Why Is California Both So Rich And So Messed Up

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
  • How can a state do so well...and so bad at the same time? And what went wrong with the Golden State? This is the Dark Side of California: The Fall From Grace.
    0:00 - Intro
    01:29 - The California Dream
    04:11 - First Nail In The Coffin
    06:32 - The Crisis Begins
    08:23 - And Everything Gets Worse
    10:35 - Grim Future

Komentáře • 997

  • @sha.elaine
    @sha.elaine Před rokem +303

    As someone who grew up in Cali...it is very sad! We don't WANT to move, we love it here but we are not sure if we can afford to retire here and we both make good money! The politicians seem so out of touch and focus on pie in the sky issues that don't help working people, very frustrating.

    • @RadicalizedRadical
      @RadicalizedRadical Před rokem +3

      It's ok at least you won't be called racist and homophobic

    • @jasonknight5863
      @jasonknight5863 Před 11 měsíci +12

      You can blame Democrats for that. Voting 🗳️ has its repercussions.

    • @ballstothewall38
      @ballstothewall38 Před 11 měsíci +13

      I remember when the majority of the population was middle class. Fast forward 40 years and now its either you are stupid rich or dirt poor.

    • @ballstothewall38
      @ballstothewall38 Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@jasonknight5863 it would have been worse if it was a republican state, DeSantis 2.0

    • @USBAMCISMC
      @USBAMCISMC Před 11 měsíci +3

      No matter where you live, you're going to arrive at a point where you can't support your family on salaries alone. You have to acquire assets (vehicles that generate passive income).

  • @james.atkins88
    @james.atkins88 Před 10 měsíci +539

    California's affluence arises from its diverse economy, driven by technology, entertainment, and agriculture. The state is home to global tech giants, leading universities, and a thriving entertainment industry. However, this prosperity is marred by soaring living costs, income inequality, and a substantial homeless population. Regulatory complexities challenge businesses, and strained infrastructure, coupled with fiscal issues, presents additional hurdles. The coexistence of wealth and problems in California stems from this interplay of economic success and pressing societal issues.

    • @Believer292
      @Believer292 Před 10 měsíci +6

      According to a 2022 study by Northwestern Mutual, 75% of American adults acknowledge the need for better financial planning. Surprisingly, just 29% of the population engages the services of a financial advisor.

    • @hunter-bourke21
      @hunter-bourke21 Před 10 měsíci +3

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      @rebecca_burns14 Před 10 měsíci +3

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      @hunter-bourke21 Před 10 měsíci +2

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      @edward.abraham Před 10 měsíci

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  • @toughbutsweet1
    @toughbutsweet1 Před rokem +406

    Another problem with resolving homelessness is that many Californians do care and are trying to help he homeless by supporting legislation that will provide for them. Sadly enormous amounts of tax money has been allocated to creating and implementing systems to assist people with housing and treatment, but nothing ever seems to come of it. The money vanishes into the pockets of "contractors" that never build or establish anything because the laws are usually written with no oversight or accountability. It really is a shame.

    • @HangingGarden606
      @HangingGarden606 Před rokem +33

      In a twisted way, I've noticed a lot of nonprofits supplying homeless individuals with clothing, food, tents, and other miscellaneous supplies. Without a tangible scheme to break ground on affordable housing targetted at the homeless, all this does is further condition homeless people to thrive on the streets + incentivizes people living on the edge to just live on the streets. I've seen this in Portland and Seattle as well, and this is starting to become an issue in Chicago as well (surprising considering how brutal the winter and early spring are).

    • @bender9222222222
      @bender9222222222 Před rokem +16

      Yup. Private companies come in and swipe the money.

    • @billmM3605
      @billmM3605 Před rokem +25

      @@bender9222222222 Private companies that are close friends of the politicians. If they weren't close friends there would be some kind of accountability.

    • @laikanbarth
      @laikanbarth Před rokem

      “Charities” are making a billions off the homeless problem. They don’t want to solve the problem because then they won’t make the billions anymore. They all need to be investigated. They could’ve built a million homes with all the money they have basically stolen. They are in bed with the politicians. I’m wondering if it’s just a money laundering scheme with a lot of the money going right back into the politicians pockets.

    • @txcaco1
      @txcaco1 Před rokem

      It is called poverty porn. The more you pay the more these groups take. Not targeted to really help people with a hand up rather than a handout. When faceless Governments replaced charities, this is what the results are.

  • @5414vivek
    @5414vivek Před rokem +340

    It's crazy how zoning is responsible for so many things

    • @therearenoshortcuts9868
      @therearenoshortcuts9868 Před rokem +34

      it's the secret discriminator flying under the radar

    • @B30pt87
      @B30pt87 Před rokem +5

      So many bad things.

    • @reversalmushroom
      @reversalmushroom Před rokem +5

      I actually agree because I'm against the destruction of nature because I live in a city where they keep chopping down all the woods to build houses, and I hate it.

    • @RadicalizedRadical
      @RadicalizedRadical Před rokem +6

      It's crazy how allowing more people in than you can sustain can create so many problems. Same goes for immigration

    • @perennialgypsy6491
      @perennialgypsy6491 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Also Santa Rosa in the 90s went from smallll suburbs and mannnyy farms to Mini Bay Area and hardly any farms… :(

  • @jrho8033
    @jrho8033 Před rokem +611

    Another issue California failed to address it the need for better public transportation and parking minimums. General Motors led the malicious campaign to kill street cars. And parking lots takes up a ridiculous amount of space. You can't have dense residential areas, if everyone also need a parking spot.

    • @advancetotabletop5328
      @advancetotabletop5328 Před rokem +36

      NIMBYism kept BART from serving the entire west coast. Basically, if any county adjacent to BART said no, it couldn’t be extended to other counties.

    • @sounakchakraboty9700
      @sounakchakraboty9700 Před rokem +17

      You think that countries with better transportation isnt facing housing crisi?? Netherlands laughing in the corner

    • @ProfesionalAP
      @ProfesionalAP Před rokem +38

      @@sounakchakraboty9700 no sir, I have been living here since July last year and it is not difficult to buy a house, but, the problem is that everyone wants to live in the middle of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht, I live in the north of the Hague in "Leidschendam-Voorburg" and it is only 15min by tram to get to the center of the Hague, if I want to go to Rotterdam it would take me 40min by tram and one train, also there are other cities around that are cheaper, and if you go towards the west you will find cheaper houses, but as I said everybody wants to live in the big cities.

    • @S.K.R.E.Inc.
      @S.K.R.E.Inc. Před rokem

      Streetcars were becoming so slow by 1947, so General Motors bought so many transit lines to convert to buses or dismantle them to force people to buy cars for this mess of a freeway that they were making. Judge Doom's speech about it in Roger Rabbit basically explains what GM, Chevron, Phillips Oil, and Firestone were doing. They were sued for conspiracy, but nothing came of it

    • @maYTeus
      @maYTeus Před rokem +10

      ​@@sounakchakraboty9700 idk is the Netherlands dealing with significant homelessness?

  • @TheModernPioneer
    @TheModernPioneer Před rokem +686

    It’s a shame that such a beautiful natural utopia was overtaken by awful economic and social policy.

    • @apologu
      @apologu Před 11 měsíci +7

      a great shame

    • @jasonknight5863
      @jasonknight5863 Před 11 měsíci +63

      In other words : Democrats.

    • @ballstothewall38
      @ballstothewall38 Před 11 měsíci

      It was the weed boom, they saw an influx of rich people moving to LA and they took the opportunity to scam the population.

    • @TheModernPioneer
      @TheModernPioneer Před 11 měsíci +36

      @@jasonknight5863 I don’t like to take partisan sides, but pretty much, yeah.

    • @kidnamedfinger3922
      @kidnamedfinger3922 Před 11 měsíci +17

      I have been through la, Santa Barbara, and San Diego and barely saw any homeless tents, I counted more in Miami and Austin then I ever have in ca. also problems yeah sure ca has problems so does every other state especially Florida and Texas but even they have pros, people need to stop complaining about California because complaining ain’t gonna do shit doing shit about it will make things better and in my opinion they already are good I have lived here since 2016 and I would never trade it for anything, I have loving family and friends my town is very safe and the people are laid back and mostly calm and chill, and I think that it’s Florida and Texas that suck more.

