I thought of my fellow
Californian Energy Secretary Steven Chu last week, when I paid $4.89 a gallon
in Gilroy for regular gas — and had to wait in line to get it. The customers
were in near revolt, but I wondered against what and whom. I mentioned to one exasperated
motorist that there are estimated to be over 20 billion barrels of oil a few
miles away, in newly found reserves off the California coast. He thought I was
from Mars.
California may face the
nation’s largest budget deficit at $16 billion. It may struggle with the
nation’s second-highest unemployment rate at 10.6 percent. It will soon vote
whether to levy the nation’s highest income and sales taxes, as if to encourage
others to join the 2,000-plus high earners who are leaving the state each week.
The new taxes will be our way of saying, “Good riddance.” And if California is
home to one-third of the nation’s welfare recipients and the largest number of
illegal aliens, it is nonetheless apparently happy and thus solidly for Obama,
by a +24 percent margin in the latest Field poll. The unemployment rate in my
hometown is 16 percent, the per capita income is $16,000 — and I haven’t seen a
Romney sticker yet.
Shortly before taking office,
Secretary Chu, remember, quipped that he would like to see American gas prices
rise to European levels — presumably $9 or $10 a gallon — to discourage driving
and thereby lower our carbon footprint. If $50 for half a fill-up is any
indication, California is over halfway toward achieving Chu’s dream. If green
bicycles are the ultimate aim of our central-planning regulators, then they are
making headway. I’ve never seen so many new rural bike riders, though most of
them out here in the San Joaquin Valley have a bad habit of riding on the wrong
side of the road.
A refinery fire, a power
outage, a uniquely Californian gasoline formula, years of regulating refineries
into stasis — all that has finally caught up with the state, as prices soar at
the pump. Yet what perplexes about California in extremis is the liberal
ability for our state government simply to ignore its own regulations, which it
has been using to paralyze businesses for years. For example, a panicked
Governor Brown just asked the state air-resources board to suspend the law that
requires gas stations to sell our special summer fuel formula through the month
of October. The state asserted that a one-time suspension would increase
supplies and yet not materially affect our air quality — which begs the
question: Why, if that is true, would such a regulation have been passed in the
first place?
California has the nation’s
highest gas taxes and fuel prices, and the tightest supplies — and reputedly
one of the worst-maintained infrastructures, with out-of-date, overcrowded, and
poorly maintained freeways. When I head home each week from Palo Alto, I feel
like an Odysseus fighting modern-day Lotus Eaters, Cyclopes, and Laestrygonians
to reach Ithaka, wondering what obstacle will sidetrack me this trip — huge
potholes, entire sections of the freeway reduced to one lane, or various poorly
marked detours? If the nation’s highest gas taxes give us all that, what might
the lowest bring?
Although the state is facing a
$16 billion annual budgetary shortfall, Governor Brown is determined to press
ahead with high-speed rail — estimated to cost eventually over $200 billion.
Such is his zeal that he intends to override the environmental lawsuits that
usually stymie private projects for years. The line is scheduled to pass a few
miles from my farm, its first link connecting Fresno and Corcoran, home to the
state prison that houses Charles Manson.
Yet a money-losing Amtrak line
already connects Fresno and Corcoran. I often ride my bike near the tracks and
notice the half-empty cars that zoom by. Most farmers here are perplexed about
why the state would wish to borrow billions and destroy thousands of acres of
prime farm land to duplicate this little-traveled link. Support for high-speed
rail is strongest in the San Francisco Bay Area, but there is no support for
beginning the project where the noise and dirty reality might be too close to
home for green utopians.
California schools rate among
the nation’s lowest in math and English, but our shrinking numbers of teachers
are among the country’s highest paid. One-third of the nation’s welfare
recipients live in California, and 8 out of the last 11 million people added to
the California population are enrolled in Medicaid, but we are also the most generous
state in sending remittances to foreign countries — we contribute a third to a
half of the estimated $50 billion that leaves the U.S. each year for Mexico and
elsewhere in Latin America. It is puzzling in the small towns of the San
Joaquin Valley to see both federal and state medical centers and nearby offices
that specialize in cash transfers to Mexico. But no one seems to see any
disconnect between the public need for free health care and the private desire
to send money to Mexico.
California has built the
nation’s largest prison system, but there is no room left in either state or
county facilities for an increasing number of dangerous felons. The same day
last week that I emptied my wallet for gas, my 15-hp ag irrigation pump simply
quit during the night. Nocturnal copper-wire thieves had come into the vineyard
and yanked out the electrical conduit. That’s the third theft of pump wire I’ve
had this year — and it costs $1,500 each time to repair the damage. I’m told
that Mexican national gangs go down to Los Angeles with their stolen copper to
sell it to mobile recyclers. No one calls the sheriff any more. Instead, we
swap stories about protective wire cages, spikes, cameras, lights, and booby
traps. Barack Obama once thundered, “Rich people are all for nonviolence. . . .
They don’t want people taking their stuff.” I plead guilty to his writ,
at least for a while longer. But I don’t agree that copper conduit is mere
“stuff” or that stealing it counts as social protest or that the thieves are necessarily
poor.
The criminals have a
sophisticated modus operandi, with lookouts who drive around and report by cell
phone when the coast is clear — green-lighting comrade thieves who in a matter
of minutes ride into the farm alleyways on bicycles, cut and pull the wire, and
pedal out with little noise and no headlights. Two nights ago, when I returned
to my farmhouse, an odd couple was sitting in a car — each one on a cell phone
— next to my mailbox. They claimed they did not speak English, but after some
harsh words they left — surprised and angry that I had dared to ask them to
leave my property.
It’s a veritable war these
days in rural central California — as copper-wire thieves, gangs, drug lords,
and fencers run amuck in a bankrupt state that can no longer afford to keep its
felons incarcerated. President Obama soars with talk of amnesty and the DREAM
Act. But if we are going to waive federal statutes for each illegal alien who
we feel may some day become a neurosurgeon or an experimental chemist, can’t we
at least enforce the law against those not in school and up to no good in the
here and now, like the two sitting in my driveway phoning directions for local
thieves to yank out copper wire?
Open borders,
redistributionist socialism, therapeutic and politicized public schools, and
public-employee unions finally are proving a match even for Apple, Google,
Facebook, the Napa Valley wine industry, Central Valley agribusiness,
Hollywood, Cal Tech, Stanford, and Berkeley. In California, it is a day-by-day
war between what nature and past generations have so generously bequeathed and
what our bunch has so voraciously consumed.
On any given day, beautiful
weather, the Pacific Coast, and the majestic Sierra Nevada are trumped by
released felons, $5-a-gallon gas, and a 1970 infrastructure crumbling beneath a
crowded 2012 state.
There are many lessons from
California. One is that the vision of the present administration is already
here — and it simply does not work.
No comments:
Post a Comment