national representation.

That exodus has continued into the current decade. One source, in fact, estimated a nearly $350 million loss in tax revenue from residents fleeing the state in 2021-22.

In terms of pure electoral math, exasperated Californians fleeing for states such as Texas and Florida would aid conservative causes. As deep-blue California grew bluer but smaller, red states would grow redder and larger.

On the other hand, that process would take decades. And in the meantime, the once-great Golden State will sink further into the progressive abyss.

Better, therefore, to contain the state's lunacy within its current boundaries and hope for a broader awakening.

Thier unfunded pensions are a huge problem with no solution.
Basic math and libtard policies are putting the state in a downward spiral...
 
OP:

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And today State Farm announced they won't be renewing 72,000 property insurance to keep pace with inflation and regs.
 
A $73 billion deficit confronts the state in 2024-25. With expanded, taxpayer-funded benefits to illegal immigrants, and with Texas' stepped-up border security diverting invaders to California, that number could increase, particularly in the face of much slower job growth.
 
There's a saying about people not being able to stand prosperity.

The change in US tax law around business depreciation in the mid-80's raised tax revenue. Unfortunately, Reagan mad a deal with Tip O'Neil to raise domestic spending, (and cold war spending) that wasted that opportunity.

Ireland began their corporate tax changes in 1996 and attracted incredible revenue growth. But as predictable with politicians, they couldn't resist outspending that incredible growth.

On a simpler, more personal level, many studies document what happens to people suddenly coming into money, especially by winning the lottery. People can't help themselves when it comes to spending.

California has a whole lot of advantages as a state. Even with everything they have going for themselves, the bad now outweighs the good for a lot of folks. There's an end in sight for the ability to tax the "wealthy". There's an end in sight for the state to borrow money at reasonable rates. It's another version of the hot/crazy matrix. Even the hottest girl can be too crazy to have a relationship with.
 
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State Audit Finds California is Broke

California's audited financial statement for the fiscal year 2021-2022 has been published, revealing a concerning financial situation for the state.
Filed 350 days past the due deadline, the report uncovers that California is facing a significant financial shortfall, with $55 billion more owed than the available funds.


 
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