  • @alexsteven.m6414
    @alexsteven.m6414 Před 11 měsíci +575

    Inflation, bank collapse, severe drought in the agricultural belt, recession, food shortages, diesel fuel and heating oil shortages, baby formula shortages, available automobile shortages and prices, the price of living place.

    • @edelineguillet2121
      @edelineguillet2121 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@davedelva Mind if I ask you recommend this particular professional you use their service? i have quite a lot of marketing problems.

    • @belobelonce35
      @belobelonce35 Před 11 měsíci

      @@davedelva After locating her, I composed an email and arranged a phone conversation. I'm optimistic that she will reply, and my go

    • @kamal-hassan
      @kamal-hassan Před 11 měsíci

      Alexsteven shortages, m6414 shortages, ago shortages, everything shortages, and shortages shortages.

    • @nmtai200x
      @nmtai200x Před 10 měsíci

      Scam post with fake people alert

  • @hothotheat3000
    @hothotheat3000 Před 10 měsíci +17

    A lot of people go out there thinking they’ll achieve their dreams, and they don’t. They struggle to make ends meet, they’re lonely, they’re preyed upon by predators, they fall behind on bills, they become depressed, and before they know it, they’re either on the streets or begging family for a ticket out of there.
    I know a girl who thought she’d go out there and become famous. She came back in five years, looking ten years older. The city had wrung the life out of her.

  • @sarmstrong7020
    @sarmstrong7020 Před rokem +82

    The last ~30 years of California's history in a nutshell: "The government spent billions of dollars to address problem x, but problem x continued to get worse."

  • @ballstothewall38
    @ballstothewall38 Před rokem +19

    I lived in LA back in the 80's, my mom was paying 300$ a month for a 1 bed 1 bath. Fast forward to today and that same apt. costs 3K. Ridiculous.

  • @mcqueendroid
    @mcqueendroid Před 10 měsíci +19

    I make 118,000 a year here in Irvine, CA. It feels like I only make 45k, its one of the most insane feelings.

  • @kayflip2233
    @kayflip2233 Před rokem +314

    California has A LOT of smart, innovative and creative people in tech, professional services, entertainment, real estate etc. Also, they work very long and hard hours there. I'm from NYC and work in management consulting and thought California was supposed to be laid back, but from my experience on projects out there, they are the most intense people and work like slaves out there.

    • @McDago100
      @McDago100 Před rokem +44

      You are not the first to notice this. I was born and raised here. I have been to New York. I was in Upstate New York. It is more laid back, and sparsely populated than where I live. It seems when you leave NYC, a large part of New York state is vast open spaces. In Southern California, Central California and the SF Bay Area, you can drive for 40 miles or more, and it is endless development. It can drain the life from people.

    • @manansethi2865
      @manansethi2865 Před rokem +20

      @@McDago100 dude. Even I lived in New york and California. Yeah, upstate New York is sparse and beautiful. But nature in California is just broken. How can snow-laden mountains, virgin forests, warm golden beaches and sandy rocky desert be all in one state and just a few hours drive apart?

    • @McDago100
      @McDago100 Před rokem +32

      @@manansethi2865 Warm beaches? In California? Oh, you mean the sand. I have never seen a surfer in California, without a wetsuit. I have lived in Ventura County and in Santa Cruz. The beaches look nice, but the water is frigid.

    • @33Donner77
      @33Donner77 Před rokem

      I think there are "a lot of smart, innovative and crreative people in tech" throughout the world. Get ready for the Great Migration of Tech Out of California.

    • @manansethi2865
      @manansethi2865 Před rokem +3

      @@33Donner77 come back after 10 years and lets see.

  • @1951RKP
    @1951RKP Před rokem +73

    The California I first visited in the 1970’s and see now is day and night difference. It still has its beauty in the central and northern area and even along the coast until you arrive in SFO and LA. Those cities are horrible in so many ways. Filthy rich ignore the miles of slums they drive by everyday to their mansions. They sit and watch jobs leaving by the thousands with corporations leaving and now banks folding. In the 1970’s I was envious of those living there now I wouldn’t move there if you gave me a home. Speaking of the big cities.

    • @bonniegaither3994
      @bonniegaither3994 Před rokem +15

      And nothing will change unless it starts affecting the rich.

    • @rexx9496
      @rexx9496 Před rokem +8

      It has problems but you're exaggerating. Miles of slums? Come on. I visit LA once a year and yeah there's a homeless problem downtown in Skid Row(always has been for the last 100 years), but I've never drove past "miles of slums" anywhere in California. Btw, I've walked through favelas in Brazil, so I have some idea what an actual slum is.

    • @jeffneptune2922
      @jeffneptune2922 Před rokem +3

      As this video explained, part of the problem was local community control.....nobody wanted to build homes in their town . A lot of blue collar and other lower wage people people bought modest property in Cali , e.g. a 2BR ranch home in the 1960s-70s and became "house rich" . Ironically, many of those people sold after massive appreciation and now live in mini mansions in states like South Carolina and knock the state.

  • @toastermindproduction
    @toastermindproduction Před rokem +171

    By watching all the "Dark side of..." videos, the feeling that I get is that the "golden" age is over in most countries because of several global crisis, like saturated market and jobs , demography, social and political bad decisions, and so on. These systems have reached their limits.

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem +45

      Honestly as odd as it sounds, this is all just the internet showing you what you're clicking and watching. If you look at any of this in an optimistic POV, you'll find great things around you and see that there is a bright light at the end of the tunnel. The more i see stuff like this the more depressing things start to look and i try to avoid that.

    • @toastermindproduction
      @toastermindproduction Před rokem +14

      @@Abel-Alvarez ooh nice ! Thanks for your optimistic perspective, you're also right about this. Internet is indeed influencing our mood and the way we see things. It's important to have a reminder like this :)

    • @icecreamforcrowhurst
      @icecreamforcrowhurst Před rokem

      The Neoliberal Era is coming to an end. Massive profits for the rich and cheap flatscreen tv’s for the masses isn’t a viable future. What replaces it we have yet to find out.

    • @RadicalizedRadical
      @RadicalizedRadical Před rokem +18

      Hard time create Good men. Good men create Good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times.
      We are now at the last stage. Everything comes around. We are just unfortunate to have missed the golden era.

    • @toastermindproduction
      @toastermindproduction Před rokem +4

      @@RadicalizedRadical Yes , it's like also, when you reach the bottom , you can only go up, and when you reached the top, you can only go down. It's a cycle. We indeed missed the golden age. But when people are uncomfortable financially etc, it's also a time when you got to work harder, come up with new things, be more inventive. The "chaos" can be source of creation. Young generation will be the seeds of new ways of life, re inventing things. I'm very glad to see that no one is silent. Young generation are speaking out , denouncing, etc. Wanting change and thinking of change are the first steps before it manifests into something concrete.

  • @maryaltshuller885
    @maryaltshuller885 Před rokem +156

    My husband and I moved from Chicago to So Cal in 2003 after his 16 months of unemployment. I definitely noticed the huge gap between the haves and the have-nots, since I fell into the have-not category. And, yes, the taxes, rent, gas prices and so on are awful. Was FINALLY able to leave after 15 years and moved to the less expensive Midwest.

    • @jjgreek1
      @jjgreek1 Před rokem +8

      And you’re bored out of your mind right ?

