Fair points. The idea of an SAR for something as big as CA doesn't quite work, whereas for something like NYC would make a good amount of sense. I think the UK/Scotland model or the UK and commonwealth model of nations is much closer to what I'm loosely envisioning. And yeah, I do realize that Scotland didn't vote 'yes' to leave the UK, and it overwhelming voted 'no' to Brexit, so yeah it's not a great example either. While all the other commonwealth nations pay lip service to the Queen, it's mostly just symbolic. They've still got their own governments and elections. As far as currency goes, I have mixed thoughts. I think using the US dollar would be easier given proximity and trade, but California has enough wealth to back its own currency if it wanted to to distance themselves a bit. The US might like this to prop up its own dollar.I guess my point is that neither of these unique situations stemmed from anything as bloody and costly as the US civil war, which is what everyone assumes would have to happen.[Edited on November 15, 2016 at 5:18 PM. Reason : .]
11/15/2016 5:12:29 PM
11/15/2016 8:49:56 PM
Alright, instead of taking the time to respond to each of the specific points you've brought up on the blue book, I'll point out that 'YesCA' is a PAC, and there's actually a political party with an actual platform:http://www.californianational.party/en_US/The two are related, but they don't have the same goals or platforms and kinda try to distance themselves from each other. I had issues with a lot of the policies or hypothetical outcomes in the blue book (why the fuck do they bother talking about the Olympics ???), but I agreed with a lot of the justifications for wanting independence- nearly all of them. I'm still not convinced of the actual political platform either, but I'd like to learn more about it, given they have more logical solutions for the military issue which is a pretty big fucking deal. All of this stuff is pretty new to me, and like I've said, I still don't think it will actually happen. But am I curious? Absolutely. Do I like the idea of an Independent CA? Without a doubt, especially given the current circumstances. If this clunky and naive proposal was all that was on the ballot, then yeah, there's no fucking way it would pass. But 2019 isn't exactly around the corner. There's some time to have a much more detailed and feasible plan, if experts, policy wonks, historians, etc decided they wanted to take part.[Edited on November 15, 2016 at 9:25 PM. Reason : .]
11/15/2016 9:24:52 PM
11/15/2016 11:06:55 PM
I love how you took the time to read my posts and cherry picked certain parts of it to attack, while leaving off entirely relevant information I've supplied because you have no rebuttal- some of it it in the same freaking sentence. But you're aaronburro, so that's to be expected. I'm glad you're so worked up though
11/15/2016 11:17:04 PM
I see no rebuttals anywhere. You argued that CA has insufficient political influence. I argue that it has over 10% influence over the national gov't. You complain that no environmental regulations that CA wants get passed; I show that large parts of the US economic system is heavily influenced by CA environmental regulations. Where is your rebuttal?You tried to suggest that someone was making a strawman argument; I showed that the exact argument you claim isn't being made is actually being made by the "secessionists." Where is your rebuttal?You think that US military protection for free isn't an expense. Where is your rebuttal?You've repeatedly been called out for having a pie-in-the-sky belief that, somehow, someway, the entirety of human history is to be ignored when considering what happens when one part of a nation tries to separate from the rest of the nation. Literally, your only rebuttal to that has been "hey, maybe it'll be different this time!" Maybe. But maybe I'll shit a bucket of skittles tomorrow, too.I don't know what you are smoking, but I want some of it.
11/16/2016 12:34:37 AM
11/16/2016 11:20:41 AM
While this whole thing has just been fantastic, I think my favorite part is your suggested mandatory military service. Oh man that would go over so well
11/16/2016 11:36:22 AM
Actually, the platform says EITHER military service OR peace corps type service.
11/16/2016 11:45:52 AM
if california goes the US should annex all of the colorado river
11/16/2016 12:44:52 PM
11/16/2016 12:45:00 PM
we're, like, totally tubular about the environment bro
11/16/2016 12:52:24 PM
^^ I'm glad you think climate change is a joke. It just proves my point for me.
