Saturday, October 14, 2017

What Happens If California Exits The Nation

http://www.toptenz.net/10-things-happen-california-seceded.php



9 Responses

  1. The Annoyed Elephant
    The Annoyed Elephant at |
    Point #5 is critical, because Southern California’s economy is entirely built on the proposition that they can get enough water out of the desert to provide for many of the things that they provide in points 6-10. Once that water goes away, there will likely be a mass exodus to more water-rich regions, taking many of the crops and companies with them.
    Reply
  2. Matt
    Matt at |
    Ahahaha, the entry that talks about Canada makes it sound like we would say, “this item costs six hundred and twenty eight loonies!”
    And it makes it sound like Ontario is in Quebec!
    And then I see the author is Canadian… Come on buddy! ?
    Reply
  3. N_the_No
    N_the_No at |
    To add 850 miles of land border to secure would have an impact on one or both sides as well. Of course with California’s backwards ass way of thinking, where they put a huge burden on us residents for the well being of people who are not legal residents, I imagine the burden of securing the new border would largely fall on us if we wanted it controlled
    Reply
  4. Jeff
    Jeff at |
    Sounds to me like an article written by one begging “Please don’t let us go!”
    I believe the greater U.S. will accommodate Cali’s exit while hardly feeling a bump in the road. Speaking of roads ….. Hey California – Hit it! And start investing in desalinization plants. That, or dry up into the desert you came from. Get your Cali taxpayers to fund that!
    Reply
  5. Wrongway
    Wrongway at |
    I would leave California, the only reason I have any gun rights freedoms or property rights left is the U.S. constitution and bill of rights. I wouldn’t trust California leadership to preserve those things.
    Reply
  6. Steve
    Steve at |
    Rofl.
    You say Cali pays a large percentage of the federal tax. You fail to mention that they draw more from the government than any other state as well.
    To be perfectly frank, California doesn’t produce anything we would miss much. Do you have any idea how much farm land goes unplanted each year in the rest of the nation? If they pushed this, central California will soon be the desert it was when only native Americans knew it existed, and we would still have produce in our stores.
    The state is broke…and you can count on the business there, knowing it. There would be a mass exodus to US soil.
    Hollywood? Good riddance.
    There’s plenty of actual talent in other places on the earth, many of whom would be delighted to prove it.
    So…realistically, the only actual loss I see, are ports and wine. I wouldn’t count the redwoods, as with the loss of federal support, one good wildfire, and the overtaxed California government wouldn’t be able to save them…and of course without water….well, I bet you see the point.
    Some of what you mention would be sad to lose, but you give the state far too much credit as far as to the welfare of the rest of the country goes.
    Do I believe they would secede?
    First they can’t. That’s precedent.
    Second, the vote would come from LA, the bay/sac area, and perhaps San Diego. The remainder of the state is mostly sane.
    No, it won’t happen. The noise you hear is sword rattling.
    Reply
  7. Mr. Byrd
    Mr. Byrd at |
    A truly silly article. Let’s not forget that the government owns 45.8% of the land that falls within California’s borders. Federal lands located in the western portion of the state would have to be swapped out other, less desirable land. It is unlikely that if such a swap were to occur, California would have land access to Mexico. It would be surrounded by ocean and the hostile US.
    The biggest problem is mentioned above, though. And that’s water. If California could not work out deals on the importation of water, their agricultural prowess would disappear.
    It’s hard to imagine that major corporations that are based in California would stay. And as far as California culture goes. How needs it? The rest of the US (not to mention the world) would be much better off with less of Hollywood’s bilge. And regarding California’s wines, the good stuff is grossly overpriced. I live in the eastern US and routinely drink wines from Italy, Spain, and South America that are (except for the very best California has to offer) superior.
    I wold *love* to see California out of the US. Unfortunately, it is unlikely to happen.

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