    • @jjgreek1
      @jjgreek1 Před rokem

      @FriskyDingo do us a favor and stop using California products redneck

    • @yom0mma214
      @yom0mma214 Před rokem +16

      Midwest is cool until you're under a Tornado warning every other 3-4 weeks

    • @jjgreek1
      @jjgreek1 Před rokem +15

      @@yom0mma214 and when you discover the nearest hill is 2000 miles away and the nearest beach 2500 away

    • @theplacesigo4169
      @theplacesigo4169 Před rokem +47

      ​@@jjgreek1 Your way of thinking is why a lot of people end up homeless out in Cali. Better to live in the Midwest and live a comfy life and be able to travel sometimes to see a beach than to end up broke all the time or end up living on the streets in Cali just because you wanted to live by a beach out there

  • @Nequetrefi11
    @Nequetrefi11 Před 11 měsíci +62

    I lived in Cali between 2005 and 2021. I absolutely love California, I really do. I was born and raised in Brazil so it was very easy to adapt, especially climate wise. However, as I finished college and started to do my own thing I started to see that Cali is designed for the wealthy. It is designed to only cater to folks way up in the chain while the rest work the hardest, pay all the taxes, while still unable to purchase any sort of land worth a damn. Also you realize that unless you are in LA or Silicon Valley, job opportunities are very limited despite taxes and cost of living being about the same. I left and came to Maryland and am loving it. I cannot say I would ever go back because I have no reason to. I was simply tired of always working as hard as anyone else but still stuck in contractor jobs with no benefits, stuck in rent that always outpaces your wage increase, constantly dealing with traffic and ridiculous gas prices, BUT MOST OF ALL because there was simply no way I could ever buy even a decent townhome in Silicon Valley unless I was willing to sacrifice a kidney. My mom still lives there but for a few more years only until they retire at which point I can hopefully convince them to come to Maryland. They are always telling me "you guys made the right decision as things got much worse here after COVID". It is simply sad to find the state of things in SF, SJ, and LA right now with the amount of trash everywhere, homeless taking over city blocks, armed robbery and petty theft going rampant, streets not being cared for (sidewalks falling apart, major streets riddled with potholes, etc.), and also the drought problems (thank goodness they got some snow and water this year). I love Cali dearly and I hope it turns things around and it starts by changing their politics. Democrats are sucking them dry there and they need to make a change fast. Thank you for the video and great work!

  • @shaynewhite1
    @shaynewhite1 Před rokem +118

    I grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and moved to the Seattle metro area last year. I really feel like Washington's gov is SO much better than California's -- there are housing projects everywhere, the roads get fixed regularly, new public transit is getting built, there's no state income tax. Plus, there are flood control ponds everywhere, unlike California, which just lets all the rivers flood out to sea. In California absolutely nothing ever gets done and everything is pretty much exactly the same as it was in the 1990s, only worse.

    • @JB-sg1vy
      @JB-sg1vy Před rokem +38

      Um, born and raised Seattle. Moved to Portland then San Fran, then LA, now back in Portland. I am 48. Seattle AND Portland are absolute DUMPS compare to what they used to be and BOTH states are on the same trajectory as Cali. The entire west coast is a mess. Garbage, drugs, homeless, crime, etc. Guess you need more time in Seattle to see how BAD the government there is. ALL the governors on the west coast are pretty much interchangeable. Cali is bigger and so are it's cities so maybe you see it slightly more but not by much. Seattle and Portland were beautiful and safe places well after Cali cities were going downhill but now they have both almost caught up to the trash states they have become. If your talking about downtowns that is. Metro is a bit better but it too will pay the price of the government and laws they pass soon. To far wacko left these days in all 3 states. ZERO common sense on what to do about things. They do not want law and order and all rights go to criminals. Many other issues as well that just make me smh. Up is down now in the ' progressive' world. SF is the worst if that is where you are from so maybe that is why you find Seattle better and it might be but not by much and NOT to anyone from other normal cities and def NOT to residents who have been in Seattle way longer and have seen the AWFUL way it has gone downhill in the last few years and what a GEM it USED to be.

    • @michaelmacleod6517
      @michaelmacleod6517 Před rokem +21

      You definitely made the wrong choice. Seattle used to be a great indie city...like before 2010....but the city government decided to be in competition with LA and even NY. Gentrification happened all throughout the city, Amazon bought up most of downtown, the city council somehow increased crime and homelessness...and not providing a stable network of how to handle these problems.
      Been downtown recently Shayne? I pass by third avenue everyday...everyday...and absolutely nothing has changed. Ever since the George Floyd (st. floyd of fentinyl) riots, going downtown is pretty much a risk with homelessness everywhere, and drug users not caring where they shoot up.
      Oh, and don't count on the police if you get into a jam. Nowadays they're just a presence. Unable to do anything for anyone.
      We won't get into the late nights. Riding the E line can be just as dangerous as some of the homeless and druggies seem to like going north up into shoreline and aurora. I guess Tukwilia fences them off around 5 PM?
      But you've only been here a year. You won't see it until it happens to you. Pray that it doesn't.

    • @cc-dtv
      @cc-dtv Před rokem +2

      And no income tax lmao

    • @bender9222222222
      @bender9222222222 Před rokem +2

      Most bay area reservoirs are full now. Roads are actually well maintained considering its absolutely perfect 10 months out of the year 😂

    • @B30pt87
      @B30pt87 Před rokem +2

      You make some good points, but Washington is just too damn cold and wet for me. We really do need to address our water issues though- especially right now! Big Agriculture has been destroying the soil in the Central Valley for decades.

  • @arctr00perecho
    @arctr00perecho Před 9 měsíci +7

    It's crazy seeing the trend on the pricing of housing skyrocketing in California. My grandparents bought their house in 1968 for $22k, now it's $1.1M. My parents bought their house in 1990 for $173k, now its around $900k

  • @rmodjeski29
    @rmodjeski29 Před 11 měsíci +13

    As someone who's born and raised here and also coming from immigrant parents, it's sad to see what this state has become. Count on mismanagement to make paradise a living hell.

  • @exfoliage
    @exfoliage Před rokem +3

    Excellent commentary. A lot of questions were answered. Job well done.

  • @sounakchakraboty9700
    @sounakchakraboty9700 Před rokem +27

    Bro yours videos might not be getting views but your content is 🔥 please never stop making videos

  • @anonam0us328
    @anonam0us328 Před rokem +9

    it's easy to understand why - California is rich in jobs and resources, but not enough opportunities to climb the ladder or be promoted. Most companies deliberately keep you at a minimum wage AND part time hours to avoid many costs and fees. Makes their bottom line look good but the people suffer. I've lived here all my life - rampant homelessness, no real programs that solve the problem instead of treat the symptoms. Big Tech and Wealthy Industries based here, meanwhile the average person isn't paid a living wage. Super Inflation. Some studies say in order to afford housing in most of California you need to make at least 35.00 to 40.00 an hour at minimum. I'm not blaming anyone as I get both sides, but this isn't sustainable. The rich love it, the poor don't. And it won't change. I've talked to a few wealthy people here, and they mostly say the same thing - "work hard, pull yourself up and you can do it." In reality, they're far out of touch. It's not that easy and show's their lack of fundamental understanding.

  • @lmjj4403
    @lmjj4403 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for the great video.

  • @trendingwwwandw
    @trendingwwwandw Před rokem

    💖Thanks for sharing this experience 👍LIKE

  • @hellviskamacaro
    @hellviskamacaro Před rokem +33

    Seriously love this videos! It allows me to know that no country, not even a state in this world, is perfect

    • @JB-sg1vy
      @JB-sg1vy Před rokem +2

      Um I knew that already at prolly age 12.... Glad you finally figured it out . um ya

    • @johndonajelon21
      @johndonajelon21 Před rokem +3

      Texas is pretty damn close to perfect in my opinion.

    • @Flyig_Walrus
      @Flyig_Walrus Před rokem +7

      @@johndonajelon21 You made me laugh so hard I snorted.

    • @uzin0s256
      @uzin0s256 Před rokem

      @@johndonajelon21 hell no. Its more like dam close to hell. Its the worst state in the us. Rich state yet so boring and dogshit

    • @darienmiller1032
      @darienmiller1032 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@johndonajelon21LMFAO, Texas is nowhere near perfect, don't be insane. if it were its own country, its quality of life metrics would be appealing compared to other G7 nations.

  • @charlesburke2379
    @charlesburke2379 Před rokem +12

    Even minding your own business rarely works in degenerate Los Angeles. A city that's difficult to walk even 3 blocks without being confronted, accosted or harassed in some way.

    • @wimvanaerde6249
      @wimvanaerde6249 Před rokem +1

      I was there in 97 sepulveda Blvd, high view motel, i guess that it's detoriating since then, correct?

