Why Is California Broke? Here's A Clue

fmdog44

Well-known Member
Location
Houston, Texas
I ordered two pair tweezers and today I got them and saw something that could be a joke in any joke book. These again, are tweezers!! On both envelopes containing each pair of tweezers was the following message exactly as it was printed:

"WARNING FOR CALIFORNIA USERS
Pursuant to California Health and Safety Code Section 25229, 6 The Distribution Of This Product Warns You That This Product May Contain Substances Known to The State Of California To Cause Cancer and/or Reproductive Toxicity"

(Notice the use or misuse of capitol letters)

These are laws passed by California legislators.
 

CA is home for .333% of America's welfare recipients while have 12% of America's population. The COL is hideously high and they are choking to death on insane govt. regulations.
 
Check this out... https://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article210645664.html

Lawmakers are asking Gov. Jerry Brown for $1 billion, a large portion of which would fund a major expansion of Medi-Cal, the state's low-income health care program. Roughly a quarter of the request – $250 million – would extend Medi-Cal to undocumented immigrant adults who are ineligible for coverage.

"We are California. We don't follow, we lead," said Assemblyman Joaquin Arambula, D-Frenso, author of Assembly Bill 2965, which would qualify all undocumented adults for Medi-Cal.

 
I think in the past that their budget showed a surplus, but during the course of the year, they borrowed so much money that they ended up with another deficit added to their already over the top deficit. I also believe that they have a junk bond rating, so that when they do borrow money, they borrow it at a very high interest rate. Their illegal immigrants cost them an ungodly amount of money each year, yet they continue to keep their doors open and now they are taking in immigrants from wherever. I, as an investor, would never consider buying any of their bonds. I am surprised that any of the big banks continue to loan them any money.
 
... I also believe that they have a junk bond rating, so that when they do borrow money, they borrow it at a very high interest rate. Their illegal immigrants cost them an ungodly amount of money each year, yet they continue to keep their doors open and now they are taking in immigrants from wherever. I, as an investor, would never consider buying any of their bonds. I am surprised that any of the big banks continue to loan them any money.

The amount of disinformation circulated sometimes astounds me.

CA bond ratings (full chart with 39 states rated: https://www.treasurer.ca.gov/ratings/current.asp:

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As was pointed out recently on Quora.com, you really do not want ANY children, but especially the poor (whether citizens or not) who traditionally live in crowded conditions, to go unvaccinated. There have already been incidents in the U.S. of measles, chicken pox and pertussis reappearing in greater numbers due to the anti-vaxx movement.

CA budget - as an update, 2017/18 surplus came in at almost $9 billion:

Jerry Brown’s Legacy: A $6.1 Billion Budget Surplus in California
WS Journal June 10, 2018
(subscriber only: https://www.wsj.com/articles/jerry-...llion-budget-surplus-in-california-1515624022)

(excerpt)
LOS ANGELES—California Gov. Jerry Brown appears poised to exit office next year with a top political priority in hand: free from the massive budget deficits that had weighed on his predecessors.

Buoyed by tax increases passed under his administration and a strong economy, Mr. Brown said Wednesday that the state is projecting a $6.1 billion surplus for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1.

The governor proposed socking most of the money away in a rainy-day fund whose creation he pushed for in 2014. Nearly 70% of the state’s projected revenue of about $135 billion next fiscal year is derived from personal income taxes, according to the governor’s office.

The state’s fiscal health is especially crucial as it faces myriad challenges: record natural disasters, housing shortages and changes to federal tax regulation—all while it ramps up opposition to the Trump administration on several major policy fronts.

As is his custom, the governor warned of an inevitable economic slowdown. “California has faced 10 recessions since World War II, and we must prepare for the 11th,” he said. “Let’s not blow it now.”
 
I ordered two pair tweezers and today I got them and saw something that could be a joke in any joke book. These again, are tweezers!! On both envelopes containing each pair of tweezers was the following message exactly as it was printed:

"WARNING FOR CALIFORNIA USERS
Pursuant to California Health and Safety Code Section 25229, 6 The Distribution Of This Product Warns You That This Product May Contain Substances Known to The State Of California To Cause Cancer and/or Reproductive Toxicity"

(Notice the use or misuse of capitol letters)

These are laws passed by California legislators.

I've re-read this post a couple times and still don't see how buying a couple pair of tweezers prompted a thread titled "Why Is California Broke? Here's A Clue"
Not to mention- why would those living in Texas care?

California Gov. Jerry Brown faced a state in dire financial straits when he took office in 2011, prompting him to push for a budget fix that included tax extensions and spending cuts to higher education and social programs.

Yet 7½ years later, California still faces risks, including a potential trade war between the U.S. and China that threatens tens of thousands of jobs in the state. Another fiscal risk for California is due in part to the state's tax system, which makes it especially vulnerable during times when the economy or stock market turn down.

Brown signed a record $201 billion state budget on Wednesday, his last while in office. It includes increased spending on public universities and programs such as child care and welfare. It also has new money for combating homelessness and restores some low-income health benefits that were eliminated during the recession.
Nearly $9 billion surplus

Overall, the budget includes nearly $140 billion from the state's general fund and more than $60 billion in bond and special funds. And it forecasts a nearly $9 billion surplus, which would make it the largest in more than decade.
 


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