11/16/2016 1:16:03 PM
11/16/2016 9:01:40 PM
Again, you're cherry picking parts of my posts to attack, while ignoring facts or logic I've posted.What is your response to the wallet hub link I posted? Californians have the least say of any state in presidential elections, and that's what prompted this whole discussion for many of us in the first place. On top of that, we rank dead last when you look at Senators. We get two, while Wyoming and Vermont get two as well? We have 40 million people. In what world is that fair? This isn't the 1700s anymore when there were thirteen colonies, you know. So 10 % representation in congress is supposed to make up for these two huge deficits? Um ok? 90% of the rest of congress can essentially do whatever it wants and it frequently does, regardless of what anything California has to say about it. You're also still not acknowledging the reality that California sends out more federal tax dollars ($16B btw) than it receives. We are essentially funding states like Mississippi and Arkansas who have some of the worst poverty in the nation and we can't even tackle our own as a result.As for global warming, you haven't acknowledged Donald Trump being a climate change denier either. Claiming global warming was a hoax invented by the Chinese were actually words that he said:https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/265895292191248385?lang=enAre you going to deny he said them? Or do you want us to give him a chance or assume he wasn't being serious? The mother fucker came to California and claimed there is no drought! http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/onpolitics/2016/05/28/donald-trump-tells-californians-there-no-drought/85082174/Y'all keep insisting that California and Americans don't view the world differently, but this is about as glaring of an example as I can think of.I'm not going to bicker with you back and forth about a potential military strategy somewhere down the line in a country that doesn't even exist yet, but I will say this. You don't see the US as an imperialist and bully, while I do. I come from a very long line of US military vets and have a lot respect for their service to America, but the America they fought for just elected Donald fucking Trump, so let that sink in for a minute. As a general principal, I'm opposed to going to war with other countries for any reason but self defense or a direct attack on our closet/immediate allies. I never enlisted or joined ROTC because I felt like the US was waging wars I couldn't bring myself to fight in. I'm not at all suggesting anyone who risked their lives and fought for my freedom was "wrong" for doing so, and I extend my overwhelming gratitude and respect to them, but morally and ethically I just don't buy into America playing the role it does. Bash me all you want for it, but I'd rather fulfill whatever hypothetical mandatory military obligations a new California Republic demanded of me to earn citizenship (so long as I knew I wouldn't be shipped off on some imperial mission across the world) than voluntarily sign up to take part in the US' watchdog and imperialist efforts. Can you for a second try to see where I'm coming from now? And finally, the whole gun issue- and again, this is based on a hypothetical scenario somewhere down the line in a country that doesn't even exist yet- is going to have to be determined by the new CA government. I would suspect that separate states or regions would have different laws and regulations that would determined when the new government was formed. In order for that to happen, people are going to have to compromise. You're making a really faulty assumption about how all liberals view guns btw. I'm pretty damn liberal, but I don't hate guns and want to take them away from everybody- at least not in practice (a world without any gun violence would be wonderful). I do want it more difficult for crazy and violent people to get them, and I do think handguns in urban areas don't mix very well, but I also have parents who are gun enthusiasts and enjoy hunting. This whole straw man of liberals trying to take away every single person's gun needs to stop. Switzerland has an incredibly high gun ownership rate, yet they don't have our gun violence problems. Is it perhaps a cultural thing? At any rate, if you actually look at the CNP platform, it doesn't discuss guns at all. Hmm. I wonder why? It talks about universal health care, free college for everyone, and even the idea of exposing the concept of a universal basic income (huh???), but I can't find anything about guns. Perhaps it's because the issue is too polarizing to deal with right now, and the goal of the movement is to try to appeal to as many people as possible?I'm fine with people trying to pick apart scenarios for what would need to happen down the road, but I still think Californians should be able to present a case for why they want to become independent. I thought America was supposed to be a democracy where citizens get to vote for the government of their choosing...This guy gets it:http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-waters-calexit-right-secession-20161115-story.html[Edited on November 17, 2016 at 3:24 AM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 3:21:52 AM
why do you keep talking about californians like they are a unified group when california is politically split in ways that mirror the rest of the countryyou use donald trump to highlight how california thinks differently from the rest of america, but here is how california voted in the presidential election:3.6 million people voted for trump, california is split like everywhere else[Edited on November 17, 2016 at 8:18 AM. Reason : thats over a million more idiots than north carolina]
11/17/2016 8:09:56 AM
Climate change isn't a joke. Never has been, always has been part of the planet. Alarmist, cripple the economy to appease Gaia, climate change however, is. California is doing itself zero favors by shutting down it's nuclear power plants. And large parts of California have historically had droughts, so it's ironic to see unsustainably high population centers built in dry climates and then cry about water problems.But I don't want to sidetrack the main points of the Calexit debate here, so please carry on with the lunacy.
11/17/2016 9:11:11 AM
11/17/2016 10:56:27 AM
^^^That map is misleading in the same way the map of the US to show blue/red states is misleading too. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/10/improved-election-map-cartograms/Here's the population breakdown of some of those red counties that look huge, but have so few people. A lot of them have less less than 30k people.http://www.latimes.com/projects/la-pol-ca-california-voting-history/The only ones of them that have any substantial population are Kern county and Tulare county. Aside from that, Orange County, an ethnically diverse, populous Republican stronghold, went blue for the first time since 1936. And again, the whole point of a new CA would be to allow more local government at all levels.