    • @rturney6376
      @rturney6376 Před rokem +2

      No one walks in LA

    • @charlesburke2379
      @charlesburke2379 Před rokem +1

      @@rturney6376 Whoa a comedian! An opener at the HaHa cafe.

  • @anthonymanderson7671
    @anthonymanderson7671 Před 10 měsíci +10

    It's so crazy that america despite one of the richest countries has such a massive inequality.

    • @bunnyfreakz
      @bunnyfreakz Před 9 měsíci

      You want equality? Damn commie.

  • @KittyNinjas
    @KittyNinjas Před rokem +8

    Simply 2 words: severe corruption

  • @annieshavingthoughtsagain

    I was born and raised in SoCal. I moved to Missouri over 15 years ago and haven't looked back. I can be middle class here.

  • @icecreamforcrowhurst
    @icecreamforcrowhurst Před rokem +8

    If had to live in a tent (which I hope will never happen) I would most certainly rather do so in California than New York.

  • @skoshow8418
    @skoshow8418 Před 10 měsíci +6

    I moved in 2009 when I was 21. Phoenix is nowhere near as bad yet but it’s trending that way. I’ll be on to a smaller town in the next few years. The older you get, the less you like what large groups of people do to a place.

    • @whelancommunications
      @whelancommunications Před 10 měsíci

      Its probably the lucrative and parasitic nature of city government which uses every crisis as an excuse to spend billions on services provided by their friends and business partners. Solving problems is not their goal, its "looking like" they are solving the problem which is the goal.

  • @HoneyBadger80886
    @HoneyBadger80886 Před rokem +4

    Lived there all my life. Left last year because of the items you mention. Spot On.

  • @Takato2527
    @Takato2527 Před rokem +30

    the fact that many tech companies and even freakin' Hollywood were considering move away from California, should speak the volume.

    • @AttackOnTitanlover1999
      @AttackOnTitanlover1999 Před 10 měsíci

      I heard it’s like really expensive and other problems which I obviously forgot about

  • @CARTER.J
    @CARTER.J Před rokem +28

    I am not from California nor have I ever lived in California but I have visited many many many times…this may be unpopular but I think the homeless issue California has should be dealt as a NATIONAL problem because I bet half or more of this homeless did not start being homeless in California…..they go there because of easy benefits, nice weather all year, and soft on crime. I feel that the homeless issue should be dealt with at a national level and stop blaming one state…there is so much more we can blame on California than the homeless countrymen…. (I put that last line in to be cheeky)

    • @stevelopez372
      @stevelopez372 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Good point. Wife and I have recently bought a meal for someone from Florida. Not the first time we heard a homeless person say they were from another state.

    • @minekon
      @minekon Před 10 měsíci +10

      I’m from California and this is correct. A lot of the homeless population actually came to Cali from other states for the benefits. As bad as it sounds, they still have it better here than wherever they originally came from. Our moderate weather definitely helps as well. It’s better to sleep in a car here than it is to sleep in a car during Minnesota winter or Texas summer heat for example. Of course rising living cost contributes to the homeless issue but inflation isn’t a problem only in Cali. It’s happening all over the states. It really should be dealt with on a national level instead of putting all the blame on Cali.

  • @sierranexi
    @sierranexi Před 11 měsíci +6

    CA: "I'm concerned about the environment. Let's make everyone take up as much space as possible, single homes only."

  • @Sly88Frye
    @Sly88Frye Před 11 měsíci +6

    It seems no matter who is in charge of the government in California it's just been all downhill. Don't forget as Dom pointed out this isn't something that was just recent to the last 10 years. Yes California is solid Democrat, but during the 70s when it was solid Republican it was already having problems which persist to this day and the government of the time allowed them to start then.
    California didn't know how to handle the insane increase of population. Yes they should have handled it better, but unfortunately human error can lead to just a little problem or something that didn't seem bad at the time, to a massive catastrophe that we are feeling today. Even my low income 1 bedroom apartment in Santa Rosa is $1,291 per month. It should be less than that. The average rent in Santa Rosa is around $2,000 per month or more, but as nice as it is to live here, it really shouldn't be that high. So many people from San Francisco have moved up here and increased the cost of rent. That's not the only reason why it went up so much, but it's a strong contributing factor.
    We are seeing similar problems beginning to happen in other states with increasing populations. Texas was gaining so much population over the past decade but now like California it is seen is one of the worst states to live in for a lot of people and that it is getting way more expensive there too. Oregon which is about 6 hours north of me is far more reasonably priced than California for sure, but many parts of the state are also getting pretty expensive, especially Portland. Housing costs in Washington are also insanely high.
    The sad truth is when a place gets really popular, the real estate companies get super greedy and continue to raise prices. I'm not saying that other states are going to become California, but the fact is the government regardless of which state doesn't seem to care about the homeless or those in poverty. Just who can pay more taxes. There are ways to address it but it doesn't appear there is any real effort to do so.
    However in 2 consecutive elections here in the state of California. That is 2018 and 2020 there was a proposition on the ballot that would have addressed the rising rent. Each time there was no downside to it passing besides the old system being replaced by the far better new system. Somehow that was enough for real estate companies to post anti-ads against these propositions and the people gobbled it up and fell for it. This is why you need to do some damn research on the propositions on the ballot. One in particular if passed would have authorized local governments to set a cap on how high rent can be in their area. This would have prevent rents from constantly going up every year, but the proposition failed.
    The sad truth is people are stupid. They don't know what they are voting for and don't do any research. Also the most powerful political party in America isn't the Democrats or the Republicans. It's the party of people who literally just don't vote. Not even half of the US population votes in a Presidential election. Same goes for state elections. People aren't informed and therefore can easily be manipulated into the wrong way of thinking.
    Lately I have voted No on more propositions than I used to. I have made that decision because so many props that pass increase taxes and honestly we don't see the benefit from what these increased taxes were supposed to do. Unfortunately people keep voting Yes to these propositions and taxes keep going up while nothing that was promised is even happening or what is promised is barely happening or not turning out how it was promised.

    • @sophiachavez3377
      @sophiachavez3377 Před 6 měsíci

      It’s been downhill since the Democrats took over.

  • @alexdawe-le4vj
    @alexdawe-le4vj Před 10 měsíci +3

    My rent was $1,750 in 2015, it's $2,700 now, my landlord is straight pricing me out

  • @edwallace2828
    @edwallace2828 Před rokem +54

    I am glad you mentioned the affect that NIMBYism had on California. I realized that when I lived there in the late 90's and early 2000's.
    Eventually, NIMBYism is going to have the same impact on the fast growth cities in Texas, Arizona and Florida.

    • @angelogiusti5283
      @angelogiusti5283 Před rokem +6

      I live in Florida Ik we are making the same mistakes as California the problem is the population is rising quicker here we are about to have a housing crisis real soon and considering their only building overpriced condos in Miami that are empty for most of the year instead of yk affordable housing or business buildings we are in trouble apparently tourism and real estate aren’t enough to hold up an economy

    • @johndonajelon21
      @johndonajelon21 Před rokem

      You sound very uneducated. Texas and Florida continue shipping the homeless and illegal migrants out. They learn from other peoples mistakes like Californian cities instead of doing it the hard way.

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem +2

      Too late, it's already hitting big out there and it's only gotten worse (see Scottsdale-AZ,Austin-TX, and even Orlando-FL)

    • @angelogiusti5283
      @angelogiusti5283 Před rokem +2

      @@Abel-Alvarez literally Orlando and North Carolina is where all the ppl from Miami are moving too to save money on rent

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem

      @@angelogiusti5283 which in turn is gonna make those places rise in mortgages/rent and the vicious cycle continues. 🤘😮‍💨

  • @KevinMDowney
    @KevinMDowney Před 11 měsíci +4

    Refusal to let people fail. Thinking you can take care of everybody, and them getting used to the idea.

    • @KevinMDowney
      @KevinMDowney Před 10 měsíci

      @@hamborger8546 Go look up median vs mean income vs COLI for each country. Then tell me how much better Finland is.

