Podcast: Is it really the end of California as we know it? – Black Voice News

Posted: November 22, 2019 at 8:41 am

By Matt Levin | CalMatters

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Youd forgive Californians for rolling their eyes. When a vaguely apocalyptic combination of wildfires and power blackouts left vast swaths of the state without electricity and breathable air last month, a bevy of stories in national media outlets fromThe AtlantictoThe New York Timesdeclared the state officially unlivable.

A very un-Californian nihilism has been creeping into my thinking, wrote California-based New York Times columnist Farhad Manjoo. Im starting to suspect were over. Its the end of California as we know it.

The hyperbole from most of the national pieces was as predictably familiar to longtime Californians as Thanksgiving, when visits from out-of-state relatives result in a game of passive aggressive California bingo: Dont you miss seasons? B!. Wow, so much traffic on a holidayI! Good lord the sales tax here BINGO!

The California is over national media trope has been its own cottage industry for decades. We were over after the Manson murders, the Rodney King riots, the record budget deficits of the late 2000s, the collapse of the whole boutique-cupcake phenomenon.

But to many Californians, deep down in places we dont like to talk about, this time does feel different. The twin threats of climate change and the states housing affordability crisis both slow-moving disasters we feel increasingly helpless to address have changed the mental calculus for an entire generation of residents.

Why pay twice as much for a home here as elsewhere in the country to breathe bad air, endure hours-long commutes and then have our power turned off so we dont catch on fire? Polling and migration data show younger and lower-income Californians are increasingly deciding its just not worth it.

On this episode of Gimme Shelter: The California Housing Crisis Podcast, CalMatters Matt Levin and the Los Angeles Times Liam Dillon interview Manjoo about whether California has reached a true tipping point, and why the state cant fix some of its fundamental flaws.

CalMatters.orgis a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

The author wrote this for CalMatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how Californias Capitol works and why it matters.

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Podcast: Is it really the end of California as we know it? - Black Voice News

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