http://news.yahoo.com/billionaires-breakup-plan-chop-california-six-states-012144464.html
7/15/2014 9:21:16 AM
this would be terrible for most of California and really great for some of it
7/15/2014 9:24:18 AM
Yeah it's crazy. There would be some really poor areas I think. All that desert area
7/15/2014 9:39:26 AM
7/15/2014 10:11:32 AM
[old]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_and_secession_in_CaliforniaThe big issue I see is the inevitable custody battle over California Pizza Kitchen.
7/15/2014 10:24:17 AM
gerrymandered statesyay
7/15/2014 11:26:41 AM
It's not actually going to happen. If they were to actually divide it though, an east/west split is much more appropriate since that's where the schism lies. Up and down the coast is pretty liberal/wealthy, while inland skews conservative/rural. Personally, I like a unified CA more than a chopped up one. If Central CA/Southern CA ever became a state, it would be a shithole, sans San Diego. Imperial County is already a third world country. Kern county isn't much better either. [Edited on July 15, 2014 at 2:48 PM. Reason : .]
7/15/2014 2:47:30 PM
Lol the number one product in most of extreme N CA would be meth...
7/15/2014 3:52:05 PM
800k out of 38 Million peoplethat's like 0.02% of the stateyep, huge support
7/15/2014 4:23:04 PM
The only people supporting this are hillbillies that practically live in another state now anyway (i.e. Jefferson) and retards that live in the desert and wastelands on the Central Valley. Republicans are going the way of the dodo in CA and this is a last ditch effort for them to make a bit of noise and fuck with Jerry Brown's impending landslide. Not happening.
7/15/2014 4:36:47 PM
I'm glad they have their signatures. It's one less thing to be harassed about outside the grocery store.I'm not voting for this shit though.]]
7/15/2014 5:11:36 PM
7/15/2014 9:21:25 PM
I really hate most Californians
7/15/2014 10:38:19 PM
Haha Sayer sucks at math.[Edited on July 15, 2014 at 10:46 PM. Reason : ^ why's that?]
7/15/2014 10:45:07 PM
7/16/2014 12:42:10 AM
or 2%... i hate math
7/16/2014 9:06:09 AM
^^^ same reason a lot of North Carolinians hate folks from NJ/NY
7/16/2014 9:27:21 AM
but Californians don't have annoying accents and aren't moving to this area in huge numbers
7/16/2014 9:40:38 AM
On my visits to San Diego I noticed that most don't posses the "Southern Hospitality" that I'm familiar with... just little things like smiling and saying hi when you pass someone in the parking lot. They seemed friendlier in San Francisco though.
7/16/2014 9:48:45 AM
7/16/2014 10:48:10 AM
Oh, I didn't realize he lived in Washington or Oregon
7/16/2014 11:22:50 AM
7/16/2014 11:59:53 AM
why would liberals not be opposed to this? What is liberal about helping out the 1% in Silicon Valley?
7/16/2014 12:35:24 PM
Californians =/= YankeesI know ncstatetke has probably never left the state, but damnAnd pretty much EVERYONE except tea party loons and gun nuts would oppose this. Liberals already have a super majority in the state, so there's no benefit to this idiotic plan. SV is already incredibly rich, and there's a growing backlash in SF against the tech industry and rich investors pouring in since they're driving out the poor/middle class. [Edited on July 16, 2014 at 12:39 PM. Reason : .]
7/16/2014 12:36:29 PM
7/16/2014 12:37:28 PM
7/16/2014 12:42:40 PM
Maybe a few, out of touch corporate billionaires, but I highly doubt SF/Bay Area voters will show their support come election time. [Edited on July 16, 2014 at 12:45 PM. Reason : it won't pass. ]
7/16/2014 12:44:58 PM
most voters won't, but company owners and executives will like it
7/16/2014 12:54:29 PM
they can like the idea of it all they want. it won't pass.
7/16/2014 1:00:59 PM
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Six-Californias-initiative-falls-short-of-5751683.phpnot surprised that it failed to collect enough signatures. also not surprised 750k idiots thought it was a good idea either
9/12/2014 5:42:01 PM
9/12/2014 6:16:17 PM
9/13/2014 2:25:04 PM
9/13/2014 6:29:26 PM
Orange County and Santa Barbara City are very Republican areas.