  • @menomisespeanut
    @menomisespeanut Před rokem +57

    I really loves California while I was stationed there in the military. And I wouldn’t mind living there, but as I’m pretty sure people have already commented the cost of living is just too unbelievably high compared to other states. Also, I’ve taken a keen interest in firearms for my own protection, and their gun laws are just horrendously horrible. And this is coming from a progressive.

    • @mitchwheeler2233
      @mitchwheeler2233 Před rokem +22

      America is such a weird country. There is no other place in the world where being able to own guns would matter to anyone.

    • @Bilbo__Baggins
      @Bilbo__Baggins Před rokem +13

      @@mitchwheeler2233 I am not from America and makes me wonder if America is really that unsafe that some people actually want to keep guns.

    • @anibalhyrulesantihero7021
      @anibalhyrulesantihero7021 Před rokem +2

      @@Bilbo__Baggins It depends on the state.

    • @AngelloDelNorte
      @AngelloDelNorte Před rokem +11

      Only CA upper-class neighborhood in the Coastline is worth living in CA. The rest is just so violent, depressed, and unstable conditions.

    • @AngelloDelNorte
      @AngelloDelNorte Před rokem +6

      ​@@mitchwheeler2233
      Stop speaking for every country. Lol.

  • @diane1390
    @diane1390 Před rokem +8

    Only the wealthy in California enjoy a good life. The middle class is disappearing, and the working class struggles to make ends meet. I feel no real love for my home state, and if I had enough money, I'd have moved years ago.

    • @jasonmoukala8909
      @jasonmoukala8909 Před 10 měsíci

      Wealthy is upper middle class right?

    • @diane1390
      @diane1390 Před 10 měsíci

      @@jasonmoukala8909 I don't think so! Besides, how many people do you know who can say they're upper middle class? My dad was upper working class!

  • @Stevel_
    @Stevel_ Před rokem +7

    I remember as a kid in the 90s California seems so cool and appealing. I would never even consider living there now, what a mess! Liberal bastion of bad ideas, high cost of living, crime and homelessness.

    • @DD-ws6cu
      @DD-ws6cu Před 10 měsíci +1

      And most conservative states are dirt poor outside of a few cities like Nashville. The best place in the US is the Upper Midwest or New England because they are not too far left or right.

  • @steverobbins4872
    @steverobbins4872 Před rokem +20

    Ronald Regan ruined my life. He emptied out the mental hospitals and filled up aerospace. It was never the same after that.

    • @petersonlafollette3521
      @petersonlafollette3521 Před rokem +5

      Remember also the trickle up model he introduced, also known as Reaganomics.

  • @jitlv
    @jitlv Před rokem +16

    Politics aside, I will always have love for California since I was born and raised there, it’s a beautiful State.

  • @Andrew-gn9qp
    @Andrew-gn9qp Před rokem +37

    A federal court district overturned Proposition 187 in 1994 which effectively allowed illegal immigrants to use public services in California. That's when California fell from grace.

    • @FernandoGarcia-nz9el
      @FernandoGarcia-nz9el Před rokem +6

      What public services do they use?? link and source please. Have you talked to the homeless?? most of them are from RED states.

    • @johndonajelon21
      @johndonajelon21 Před rokem +2

      @@FernandoGarcia-nz9el 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🤡

    • @bartek920
      @bartek920 Před rokem +1

      ??????? hows that bad

    • @highwayman1218
      @highwayman1218 Před rokem

      😂

    • @KyleReeseCel2029
      @KyleReeseCel2029 Před rokem +1

      @@FernandoGarcia-nz9el Add more low wage workers to an area, means more welfare. Low wage workers pay less in taxes and take more in public services. That means higher taxes for the middle class. Illegals fill up schools, hospitals, prisons etc. that stuff isn't cheap or free. While the rich come out richer the middle class goes away.

  • @ev_solou9341
    @ev_solou9341 Před 11 měsíci +10

    The biggest issue here in California are the property rights, which the older generation are obsessed with and have the most to lose. You cannot have such inflated values and actually expect people to live. I suspect a large part of the social vices stem from this issue.
    My father spent a decade here. Before I moved to SF for work, he told me how he thinks California is conservative. I laughed at him and thought it was because Reagan was governor during most of my father's stay that he had such a conception. After living here for six years, I think he's overall correct. While the people are more lax about drugs and are a bit more environmentally conscious than other places, they are very racist, ableist, and cling to their precious property for dear life. People are highly atomized and the frontier mentality is very much alive. Nobody actually cares about the homeless and people are in a perpetual uproar about having it "dealt with".
    Of course, California has its subversive elements, but it has never outnumbered or been more powerful than the people just mentioned.

    • @whelancommunications
      @whelancommunications Před 10 měsíci +1

      The homeless are mostly opportunist invaders from cities across the USA, not local born. Taking advantage of the 2 Billion SF spends annually on them, the good weather, the crime without consequence laws. It is not our job to "take care" of the whole country's drug addicts. Anyway, I think you have a good point here about the residents which I have not read elsewhere yet. .

  • @chengliu872
    @chengliu872 Před rokem +10

    Add me to the people leaving California. My wife and I will be moving to Phoenix soon. It's just hard to see a future in California when a $600,000 budget will only get you a 1500 ft² gut job in the hood.

    • @MrCarloszeca
      @MrCarloszeca Před rokem

      My two homes are paid off, I can live in CA with a $2000 budget a month, just enjoying the great weather and all CA has to offer.

    • @chengliu872
      @chengliu872 Před rokem +3

      @@MrCarloszeca: That means either you were quite wealthy or bought those homes forever ago. These days most people aren't that lucky.

    • @MrCarloszeca
      @MrCarloszeca Před rokem +1

      @@chengliu872 Bought those homes with low down payment over 30 years ago.

    • @chengliu872
      @chengliu872 Před rokem +3

      @@MrCarloszeca: As I said, forever ago. Only a wealthy person could do that today.

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem +1

      In California $600,000 can get you pretty far, the issue is where the hell are you looking at?

  • @AIIA23
    @AIIA23 Před rokem +38

    Interesting analysis. Thought provoking. I wonder if the weather and tolerance attract homeless people from other areas?

    • @CharlesMuccia
      @CharlesMuccia Před rokem +19

      Yes, the weather in California does in fact attract many people, both homeless and non-homeless. I'm a native Californian and I've met many people that moved here for the more moderate weather and climate, especially people from the east coast. The problem. is people don't realize how incredibly expensive it is to live here. Housing, gas, utilities and food all cost more here. It's a great state if you're wealthy, but if you're middle or lower class, it's a constant struggle.

    • @aaronhrynyk
      @aaronhrynyk Před rokem +5

      Don’t forget about the free money the cities hand out, and the free drug supplies.

    • @firefalcoln
      @firefalcoln Před rokem +5

      @@CharlesMuccia food and utilities in my experiences are not more expensive in California than other states. A lot of food is grown in California and therefore cheap to get to the grocery stores. Also a lot of people don’t have to spend much on heat or AC if they live somewhere in California with nice weather. My gas, water and electric bills are typically less than $200 a month for a house of 4. That’s better than a lot of places.
      I agree on the other things typically being more expensive in California (especially gasoline) and would add that home insurance can be very expensive in fire or flood risk areas. And just about all of the state is near a major earthquake fault.
      That said, if you live somewhere desirable in California or have the right skills, or a good support system to help you get established, you can do very well in the state emotionally and financially.
      The state is very beautiful and diverse. I’m happy to live where I am in California. I have a laid back job, a home in an area with terrific weather and make about 75k a year (which is fine for my area) And I’m still only 31. I live in the central coast of the state about halfway between the Bay Area and the LA areas.
      Also, if one is able to buy a home in a nice part of the state, it appreciates much faster than most areas if you are patient and hold onto the house. A larger pool of money in a home appreciating faster is largely why so many Californias moving to other states are boosting the prices for homes in those other states and why people from those other states get annoyed to have to compete with the people moving from California.
      I think it’s odd how people in one breath can claim that California makes its citizens broke, and complain about those broke Californians outbidding people in other states to purchase homes in Nevada, Arizona, Oregon, Texas Idaho etc.
      The state clearly isn’t bad for a significant percentage of people within the state. And I’d say that the middle class is being squeezed throughout much of the country in blue and red states. California middle class squeeze is just a good example of what’s going on nationally in a lot of areas.