11/17/2016 11:01:02 AM
11/17/2016 11:27:34 AM
It's literally 45 minutes from the Bay Area to Stockton. Not sure you could have two areas so close yet so far apart.
11/17/2016 11:36:36 AM
^ wat? Stockton voted blue dude. And you're right, they are night and day places.^^Yes, I realize 3.6M people voted for Trump. Clinton still won 60%+ of the vote and it wasn't just in the "blue oasis" I'm living in. And for the last time, I'm not denying there aren't cultural differences within CA. You still haven't addressed some of the progressive ballot initiatives that passed with 60% + of the vote or higher. Prop 52 passed in all counties, so did 54 and 58. All but 5 counties voted to extend taxes on the wealthy for the next 12 years. Prop 57 passed by 63% and the vast majority of counties. Those are LOCAL issues that affect Californians directly. http://projects.sfchronicle.com/2016/election/Oh, and go back and read the context behind my statement when I said there were glaring difference between the US and CA. I was talking about the environment. You may not think so, but most Californians care a lot more about the environment than other parts of the country. We have the laws to prove it, while people like TKE-TEG and aaronburro are pissed about lightbulbs and gas cans.[Edited on November 17, 2016 at 11:53 AM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 11:47:25 AM
what do you mean, "i haven't..."you are the one talking about californians thinking different than the rest of the country, acting like they are unified, when its clearly evident that they have the same kind of different ideas as the rest of the country[Edited on November 17, 2016 at 11:53 AM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 11:52:35 AM
If California is just as divided as the rest of the country (which was nowhere near a 60/40 split), why was it able to pass progressive states laws like prison reform, taxing the wealthy, making legislation transparent, and bilingual education essentially by every county? And NO, the rest of the country wouldn't have voted for these things. I didn't even mention marijuana or school bonds which passed easily, I'm talking about other issues. [Edited on November 17, 2016 at 11:56 AM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 11:55:56 AM
11/17/2016 11:57:54 AM
^^ 60/40 is not unitedjesus fuck
11/17/2016 12:03:11 PM
^ 61.5% vs 33% is sure closer than how the rest of the country voted. And you're still not addressing the issues that passed in every county. Are they not progressive or a reflection of Californian values? Are they just a coincidence?^^To be a leader? To not have to be held back by people who refuse to want to listen? There's a meme floating around with the image of an adult taking an oxygen mask down while on an airplane and putting on themself first before their child. It says something like, "before helping others, you must first help yourself"Yeah, it's a condescending message, but it's still true.[Edited on November 17, 2016 at 12:10 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 12:03:27 PM
I don't know what your definition of being a leader is, but completely removing any influence you have from the discussion is not among those qualities. But then again, you are being informed by internet memes, so there isn't much reasoning with that level of thinking.
11/17/2016 12:18:28 PM
Leadership by example. LA has demonstrably reduced pollution to pre 1990s levels despite huge population growth. It did so by passing aggressive emission laws. CA wants to be a world leader in solar and wind technology, while the US is busy fracking the shit out of America causing big earthquakes in Oklahoma. Energy companies in Wyoming are trying their very best to tap into Yellowstone to make money. How can you be a leader when those around you refuse to follow or take you seriously? Sometimes it's best to cut your losses and move on. [Edited on November 17, 2016 at 12:27 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 12:23:21 PM
11/17/2016 12:36:55 PM
It's not an exaggeration. It's an actual possibility. Notice how I used the word "might" as a qualifier I shouldn't have said "entire" east coast though. My bad. It would just be the parts that matter like NYC, Boston, DC, Philly and Miami [/NorCalSnob][Edited on November 17, 2016 at 12:47 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 12:42:33 PM
11/17/2016 1:33:24 PM
I'm glad you agree! Still waiting on that dtownral rebuttal to the ballot initiates that passed in every county. Oh, and Kamala Harris won in every county too for US senate.
11/17/2016 1:58:14 PM
Thread of the year
11/17/2016 3:05:11 PM
^^ i'm sorry, are you pretending like other states haven't passed ballot initiatives?in addition to marijuana, 4 states increased minimum wages with targets exceeding california, arizona also has guaranteed paid time off, 2 other states passed new gun controls, main fucking passed rank voting, etc...california only had so many ballot initiatives because the bar to get on the ballot was so low (which is dangerous). Am I supposed to pretend like california is more progressive than fucking vermont because they don't allow public ballot measures?
