ack : Well, you know what’s not a
beautiful place to live, Victor, segueing, is Los Angeles. And you
talked with Sami about the really terrific, I think, debate between the
mayoral candidates, Karen Bass and Spencer Pratt, the Republican who
you’ve actually talked to, and you’ve talked about talking to him and
Nithya Raman, who’s a city councilwoman.
: Yes.
So, we won’t re-go over the debate again,
but just to let folks know that an online poll from NBC Los Angeles
showed that, as of Thursday morning, this was right after the debate,
89% of the voters picked Spencer Pratt, when asked who they thought had
emerged victorious from the Wednesday night showdown.
Now, two other things, and then please,
any opinions you please share. Today, Karen Bass has announced she’s
withdrawing from the next mayoral debate. This was being sponsored by
the League of Women Voters and the Pat Brown Institute for Public
Affairs.
She had promised she would come, but I
think she got her, you know, her hiney kicked by Pratt the other day.
And she’s just gonna ghost them.
And then finally, worth raising about the
debate is that Nithya Raman, the city councilwoman who was running,
during the debate she backed off her—she had a position change.
Guess what, Victor? She used to be for defunding the police. She’s no longer for defunding the police. So—
: No longer, for now.
She will if she were to be elected. She’s
on the City Council—once the race is over, she’s a City Council member,
they’re all Democrats, she will go back to do that. It’s chaos. It’s
really tragic, what’s happened to Los Angeles. And Karen Bass was a deer
in the headlights at that debate.
Both of them are incumbents. One was an
incumbent City Council member and one was the mayor. And they all had a
hand in the policies of no cash bail, not arresting people for theft
under a particular, you know, they eased that. It wasn’t just $950. Even
when people did a little bit more, they kind of winked and nodded.
There are homeless parks. If you go to
Venice Beach—I used to teach at Pepperdine one day a week, and I would
ride my bike through there, and even in 2000—I think the last time I did
it was 2020—it was just dystopian. I mean, there’s zombie—it looked
like, you know, “The Last of Us” or some TV show with all of these
zombies.
And then it was filthy dirty. My bike
would get human excrement on the tires. And then you go down the Pacific
Coast Highway, people were just crazy, walking around in the middle of
traffic. Just total chaos.
And then when he brought all this up, all
they could say is he’s Donald Trump or he’s a right-wing Republican. And
he’s apolitical. I think he’s an independent.
All he stuck to was we didn’t have water
and the fire burned down. And then you won’t even issue building
permits. You wouldn’t let us clean the hills so we could get that
flammable brush out. We tried. You didn’t do that. Your fire chief was
more interested in DEI than monitoring why all these hundreds of fire
hydrants did not work.
Your power and water grandee who was
hired, kind of, was a flunky from PG&E. You paid her $700k. She left
two critical reservoirs for months dry, right during the Santa Ana wind
season, when we had this flare-up.
You went to Ghana for no reason, just for a
personal—your vice mayor, as I said to Sami, was under house arrest for
phoning in a bomb threat. Of course, it was a feint—he claimed that
Israel had phoned in a bomb threat, and it was a complete lie. He’s in
jail, I think, now.
And your fire chief was bragging about her
DEI hiring. But nobody was saying that we’re in a very fragile
landscape where we have to get these reservoirs full, because they had
other interests.
And every time you mention that about DEI,
diversity, equity, and inclusion, the problem with it is it’s not just
commission, it’s omission.
When you put so many resources and so much
virtue signaling and performance art all about how diverse we are, and
you never ask yourself, is that person meritocratically hired? Is that
person competent? Because 6 million people’s lives depend on that job,
in the air traffic controller or in the water and power or getting oil.
And the answer is, we don’t care.
And that’s why Spencer Pratt’s ads are so
effective. He walks through the detritus of Los Angeles, and then he
superimposes Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass laughing in very beautiful
homes.
And his point is the ramifications, the
consequences of these people’s ideology never affects them. For them,
it’s all some utopian exercise and we’re all the lab rats. We’re in
cages, and we can’t get out, and they experiment on us. And then they go
home to nice, happy, secure lives, and they’re well paid. And their pay
has nothing to do with their actual performance.