    • @MichiganUSASingaporeSEAsia
      @MichiganUSASingaporeSEAsia Před rokem

      No never. Makes no since

    • @latetotheparty4785
      @latetotheparty4785 Před rokem +2

      @@aaronhrynyk Free drug supplies? Cities handing out money? What state do you live in?

  • @martinavaslovik3433
    @martinavaslovik3433 Před rokem +7

    Yup, I got out of there in 05 because I just could not afford it anymore on only $78k a year. I could see where it was going then, and I'm so glad I got out of there.

  • @DavidinSLO
    @DavidinSLO Před rokem +3

    “how can a state do so well and so bad at the same time?” - great question

  • @joeldavis5815
    @joeldavis5815 Před rokem +9

    To California's credit they have recently been working on revising their zoning laws to address this very problem. Stay tuned to see just how effective whatever (if any) changes to said zoning laws will have on their housing problem.

    • @joeldavis5815
      @joeldavis5815 Před rokem +5

      Also, I'm noticing that this channel may be in danger of showing a conservative bias when approaching the "dark side" of the geographical locations discussed on these videos. You know, typical CZcams clickbait. 🙄

    • @jt-rex6972
      @jt-rex6972 Před rokem +1

      @@joeldavis5815 Conservative bias? LOL! Really? He didn't even talk about the MAIN reason CA is going downhill and that is LEFTIST policies! If anything I thought he had a Liberal bias. For example, blaming homelessness on mental health when 99% of homeless people are drug addicts, not mentally ill! He's also implying that CA is not spending enough on fixing the homeless situation. LOL!!!! CA spends about $1 billion dollars a YEAR on the homeless but it gets worse and worse every year! And as to the problem of housing, no mention of illegals which CA incentives to come over. They come here and they have to live somewhere, don't they? Thus, making the demand for housing that much greater!

    • @stevelopez372
      @stevelopez372 Před 11 měsíci

      New Zoning Laws. Rackem,Stackem and Packem . Just like Rats .lol.

  • @peko7446
    @peko7446 Před rokem +3

    NIMBY at expensive zip codes and YIMBY at less expensive and more crowded zip codes.

  • @lonelychameleon3595
    @lonelychameleon3595 Před rokem +31

    An important detail you missed was Proposition 13 (1978), an amendment to California's state constitution that effectively limited how much revenue the state could collect from property taxes, which also led to an increase in state income taxes to make up for the lost revenue.

    • @advancetotabletop5328
      @advancetotabletop5328 Před rokem

      “ Other estimates show that Proposition 13 may not have reduced California's overall per-capita tax burden or State spending. The think tank Tax Foundation reported that in 1978, Californians had the third highest tax burden as a proportion of state income (tax-per-capita divided by income-per-capita) of 12.4% ($3,300 tax per capita, inflation adjusted).[22] By 2012, it had fallen slightly to the sixth highest rate, 10.9%, ($4,100 tax per capita, inflation adjusted).[22]
      California has the highest marginal income and capital gains tax rate and is in the top ten highest corporate tax and sales tax rates nationally. In 2016, California had the 17th-highest per-capita (per-person) property tax revenue in the country at $1,559, up from 31st in 1996.[23] In 2019, WalletHub applied California's statewide effective property tax rate of 0.77% to the state median home market value of $443,400; the annual property taxes of $3,414 on the median home value was the 9th-highest in the United States.”

    • @shaynewhite1
      @shaynewhite1 Před rokem

      And people who are covered by Prop 13 aren't moving out of their homes, so it contributes to the lack of housing availability.

    • @KyleReeseCel2029
      @KyleReeseCel2029 Před rokem

      Property taxes are criminal. You already bought and paid for the home, they shouldn't be able to tax you on it at all. If your lower wage and retired it could force you out of your home raising those taxes. It is wrong all around.

    • @taryntaryn9090
      @taryntaryn9090 Před 11 měsíci

      They are planning on getting rid of Prop 13. Get ready for more taxes!!

  • @kimchi_taco
    @kimchi_taco Před rokem +7

    Prop 13 is also one of the major contributors for uncontrollable house prices. It also demonstrates how selfish they are.

    • @KyleReeseCel2029
      @KyleReeseCel2029 Před rokem

      Property tax is immoral especially on people who can barely afford it.

    • @landonbarretto4933
      @landonbarretto4933 Před 10 měsíci

      It's the major contributor. And the state income tax.

  • @simonjarvis2523
    @simonjarvis2523 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Having travelled to San Francisco 4 years ago to visit friends I was shocked by what I saw.

  • @FriendofMineralTown
    @FriendofMineralTown Před rokem +2

    When I think of the problems we have in CA, a lot of them are fixable with time and solutions. Not saying “oh pfft all they have to do is flip a switch” or that it’s easy or fast. But unfortunately, I’m not sure what we can do about things when a lot of things depend on us building more cities and neighborhoods and either people don’t want it, “they” block it due to the ecosystem, or the issue of bringing water to your new areas. So I can see the need to preserve and respect nature and etc. But is that it? We can’t help the people because to build the structure needed for them would destroy the ecosystem and drain more water?? If the able body people who need housing or better jobs could get those things, it would alleviate a lot of issues. It’s really annoying because all the tools already exist to help. Structures exist and sit vacant. Then we come to water… can’t take it from the ocean that ruins the ecosystem.

  • @allansilva684
    @allansilva684 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I grew up here and this is the most easily read explanation as to why it's so fucked. Thank you for making this video

  • @ballinrides
    @ballinrides Před rokem +17

    I feel like LA should have a subway system that rivals NY. I don't know why they never invested.

    • @S.K.R.E.Inc.
      @S.K.R.E.Inc. Před rokem +12

      Blame car lobbyists and the homeless. Also, back in the 80s, a thrift store exploded after tunneling efforts uncovered a methane pocket. Car lobbyists used the opportunity to stop all subway construction west of Western Ave and make overpriced garages the norm. So, until 2026 or so, the Purple Line is basically the Red Line extension to Koreatown

    • @maYTeus
      @maYTeus Před rokem +3

      a surface rail would also be cool. Im in the minority that trains look cool. A NorCal to SoCall bullet train would be nice to but w/e

    • @ballinrides
      @ballinrides Před rokem +2

      @@maYTeus they movie "Speed" had me thinking LA had a bigger subway

    • @Dj.D25
      @Dj.D25 Před rokem +5

      Agree. Kind of surprised by the lack of lines. Even though a few are being extended, I noticed Los Angeles takes a long time to build its subways compared to other cities. One thing I do like about Los Angeles subways is that they go beyond Los Angeles to other cities nearby.

    • @JB-sg1vy
      @JB-sg1vy Před rokem +5

      Um simple, it is a giant sprawl in SoCal and NYC metro is not even CLOSE in size just in LA county ALONE is 4,753 square miles...an area some 800 square miles larger than the combined area of the states of Delaware and Rhode Island. This does not even include ALL the other huge counties that surround LA county and make up the SoCal area. The OC and Inland Empire that are attached and several others... in contrast NYC metro is 300 square miles. So you could NEVER make enough lines or subways to get all around that GIANT of an area in SoCal lol. It is automobile and land of freeways! Your also digging into desert land on top of the fact of earthquakes. This is another reason you do not see very many bridges or circular type looped up on top of type freeways that you see say in Dallas or Houston which is even more flat but not prone to massive quakes and such like Cali. The building codes in Cali are MUCH stricter due to quakes than NY. But again I think it simply is to big of an area for above or below ground systems to get all over SoCal's massive land mass sprawl. Also do not forget Between 1910 and 1950, Los Angeles County ranked number one among the most productive agricultural counties in the nation. It was at first not designed or assumed it would end up the way it did. NYC is way older and settled in long before Cali and the subway opened in NYC on October 27, 1904, the New York City Subway is one of the world's oldest public transit systems, one of the most-used, and the one with the most stations, with 472 stations in operation. Then also the automobile became much more popular after that as well, especially when Cali started to grow more which again was after NY which saw growth earlier on when everyone first came over.