11/17/2016 3:46:35 PM
I'm just responding to the argument you personally invented about California being just as divided as the US is. For the last time, I never once said there aren't cultural and political issues between Californians- there's roughly 40 million of us; it's to be expected. However, 5/12 ballot initiatives passed in either every of California's 58 counties or close to it. I'm sorry you don't have a rebuttal for Kamala Harris winning every single county either. I guess you could make excuses or move the goal posts and say that the red counties didn't have a choice so they had to vote for her anyway (do you know how liberal she actually is? LOL), but it's a dumb argument, given how the GOP won plenty of seats in Congress, which happens in other populous and/or diverse states too. In this case, you simply don't know what they fuck you're talking about. You've presented logical rebuttals to some of my previous claims, and you generally know what you're talking about when it comes to most political matters, but if you're trying to suggest the CA and the US are just as divided, you don't have any quantifiable way to support it at the moment, unfortunately. [Edited on November 17, 2016 at 4:15 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 4:04:15 PM
11/17/2016 4:37:56 PM
Look, several of you made the claim that because many small, rural counties in CA voted for Trump (and Kern/Tulare counties), it means that the state is just as divided as America, and I guess you're implying that compromise will never happen. I am just relying on recent, quantifiable evidence to show that while, yes, Trump did earn 33% of the vote, the STATE passed a dozen progressive initiatives (5/12 with essentially all 58 counties voting 'yes) that will have a direct impact on issues in CA. Ballot initiatives aren't passed all that often here, so either these ones were expertly written and appealing, or maybe Californians agree on more than you all think. The fact that Kamala Harris won all 58 and is a hardcore and aggressive liberal is just icing on the cake at this point since nobody seems to be able to have an argument for it. In sum, California isn't nearly as divided as you are claiming. Move the goal post, change your argument, whatever; you don't have any proof other than "Well, Hillary only won by 61% to 33%, so there!" [Edited on November 17, 2016 at 4:57 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2016 4:50:42 PM
We are all aware 1st generation immigrant anchor babies are dependent on big gov and vote for Clinton.
11/17/2016 6:13:59 PM
Over a million more Americans voted for trump in California than here in NC. California has left-right splits the same as everywhere else, I showed you the maps. Are they more progressive than some states, yes. Are the substantially different from all other states or the US? No. You are an idiot, and you rich California liberals are making democrats look terrible. Stop it.
11/17/2016 6:16:54 PM
11/17/2016 7:42:15 PM
Northern Califronia is very different but so is western oregon and Washington. Cascadia makes a lot of sense.
11/17/2016 7:49:29 PM
11/18/2016 9:22:49 AM
[Edited on November 18, 2016 at 10:37 AM. Reason : .]
11/18/2016 10:37:07 AM
sweet, one of my favorite gifs
11/18/2016 12:48:44 PM
Hey man, it's nothing personal. We just view the environment in completely opposite ways and we probably won't ever come to an agreement. I just have a huge problem with dtownral trying to minimize such differences and suggest that CA is the same thing as the rest of America when it really isn't. I've lived in many places in the US (NC, VA, NY, MD, AZ, and CA) and visited 44 of out the 50 states, I kinda get how the rest of the US and CA are pretty different.Anyway, look! More news:http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-elections/canada-invite-liberal-us-states-break-away-donald-trump-america-a7418341.htmlhttp://mobile.nytimes.com/2016/11/20/opinion/sunday/i-wish-we-all-could-be-californian.htmlhttp://www.thenational.scot/news/14912848.After_Donald_Trump__California_s_dreaming_of_going_it_alone/http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/politics/should-california-oregon-and-washington-join-canada-calexit-talk-envelops-west-coast/http://www.cnn.com/2016/11/10/politics/calexit-donald-trump/https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/nov/09/trump-win-california-secede-calexit-silicon-valley[Edited on November 18, 2016 at 2:19 PM. Reason : .]
11/18/2016 2:18:57 PM
I love the delusional view Californians have of their state from within their gated communities. California is quickly declining into Mexico 2.0, with absurd taxes, regulations, inflation, and state debt.When the orange man builds a wall, he should wall off Cali too, to quarantine the cancer.
11/18/2016 2:42:51 PM
Cool, so you'll help us pack our bags? Awesome!
11/18/2016 2:46:11 PM
Oddly enough, more people are leaving California than coming in. I guess the liberal policies that have resulted in taxes, debt, inflation, crime, riots, and no middle class aren't appealing to people unless they are crossing over from Mexico.
11/18/2016 2:53:27 PM
So, yes?
11/18/2016 2:54:58 PM