And then when you see Gavin Newsom endorse
her and say all these things, and then you see people on the debate
stage for the governor’s race, which was really pathetic, they were all
praising Gavin Newsom, and you say to yourself, California fell apart
around 2008/’06, it started going downhill. People started to leave.
Taxes started to get really high.
Who, more than anybody, could have been
responsible? Because it was a Bay Area phenomenon where it started.
Well, who was City County official? Gavin Newsom, eight years. Who was
mayor? Gavin Newsom, eight years. Who was lieutenant governor? Gavin
Newsom, eight years. Who was governor? Gavin Newsom for six years now
and counting.
So, there’s no person more responsible.
And yet when you see him talk, Jack, if you mention high-speed rail, he
said, oh, you know—he just moves his hands and just shakes his head and
he says, we’ve got this going and this.
And you say, you’ve spent $250—it’s gonna
be $250 billion. You probably spent $30 billion. There’s no way you can
build it. There’s no way you can run it if it was free. And he just
ignores it.
And then when you say, after the Paradise
Fire or the Aspen Fire or the Palisades Fire, don’t you get it, that you
drove out all the lumber companies? They can’t glean the hillsides. You
don’t let people go up and harvest wood.
You think it’s natural to let all these
dead trees from the drought just sit there, 60 million of them, as
kindling? And then you say, you have no margin of error, Gavin.
You drove out two big refineries. You’ve
got all of these people on the Air Resources Board that wants the purest
gas that doesn’t pollute, and you can only get it in the Caribbean
distillery and refineries in Japan.
And you talk about fossil fuels as evil,
but then you import it from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf. Do you think that
they pump it more ecologically sound than we could?
: Right.
: So, you want to use it, but you just
don’t want to get your hands dirty. And then when the price goes up, you
have a Steven Chu attitude that you don’t express. Well, gas goes up to
European levels, we’ll use less.
Well, yeah, if you live in Palo Alto and
Santa Monica and Montecito, you don’t care. But if you live in Huron or,
I don’t know, Five Points or Parlier, you do care. And $2 can break you
if you’ve got to commute. Maybe you can’t afford a Tesla. You have
maybe a 2003 Pontiac or something that gets about 16 miles to the
gallon, and you can buy it for 1,500 bucks.
But they have no idea. And why, the people
who are harmed the most by them, vote for them, I don’t know. But if
it’s not sustainable, as I said to Sammy, it won’t go on. And we’re
getting to peak dystopia.
That it’s not going—it’s not working.
: Yeah. The fact that Pratt seemingly has traction here is helpful, Victor. But I think it’s a test here.
Can a city that’s been so committed to
such self-inflicted wounds, can the people snap to their senses and say,
we’re not gonna do this anymore? I don’t know. It seems like there’s
some hope here. But if he loses, I would think all these big cities are
just—they’re circling the drain. How much torture can you create and—
: I think if you go into the LA area now
and you go into places in Orange County or communities along the coast,
blue-chip places, or you go into Simi Valley, you’re starting to see the
breakup of the idea of Los Angeles.
They’re just small communities, and
they’re run locally, and they want nothing to do with LA, and they’re
very suspicious of anybody coming in anymore. You know what I mean?
They’re trying to reestablish local
control and they’re saying, we’re gonna be like Augustine in North
Africa in the fifth century AD when the whole world was collapsing.
They’re gonna have fortified Hippo or something, communities.
And I think that’s what’s—it’s very
similar to the late Byzantine Empire and the late Western Empire where
as the federal system collapses and the elected officials collapse and
you have these huge migrations of people that are antithetical to the
system and the people in power are incompetent and corrupt, then people,
on their own, they either migrate, which is happening now, or they
create cocoons where—
I’ll give you an example. There’s a rural
school not too far from here. I grew up with it. It was just a rural
school. But some very, you know, concerned people began to move into
that district. And then they fixed the school up. And then they began
paying much more in that little school district, and they recruited the
best teachers in the country. And now that school, a rural school, K-8, I
think it is, you have to register when your child is born, to get into
it.
