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The Atlas of California. Suresh K. Lodha
Читать онлайн.Название The Atlas of California
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780520966864
Автор произведения Suresh K. Lodha
Издательство Ingram
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and thence to Japanese internment in World War II, exploitation of Bracero “guest workers”, beating of farm labor organizers, and blaming “illegal aliens” for budget shortfalls. Not everyone has shared in the California Dream. Racism has often served a useful purpose for those who benefitted from the dominant position of White people. Miners profited from the slave labor of natives, Irish benefitted from tighter labor markets incurred through boycotts of Chinese workers, and Okies were able to move to the cities when Braceros were imported to do farm work. Even clearer are the benefits won by upper-class Whites, by such means as paying lower wages to “colored labor”, eliminating Japanese farmers as competitors, creating exclusive residential areas in cities and suburbs, and more. The misuse of power has been a repeated theme in California history, from the state’s birth as a child of colonialism to its 20th century role as a military launchpad for American wars and adventures around the world. If the Spanish empire left traces in crumbling missions, a few presidios and many lovely place names, while the Russians left only a single site, Fort Ross, the American empire continues to leave a deep imprint on California geography. This has been the most militarized of all the states, as shown in Chapter 2. Militarized crime control has left its mark, as well, in the Golden Gulag of prisons and jails across the state, and a more subtle one on the legal codes, the make-up of the judiciary, and lives of millions of young men of color. These tangible geographies of power are closely linked to California politics, as well. The state was a leader in the neo-conservative wave of the last two generations (often called, confusingly, “neo-liberalism”). California sent Ronald Reagan to the White House in 1980, along with half his cabinet, where they presided over a political revolution, one that dismantled much of the New Deal/Social Welfare state in the US and introduced a new set of principles based on freeing up markets, cutting taxes and shrinking government, and letting the successful get richer and the unsuccessful fend for themselves. California led the pack in many of the key domains of neo-conservative policy: the wars on crime and drugs, deregulating banks and finance, and building up the border wall between the US and Mexico. Most famously, it gave birth to the “tax revolt” with Proposition 13 in 1978, among other revenue-reducing accomplishments. The effects of these political shifts on government, budgets, and incarceration are detailed in Chapter 2. State and local governments in California have been hovering on bankruptcy for 30 years, and several cities and school districts have tipped over the edge. For years the parties, the legislature and the governor’s office have been deadlocked and ineffective, while too many of the enlightened features of California’s postwar civilization have eroded: schools, universities, pensions, healthcare, safety, housing—and, one might say, even humanity towards one another. This comes at the worst time possible, just as the state needs to cope with the education of millions of young people of color—the legacy of mass immigration to feed the booming labor markets of the 1970s and 1980s. The schools and colleges are bursting at the seams at the same time as they are having their budgets slashed, making it that much harder for young people to get a good education. On top of this, healthcare costs in California, as throughout the US, have skyrocketed, weighing heavily on the budgets of households, corporations, and governments trying to care for the sick and aged. But the state is not doing the job it should in seeing to it that all its citizens are adequately insured or that they have sufficient pensions to live out their days without want, as discussed in Chapters 7 and 8. Today, the shine has gone off the Golden State. So it is more important than ever to take the mythology of California’s blessings and success with a grain of salt. There is a sense of fading glory, despite the gloss of iPhones and Oscars. On the whole, the California economy has stumbled into the 21st century, despite the fame of Silicon Valley and Hollywood and the billions racked up by high tech and entertainment giants like Apple and Disney.
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California has created too few new jobs for too long, and it absolutely cratered in the Great Recession, with over 2 million workers unemployed and some of the highest unemployment rates in the country, whether measured by state, county, or metropolitan area. This was the vortex of the housing bubble, with more price inflation and bad loans than any other state, ending with a crash that left more lost value, house foreclosures and underwater mortgages than anywhere in the world, as we note in Chapter 4. Recovery has been slow and painful, even five years after the crash. The problems run even deeper than recession indicators or government budget deficits, however. While California has a long history as a financial center and a place of periodic financial shenanigans, as discussed in Chapter 3, it has been Wall Street West when it comes to the present age of greed, going back to Michael Milken’s dodgy Junk Bond empire run out of LA and the Savings and Loan debacle of the 1980s. In the 2000s, California banks such as Countrywide Savings and Golden West Savings were the worst offenders in issuing subprime, adjustable rate, and jumbo mortgages, setting up homeowners for the fall. And the reason there were so many people ready to take the bait was that house prices had bloated up out of reach of ordinary household incomes, which had been stagnant for years among the lower half of wage earners, as noted in Chapter 4. Even more disturbing in light of California’s history of relative equality and a wide middle class, the state has recently been in the vanguard when it comes to widening inequality. On the one hand, wages and salaries have gone nowhere fast, and poverty rates have shot up with every recession, as remarked upon in Chapters 3 and 8. On the other hand, people at the top have done all too well. The top 10 to 20 percent of professional, technical, and managerial workers have ridden their skills and position to happy heights on the tsunami of high-tech profits. Even worse has been the untrammeled enrichment of the top 1 percent—even 0.1 percent—of wealth holders. California has more billionaires and millionaires than any other state, led by tech heroes, movie moguls and investment bankers. Companies like Apple, Chevron, and Wells Fargo are awash in money. At the same time, inequality has grown to the worst levels in US history, California has become the most racially diverse state in the country, in which the vast majority of working people are people of color, and Whites have become a minority. California is one of the great experiments of our time in the potential for a racially blended society, the hope—never realized—of the Great American Melting Pot and the possibility of a non-White working class joining the ranks of that other idolized entity, the Great American Middle Class. There are certainly hopeful signs, such as the rising percentage of mixed-race children in the state and the surging numbers of young college students of color on the