9/13/2014 9:57:09 PM
9/14/2014 4:20:14 PM
maybe if you are talking about small cities or considering something like monte carlo a major city. San Fran has surpassed New York and London. Also in real estatehttp://www.forbes.com/sites/trulia/2014/05/14/top-10-least-and-most-expensive-housing-markets-for-todays-middle-class/
9/14/2014 7:57:14 PM
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101468652#.
9/14/2014 11:23:56 PM
Are you sure you read the article or watched the video? How many people does "what can $1 million buy you?" actually affect?
9/15/2014 7:13:24 PM
I don't know anything about how this split works politically, but the idea itself is good.https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/06/13/voters-decide-if-calf-should-3-states/697054002/[Edited on June 13, 2018 at 10:52 AM. Reason : .]
6/13/2018 10:50:22 AM
Why do you think this is a good idea?Also, Southern California ends at the Tehachapis.
6/13/2018 11:19:24 AM
It's a terrible idea and it won't happen. I'd much rather just have CA leave altogether than to allow SV dbags to Gerrymander it
6/13/2018 11:46:31 AM
https://www.thenation.com/article/this-political-scientist-says-the-left-needs-to-battle-for-democracy-as-viciously-as-the-right-fights-for-power/A better solution would be to get rid of the senate, but that won't happen either.[Edited on June 13, 2018 at 1:05 PM. Reason : .]
6/13/2018 1:04:50 PM
^that is an amusing read. How can anyone think that the Democrats just need to get a simple majority of the house and senate, eliminate the filibuster, and then create an additional 14 dark blue senate seats by making Puerto Rico and DC states and then chopping California into 6 pieces? California polling indicates most citizens aren't onboard with the movement. DC becoming a state would require an amendment to the constitution, which they aren't getting with a simple majority. It's unclear whether Puerto Ricans want statehood, as the voter response on the last ballot was abysmal and previous votes always shot the notion down. With Puerto Rico, even some democrats in congress are going to have trouble voting to bring on a state with twice the poverty rate of Mississippi and all the financial burdens that come along with that.
6/13/2018 1:51:35 PM
I posted it for the viewpoint on California, but as far as Puerto Rico, they are overwhelmingly in favor of statehood. 2017 turnout was low (23%), but 97% voted in favor.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puerto_Rican_status_referendum,_2017And it’s funny that you say low turnout invalidates the results because your man Trump only received an effective 26%, and far less if you consider the primaries. [Edited on June 13, 2018 at 2:08 PM. Reason : .]
6/13/2018 2:08:19 PM
contrast that 23% turnout against the 60-78% voter turnout of the previous 4 referendums for statehood that all resulted in majority no votes. The reason the turnout was so low yet so much in favor this time was due to a boycott on the referendum. Why show up to vote no when simply not showing up at all was supposed to be the same as a no vote? Trying to spin this into Puerto Rico somehow being heavily in favor of statehood is very deceptive.
6/13/2018 5:00:45 PM
The last referendum before this one was in 2012 and 61% voted for statehood.Either way, no taxation without representation. The majority want statehood or independence.Back to California...[Edited on June 13, 2018 at 5:44 PM. Reason : .]
6/13/2018 5:38:40 PM
That's a gross misrepresentation. The preceeding question on that ballot was "Should Puerto Rico continue its current territorial status?", on which 970,910 voted No (51.7%) 828,077 voted Yes (44.1%), and 79,982 were left blank (4,2%). For the following question of "Which non-territorial option do you prefer", 515,348 left it blank(27.4%), 834,191 chose statehood(44.4%), 454,768 chose free association(24.2%), and 74,895 chose independence(4%).Due to the way the questions were framed, more people voted for a non-territorial option (1,363,854) than actually supported a non-territorial option (970,910). There's no way to know what non-territorial option was selected by the people who supported changing Puerto Rico's status, but even in the best case scenario of every statehood voter also voting no, that only works out to 44.4% support for statehood. The actual number is likely in the 25-35% range.Contrast this 2012 vote, with 78% turnout of registered voters, against the 2016 vote with 23% turnout, and it looks like the support for statehood has remained at a similarly low level.
6/13/2018 6:26:06 PM