  • @TonyTheTGR
    @TonyTheTGR Před 9 měsíci

    6:28 - Graduating from college in 2001 there was the WORST EFFING THING EVER.

  • @user-mm8vw1ow1x
    @user-mm8vw1ow1x Před 11 měsíci

    You answered your questions with the initial statement

  • @JB-sg1vy
    @JB-sg1vy Před rokem +7

    He says CALIFORNIA very oddly lol

  • @spanglestein66
    @spanglestein66 Před rokem +6

    California the American dream/nightmare in a nutshell

  • @user-vc4fy6ys4y
    @user-vc4fy6ys4y Před 11 měsíci +2

    I went to college in Chico CA and visited eveywhere in CA. I found CA is beautiful and the best place to live.

  • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
    @SonnyDarvishzadeh Před 7 měsíci

    It's kinda like Germany (and probably many other European countries). We have housing crisis in different tiers; 1. supply vs demand 2. very slow and strict building laws 3. unsuitable and old construction code (no one wants roof units due to overheating and having no cooling systems) 4. Not-in-my-backyard mindset and attitude everywhere. etc.

  • @haywoodjablome7822
    @haywoodjablome7822 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I have a friend who live out in LA. She's an animator for disney. Her husband is an aero engineer. They barely are able to afford life. Both with over 6 figure incomes...still can't even afford groceries.

  • @misterbig9025
    @misterbig9025 Před rokem +15

    California is the capital of adult movie production.

    • @charliepearce8767
      @charliepearce8767 Před rokem

      Do you want my autograph ?
      Captain stabbing.

    • @McDago100
      @McDago100 Před rokem +2

      Do you mean the San Fernando Valley? Do you mean Van Nuys, Chatsworth and Canoga Park? Guess what? It's not that far from Hollywood. In more ways than one.

    • @wimvanaerde6249
      @wimvanaerde6249 Před rokem

      ​@@McDago100 Chatsworth were Charles Manson had his ranch

    • @rturney6376
      @rturney6376 Před rokem

      Hence, the Northridge earthquake 😂

    • @thespiritof76.
      @thespiritof76. Před rokem

      @Mister Big That's why that area is referred to as the chasity belt.

  • @charlesw7397
    @charlesw7397 Před 9 měsíci

    I was born in Livermore, CA and spent the first couple years of my life living there. Moved to CO for my father's work but visited CA frequently. I love it there and when I visited CA a few years ago, I thought about how great it would be to move back. Unfortunately the house we sold in CA in 2000 went from being $800k to $3.2 million. Housing prices are just insane and I wouldn't be willing to rent in the state considering the average rent in CA would destroy any chance of saving money from your paycheck to save up for a house. Maybe someday housing prices will crash and I'll be able to scoop something up lol (though I'm not even close to being able to buy a house in CO in a rural area lol)

  • @ithirtmean
    @ithirtmean Před 11 měsíci

    @ 2:34 isnt that Powell street in San Francisco ?

  • @guestadd-block4879
    @guestadd-block4879 Před rokem +22

    they just have to deregulate , california is the perfect example of why too many laws is bad

    • @ShadowsandCityLights
      @ShadowsandCityLights Před rokem +2

      They've litterally banned or made it illegal to own or do so many things it's crazy!

    • @kennethli8
      @kennethli8 Před rokem +2

      They should get rid of Proposition 13 Property Taxes. Plenty of real estate owners pay less than $10,000 in annual property taxes for houses worth more than $4M.

    • @kennethli8
      @kennethli8 Před rokem +1

      Are you sure not regulating PG&E is a good idea? Have you studied the history of PG&E throughout the last 30 years when they were deregulated?

    • @kennethli8
      @kennethli8 Před rokem +2

      The biggest issue is that the richest people in America (Silicon Valley Billionaires) lobby for progressive laws but totally against these laws in their own neighborhood. Check all those housing cases in the richest part of America (Silicon Valley: Atherton, Palo Alto, Los Altos Hills).

    • @PoolGyall5441
      @PoolGyall5441 Před 11 měsíci

      THIS! we are even creating laws to start countering other laws because people are finding them oppressive to build and do anything.

  • @giaafshar8419
    @giaafshar8419 Před rokem +8

    i think many homeless come to CA for survival due to the mild climate. coastal southern CA never gets too cold or too hot. people would die outside in many of the other states in the U.S

  • @catl1783
    @catl1783 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Funny, but I have been asking myself that for over 15 years...living here. All my friends have moved out. But when I retire I will have to move, too expensive, so sad

  • @timothyrday1390
    @timothyrday1390 Před rokem +14

    The California authorities should start implementing the opposite of "tolerant containment" zones in the most densely urbanized areas, effectively creating safe districts in which to rebuild their scattered social structure. Let the NIMBY suburban neighborhoods shoulder an increasing number of the burdens and only offer them state support in exchange for changes in the zoning laws to allow for larger housing developments. Also, the authorities need to ruthlessly crack down on any violent offenders and uphold a zero-tolerance policy for all forms of public harassment. A similar harsh approach could also be applied to public drug usage and needle disposal. It's one thing to be homeless, quite another to shoot up and hit crack pipes in full view of families, workers, and children.

  • @blackman7186
    @blackman7186 Před rokem +81

    This guy literally sees everything's dark side 💀

  • @rond1475
    @rond1475 Před rokem +4

    If CA was its own country they wouldn’t have 37 major US military bases and a handful of smaller ones with a few hundred thousand military personnel spending money there every week. As its own country they also wouldn’t benefit from the billions in US contracts. They benefit from the government mostly because they are a shoreline state.

  • @shelliupshaw3405
    @shelliupshaw3405 Před 11 měsíci

    I grow in Los Angles. For local exact Noho and K-Town. I left in 2018 aint going. My family still lives there. It was the first I slept in peace

  • @socloseyetsofar673
    @socloseyetsofar673 Před rokem +2

    Yeah, it's so bad now that Tony Bennett needs to change his tune to "I Left My Wallet in San Francisco". Hang in there California!

  • @stonedwalljackson5806
    @stonedwalljackson5806 Před rokem +6

    Alabama and Mississippi are #1 and #2 in least amount of homelessness in the nation. Let that sink

    • @jesuissoldatamericain8771
      @jesuissoldatamericain8771 Před rokem +1

      Fortunately, people from the south is very wise. They can transform their trucks into the houses.

    • @manansethi2865
      @manansethi2865 Před rokem

      Coz people move from these states to California and new york to beg for money or find petty jobs. And they remain homeless till they can make it.

    • @tylerkriesel8590
      @tylerkriesel8590 Před rokem +2

      So even Alabama and Mississippi are doing better than California? damn it’s bad in California!

    • @edmarr5209
      @edmarr5209 Před rokem +2

      Yet they are some of the poorest and have some of the worst standard of living in the country.
      Goes to show you that the homeless population isn't the best metric to measure a state.
      I'd bet a lot of the homeless in California are actually transplants from those states as well.

    • @thomasgrabkowski8283
      @thomasgrabkowski8283 Před rokem

      Because housing there is affordable

  • @fredphilippi8388
    @fredphilippi8388 Před rokem +35

    One way to explain the high number of homeless in California is to recognize that the majority of the homeless come from other States.

    • @thespiritof76.
      @thespiritof76. Před rokem +3

      That's a door that swings both ways. The majority of the tech and military industrial economy which sustained California for decades was conceived and built by people from other states.

    • @fredphilippi8388
      @fredphilippi8388 Před rokem +6

      @@thespiritof76. Which is a good argument for why the United States should hold together, not, as some Republicans would propose, "divorce" into a "red States" country and a "blue States" country. The blue States country will do very well on its own, thank you very much. With California, the blue States country will be easily the fifth largest economy in the world., maybe fourth if you add in all the other blue States.. The red States country, by contrast, will be what? Maybe 15th in the world, or 20th? Your choice.

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem +4

      @@thespiritof76. And when SHTF, where did they go? Exactly, talk about accountability for others and a lack of respect.

