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malloc's avatar

California liberals REALLY are not thinking about the consequences of transitioning whites out of power while also accelerating the growth of anti-white sentiment. It isn't even a conversation it's possible to have with anybody I know who still lives there. If it weren't easy to leave California then I'd be legitimately worried about genocide since this seems to be the recipe for modern genocide.

One thing I expect to happen is California will begin demanding taxes from anyone who leaves California, just like the US itself does, to combat the flight of capital and high-earners from the state. They can't enforce it unless you return, so... gonna be a lot of issues around air travel.

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Jarlis's avatar

This article touches on several arguments I've had over the years with an IRL friend about the future of California. The state is currently somewhere in the middle of a lopsided process of transformation whose endpoint could go in any number of directions, but said destination will depend of just how well certain externally enforced guardrails hold.

It's in the federal constitution that states making up the union need to maintain a "republican" form of government. Just what exactly is grandfathered in? Thanks to the constitution and the Supreme Court, California has been required to fund tons of minimum services for illegal immigrants. Once the state government turned sufficiently blue, this then expanded to further reinforce the state's redistributive patronage network. But there are limits. California can't pull a Canada or Germany and ban "hate speech". The state can't just go seizing private property left and right. No matter how full of holes our election standards are, there are limits to brazen ballot harvesting or the state arbitrarily banning candidates. "Reverse discrimination" can only go as far as the Supreme Court would let it. Finally, while the state can tax people who want to leave, it can't exactly construct a Berlin Wall around the state lines and outright shoot anyone who wants out.

California also has internal safety valves. The proposition system ostensibly kept the state-level ban on affirmative action in place. Prop 13 is, somehow, still a thing. A Boomer oligarchy still ultimately runs the show, not acolytes of Antonio Villaraigosa. For a long time to come, proposition voters will be to the socio-cultural right of the governor and other state level elected officials, who will in turn be to the right of the state legislature. Why? Citizens vote directly on propositions and indirectly for the policies of the state executive branch, intermediated through the party-state. But the legislative branch represents raw slices of the population pie, be they citizen, legal immigrant, or illegal immigrant counted by the census.

This all goes out the window if the national Dems pack the Supreme Court, and suddenly you can restrict free speech, run de facto fixed elections, implement hard racial quotas, or arbitrarily seize private property under greatly expanded conditions. Then the United States really does become a Greater California, without the protections of the current interpretation of constitutional rights. And it's far harder to migrate to another country than it is to just move to another state.

As an aside, this is why I'd never want to live in Texas long term. They don't have a proposition system as an interim safety valve. All it takes is one Blue Wave and Republicans (who seem to have a short term only vision like the national Republicans of old) would never win the state government there again (with the only likely slowdown guardrail being just how entrenched the Texas State Supreme Court is). At that point, why not just stay in California if you could afford it? This is why Florida is a much better longer term play... they at least have propositions (albeit with a 60% threshold needed to win) and no plethora of deep blue mega cities.

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