End State

Is California finished?

California remains America's state, but it also registers the state of America. It is the repository of America's dreams and fantasies, and it is integral to the country's wealth and prosperity, as well as the growing inequality they have fostered. To realize the California dream for a new generation--and to do it in a way that touches not just Menlo Park and Santa Barbara, but also Fresno and Modesto--California needs a new Master Plan, one that repairs its tattered educational system and reshapes its segmented economy. But it can't do that without a far-sighted government that can transcend faction and interest.

To be sure, California has defied its prophets of doom before, recreating and renewing itself. As someone who knocked on the Golden Door in an earlier era, I hope it does so again--for the country's sake as well as California's. But I have my doubts.

John B. Judis is a senior editor for The New Republic.

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COMMENTS (11)

10/26/2009 - 12:16am EDT |

Judis:

Paradise Lost: Is California Finished?

Time Magazine cover story:

Why California is still America's Future

I'll take a stab in the dark here:

The, uh, truth is somewhere in the middle?

gw

10/26/2009 - 7:11am EDT |

Differences. That is the source of the difficulty, not only in California, but in most every state. The states with the fewest problems? The states with the fewest differences. I grew up in a period (1950s) when the children had few differences, including academic differences. Most kids fit in the middle, with few at the bottom and few at the top. Today there is no middle, as kids are either at the bottom or at the top. How times have changed. And as long as there are differences, solving social problems will be elusive. And not only in public education. A major reason that health care reform has been so elusive, is because different groups have different health care systems. And ... view full comment

10/26/2009 - 11:20am EDT |

California is one great big experiment in direct democracy. It's failure to govern itself is a product of its own demographic problems to be sure. But other states in similar situations do a better job...Arizona for example. The problem in California is the initiative referendum system that allows voters to override their representatives. Madison, in Federalist #10, warned against just this sort of thing in preferring a republican (representative) government over a democracy (a direct democracy). His only real life reference in this regard was the trial of Socrates in the Athenian forum. Direct democracy was a failure in ancient Greece, Madison thought it was a bad idea in post-Colonia ... view full comment

10/26/2009 - 11:40am EDT |

California's gerrymandered legislative districts are also a problem. There are few competitive races. Until this is dealt with you will continue to have a very polarized legislative branch in California.

10/26/2009 - 12:44pm EDT |

As I drove over the Bay Bridge this morning the gorgeous October sun half-heartedly attempted to climb the sky, surfing its wave of time. Below me down there, in the Financial District, the stock market is up of late, leading to the usual short-term memory loss. So, far away, are the Yanks, among whom A-Rod has found an October stroke. You are all coming through in waves; California in decline isn't finished, even if it wanted to be. Just surfing a disturbance in spacetime.

Although I'm in biotech (part of the "good" economy), I'm around many on the downside of their personal waves. We hired a vet tech to help out part-time around our ranch; she needs the money: she may lose the house. My inb ... view full comment

10/26/2009 - 12:48pm EDT |

If CA's unemployement rate was 14% in 1949 and 12.2% today, that makes today's rate the highest in 60, not 70 years.

10/26/2009 - 1:57pm EDT |

I’m a third generation Californian (my great grandparents arrived on a wagon in the late 1800’s). Your comments about the initiative and referendum system (and the follow up comments by other readers) are spot on.

However, leaving politics aside, I only wanted to comment on your memory trip back to the 60’s (“trekking to the Fillmore to hear the Grateful Dead, living in sin, smoking pot, and marching against racial discrimination and the Vietnam war.”) I too, lived through the 60’s as a University student in the SF Bay area. I wouldn’t be surprised if we were in the same place at the same time on more than one occasion. I’ll just add the Rolling Stones Altamont concert to ... view full comment

10/27/2009 - 12:11pm EDT |

(1) Yard!

(2) What we do know is that experience is the greatest vehicle for learning. And maybe the only way to begin to bridge the inequality gap in an ecology like California's--and by extension, America's--is to regulate large paychecks with community service expectations. For the only way to make global insurance stock-derivators care about libraries and schools and service jobs is to make them work for libraries and schools and hotels. Then they might see with their own goddamn eyes the dilapidation of the infrastructure the next generations will assume is normal. You want a $700 million bonus and a tax holiday on that bonus? Fine. But you can only have it after you've shoveled ... view full comment

10/27/2009 - 4:21pm EDT |

YARD! Welcome back!

Judis article leaves out the effects of illegal immigration and the power of the public employee unions. Both explain a great deal about CA's curent predicament.

That Godawful political system isn't helping, either.

10/28/2009 - 10:23am EDT |

I just hope the rest of the nation will not be forced to "bail" California out. For years Californians have been swilling programs and services only to turn around and vote against the very taxes necessary to pay for them.

11/03/2009 - 12:20am EDT |

Mr. Judis:

Next time you are in Oakland, feel free to visit my classroom at Oakland High School, where you can meet a large number of bright, hard working 1st and 2nd generation immigrant students in an AP World History class. It is hard to feel TOO pessimistic about California after spending time with them

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