    • @MichiganUSASingaporeSEAsia
      @MichiganUSASingaporeSEAsia Před rokem

      That's a lie and state propaganda. How can poor people afford the trip to California silly

  • @ilBUZZo
    @ilBUZZo Před 11 měsíci +2

    That proves that money without good ideas is useless

  • @aaronsnumbuh2
    @aaronsnumbuh2 Před 6 měsíci

    First generation immigrant that was born and raised in San Francisco. This place is insanely competitive, there are so many people from around the world that want to live and work here. You need to constantly be adapting and developing in-demand skills or you can quickly be left behind. It’s very sad seeing so many good people get left behind that grew up with me here. Unless you are wealthy you don’t get second chances so something as simple as getting a girlfriend in high school that causes your grades to slip, or taking a business risk can completely derail your future as there are so many people that there is hardly room for second chances. If you are a kid, please study. If you neglected your studies, it’s never too late to take some classes and educate yourself.

  • @leonidas759
    @leonidas759 Před rokem +7

    I finally get a proper explanation of why the state has SO MANY homeless people. I always wondered why it has so many poor people living in terrible conditions while it is supposed to be the 5th largest economy on earth in a "developed country". It results that it is the Mecca of inequality, even with the highest taxes in the United States. One would think that having the highest taxes in the USA would mean their government would have enough budget to support the poor people, but apparently they have other priorities... Very sad indeed.

  • @AG-xz7ne
    @AG-xz7ne Před rokem +3

    California sucks. My 26YO friend makes 100$ an hour and still couldn't buy a good house and has well over 300k in savings. He found a decent sized place but it had structural issues so he had to move back to an apartment.

  • @poohshmoo9892
    @poohshmoo9892 Před rokem +2

    Problems in California are #1 Expensive housing even for mid and high mid class ( let alone lower ones ), #2 High gas prices, #3 High car insurance, #4 High personal income state taxes, #5 High medical cost ... homelessness is a problem yes, but is not among top 5 in my list

  • @bonniegaither3994
    @bonniegaither3994 Před rokem

    Which just proves, as always, corporations don’t create jobs. At least not to the extent that is portrayed.

  • @chrislacy4185
    @chrislacy4185 Před rokem +16

    CA has always been land of fruits and nuts. The poverty, violence,and filth nowadays not worth price

    • @JB-sg1vy
      @JB-sg1vy Před rokem

      well my services are doll!! Whatcha lookin for???!!!

    • @jjgreek1
      @jjgreek1 Před rokem

      There is no fifth…and the crime is less per capita than all red states.

    • @chrislacy4185
      @chrislacy4185 Před rokem +2

      @@jjgreek1 This is Joke of the day. Thanks for laugh. Not to generalize but other than DC, or New York its hard to find more despicable. You don't go to LA, SD,OC,SF or IE much huh?

    • @chrislacy4185
      @chrislacy4185 Před rokem +1

      @@jjgreek1 update maybe rain will clean slightly. Rats will get on stilts

    • @jjgreek1
      @jjgreek1 Před rokem

      @FriskyDingo is that what Fix News has brainwashed you with? LA is infinitely safer per capita crime than your red neck town …and while you’re at it stop using California innovations (like CZcams)…redneck

  • @CaraTheStrange
    @CaraTheStrange Před rokem +13

    It seems then that no one can afford a stay in the Hotel California anymore 😅
    Also NIMBY is an issue all over the world, it really sucks that people only think of themselves. Not saying I don’t get why people would form a nimby mindset but i am saying it certainly is a bad mindset to be in

    • @tatarchan5212
      @tatarchan5212 Před rokem +2

      We once have NIMBY in Thailand too.
      But since we're ruled by military junta, three guess what happens to the Nimby?

    • @MrCarloszeca
      @MrCarloszeca Před rokem +1

      I live in a QUIET neighborhood 7 miles south downtown LA. I am glad not to see apartments around the area, they tried to build a Casino but citizens voted NO.

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem +1

      @@MrCarloszeca if you have something to get off your chest, you might as well say it now or forever hold your peace. I know how you NIMBY people act and try to beat around the bush when it comes to bringing up issues, but in reality it's just an excuse for your selfish greed.

    • @jamesclarke2789
      @jamesclarke2789 Před rokem

      @@MrCarloszeca So you have a justifiable right to determine how another person's property is used? Property that you don't own? Property that you haven't paid anything for and yet you still think you justifiably have a right to determine how it's used. For your own subjective preferences and whims?

    • @watch1981
      @watch1981 Před 11 měsíci

      Nimbys are the worst villains, who delude themselves that they’re doing nothing wrong

  • @AlmostEthical
    @AlmostEthical Před rokem

    Now that geopolitical conflict has increased, will California's economy return, or will arms companies now set up in other states?

  • @PoolGyall5441
    @PoolGyall5441 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Because of Suburban sprawl and nimbyism. Suburbs either rely on denser areas to subsidize their infrastructure or an unsustainable growth model to sprawl, California chose the sprawl and now that the neighborhoods can’t grow at the rate they anticipate due to geographic and political reasons, they become scarce in housing supply and rely on the cities to make up for the costs of their services they can’t afford. It's gotten to the point where even the California state government is trying to encourage more dense/mixed-use housing through policies, but it's simply not going at the required pace due to nimbyism and the rise of luxury apartments to counter affordability in neighborhoods. In a sense Californians want the state to be unaffordable without dealing with the consequences meaning people leave and we begin to crumble.

  • @_____J______
    @_____J______ Před rokem +7

    A story how Golden State became Cacafornia

  • @jeanphare8318
    @jeanphare8318 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I was gentrified out of California.

  • @manuelfromdabloc1452
    @manuelfromdabloc1452 Před 9 měsíci

    Very unrelated question, but where is the narrator from? I can hear some sort of accent but can‘t put my finger on it

  • @hanglee5586
    @hanglee5586 Před rokem +2

    The Terminator started terminating California

  • @SharksSJ408
    @SharksSJ408 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I mean, I feel like every state is messed up in its own little way. You gotta stay focused on the positives otherwise you’ll be miserable forever.

  • @MS-ql8ek
    @MS-ql8ek Před rokem +8

    California is what Chicago was in the 50s and in 2023 people are slowly leaving and the big companies are going elsewhere

  • @JB-kx9bx
    @JB-kx9bx Před 10 měsíci

    This trend is happening in every expensive place to live. If its unaffordable people on the fringes of society will end up in the street.

  • @gumerzambrano
    @gumerzambrano Před rokem

    Tesla is moving their HQ back to California. As a born and raised Angeleno it's annoying how the government isn't doing more to handle the homelessness crisis

    • @MD19853
      @MD19853 Před rokem +1

      Tesla is bringing the workers HQ back not the main HQ

  • @gregatkinson7276
    @gregatkinson7276 Před rokem +16

    A BIG reason the end of California's good time was later in the 70's is simply because 1969 was the last year that Ca. was a Republican ran state. The Dems. took over consistently and it just took a few years for the negative effect to begin showing....and has been an ever-declining mess ever since.
    This most accurately puts it in a nutshell.

    • @rturney6376
      @rturney6376 Před rokem +6

      I am a liberal and agree with you. Politicians ruined it .

    • @rturney6376
      @rturney6376 Před rokem +3

      Where does 😢all the tax money go? This should be a golden place to live.
      Politicians are over paid.

    • @hankhillsnrrwurethra
      @hankhillsnrrwurethra Před rokem +2

      Proposition 13 passed in 1978. California has been hosed ever since. Greedy Boomers. That's what hurt this state.

    • @edmarr5209
      @edmarr5209 Před rokem

      When dumb people give their opinions

    • @Abel-Alvarez
      @Abel-Alvarez Před rokem

      If we're being honest this nonsense started with the silent gen/boomers of yesteryear. In reality the rest of us are paying the consequences of their actions.

  • @whatsreal7506
    @whatsreal7506 Před rokem +12

    I grew up in California. Go back on occasion I do. It has gone to crap for sure due to misguided Hollywood-driven activism and social media. Y'all did it to yourselves.

  • @ericaallispn7284
    @ericaallispn7284 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Too many people taking money from programs for their own well-being

  • @D.D.1963
    @D.D.1963 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Because obviously humans have their priorities all screwed up,they tend to focus on things, objects, money, power, when we are supposed to be down here caring for one another and obviously we fail miserably.