But they’re very careful. They moved
there. They live in that district. And they said to this wider world, we
don’t believe in your schools. We don’t believe in any of this. We’re
going to go live near a school. Get our school board. Control it. And
then we’re going to have meritocratic hiring only.
And we’re not going to have any DEI. We’re
not going to have any teachers union. We’re not going to have any of
that weaponized curriculum. Just a classical curriculum. And everybody
wants to go there. And they’re very careful.
And where I live, in a 50-mile radius, I’d
say there’s three or four communities that have decided, you know, as
the Romans say, non hic porcus. Not this pig. We’re not going to do it.
And they have reestablished local traditions. They have good
restaurants. They’re very careful about zoning.
They don’t have a lot of new housing
development. They discourage rentals. And they are throwbacks to the
1950s. It works. And they’re very coveted, to live there. And if you
want to go to their schools. It’s very hard to get a transfer.
And so, I can see it, where my daughter
lives in the foothills, that there’s a whole bunch of people, and
they’re not conservative necessarily, from the Bay Area. She lives on a
dead-end road. Cul-de-sac. It’s, kind of, about a quarter-mile long, and
there are homes there.
And they all have one thing in common.
They’re all semi-upper-class or middle-class professionals, at one
point. But usually the woman is now raising children at home. They have
chickens. They’re back to the land.
And they don’t talk politics. And they’re
very involved in Little League, local PTAs, schools. And their whole
existence is a rejection of the Bay Area. And that’s why they’re there.
They voted with their feet, to stay in California for a variety of
reasons, but they’re creating an alternative identity. And I think
that’s going to happen.
That’s what red-state America is becoming.
: Right.
: Parallel polis.
This is funny, when you see Gavin Newsom,
when he looked at—because he is really the most disingenuous politician
of my lifetime. He looks at these red states and now they’re
redistricting. Now he calls them the Confederate states.
Gavin, if they’re the Confederate states,
after the Civil War, the Confederate states were devastated. They were
plagued with racism. They were the home of the Klan. They had Jim Crow,
and the northern industrial states and New England were booming.
And you tell me how that flipped. Because
people vote regardless of ideology. And they’re leaving your paradigm
for that paradigm. And they’re not going there for Jim Crow. They’re
going there for safety, low taxes, good infrastructure, responsible
government, police, security.
And then he said, and I’ll end with this,
Jack. He said, or he wrote, he was very anguished because he showed the
Confederate states, he called them, and he said their legislatures have
redistricted, like Louisiana and now Tennessee. And it’s eight-zero,
House seats. Even though the Democrats in those states had 45% in the
last election. Or 38%. Look at Alabama’s doing it.
And you just stop and take a deep breath
and say, my God, this guy really is shameless. He’s shameless because
everybody knows that you can take a blue-state paradigm of New England.
: Right.
: And you look at Delaware, New Hampshire. They’re the same. Massachusetts, nine-zero.
They have no representation, even though Trump in those states got from 38 to 45%.
And then you look at California, and under
his directorship, we’re going to have about, of the 52 or 53 seats,
we’re gonna have maybe 9%. I don’t know, seven Republicans.
And so here he is in the most
gerrymandered and biggest state in the union calling others Confederates
for doing what New England does and what he does in spades.
It’s really—
: It’s projectionism, which is their power.
: I don’t understand his career. I never
understood his career. I have never understood it. I understand the
Gettys launched it. I understand he was under the tutelage of the
Pelosis.
I understand that the Bay Area assumed
political power after the riches of Silicon Valley were manifest. I
understand Willie Brown. I understand Barbara Boxer, Dianne Feinstein,
Nancy Pelosi, Gavin Newsom, Jerry Brown.
I understand that was the power, but he
was the prodigal son. He was the black sheep of that group. He never
distinguished himself, and yet, somehow he became the most influential
Californian in the last 30 years.
Yeah, now he’s handing out diapers.