Mileage Tax Would Put Big Brother in Your Back Seat
Mileage Tax Would Put Big Brother in Your Back Seat
California is known as the world capital of the car culture. The automobile played a central role in creating the California Dream, giving people the freedom to travel, to live where they choose and to experience the exhilaration of the open road. Now, if Senator Mark DeSaulnier gets his way, you’ll have to pay a...
By Jon Coupal
California’s Green Bantustans
California’s Green Bantustans
One of the core barriers to economic prosperity in California is the price of housing. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Policies designed to stifle the ability to develop land are based on flawed premises. These policies prevail because they are backed by environmentalists, and, most importantly, because they have played into the...
By Edward Ring
America’s Emerging Housing Crisis
America’s Emerging Housing Crisis
From the earliest settlement of the country, Americans have looked at their homes and apartments as critical elements of their own aspirations for a better life. In good times, when construction is strong, the opportunities for better, more spacious and congenial housing—whether for buyers or renters—tends to increase. But in harsher conditions, when there has...
By Joel Kotkin
California vs. Texas in one chart
California vs. Texas in one chart
As can be seen on the following chart, during the period from January 2011 to March 2014, there have been slightly more single-family housing starts in Houston (95,037) than in California for the entire state (94,993). In this single chart, we can understand the dynamism of the booming, expanding Texas economy and housing market compared...
By Mark Perry
Charter Schools: Reinventing Public Education
Charter Schools: Reinventing Public Education
The destiny of a nation lies in the education of its youth. Both Jesus and Hitler understood that society is shaped by its children, for better or worse. In this country, the commitment of public education to social indoctrination of our youth instead of education has helped determine the downward trajectory of the American Republic....
By R. Claire Friend
Why the "War on Poverty," Now Entering its Fifth Decade, Has Failed
Why the "War on Poverty," Now Entering its Fifth Decade, Has Failed
“Keep doing what yer doing and you’ll keep getting what you got.” Thus spoke Robert Woodson, explaining why the War on Poverty, now entering its fifth decade, has failed—and miserably so. As a front-row spectator, Bob should know. He has been an outspoken civil rights activist since the 1960s, directed the National Urban League’s Administration...
By Bill Frezza
Why Not Sustainability in a Spending Limit?
Why Not Sustainability in a Spending Limit?
Last week, Gov. Jerry Brown delivered the keynote address at a sustainability summit hosted by the Los Angeles Business Council. While the summit focused on California’s environmental, energy and water policy, we have to wonder whether the governor will exert the same effort in support of fiscal sustainability now that he has called a special...
By Jon Coupal
Homeschooling and Its Importance for the Survival of a Free Republic
Homeschooling and Its Importance for the Survival of a Free Republic
What do George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin, Booker T. Washington, Florence Nightingale, Susan B. Anthony, Thomas Edison, Winston Churchill, Albert Einstein and Sandra Day O’Connor have in common? They were all homeschooled as were countless other famous statesmen, scholars and scientists. Children traditionally were taught at their parents’ knees. In most...
By R. Claire Friend
California High Speed Rail's Dubious Claims of Environmental Benefits
California High Speed Rail's Dubious Claims of Environmental Benefits
Editor’s Note: There are dozens of major infrastructure investments that would yield positive economic returns to Californians. Spending over $100 billion on high-speed rail is definitely not one of them. But as Kevin Dayton explains in this article, even the environmental benefits of high speed rail are questionable, if not a complete fabrication. This isn’t...
By Kevin Dayton
Common Core Threatens Charter Schools Ability to Innovate
Common Core Threatens Charter Schools Ability to Innovate
A battle is raging between those who would challenge our public school monopolies and those who wish to nationalize school curricula. There is much more at stake here than how Jane and Johnny learn to read. The success of the American experiment has always rested on a balance between opposing forces, between those seeking common...
By Bill Frezza
Cap and Trade Revenue to Fund High Speed Rail?
Cap and Trade Revenue to Fund High Speed Rail?
Liberals and good government advocates frequently decry citizens’ mistrust in government, especially in California. Over the last decade and a half, numerous surveys have confirmed that voters distrust government on several levels including waste, corruption and lack of responsiveness to legitimate public needs. The recent criminal exploits – both actual and alleged – of three...
By Jon Coupal
The City of Villages – Los Angeles
The City of Villages – Los Angeles
Los Angeles is unique among the big, world-class American cities. Unlike New York, Boston, or Chicago, L.A. lacks a clearly defined core. It is instead a sprawling region made up of numerous poly-ethnic neighborhoods, few exhibiting the style and grace of a Paris arrondissement, Greenwich Village, or southwest London. In the 1920s, the region’s huge...
By Joel Kotkin
Unaffordable California – It Doesn't Have To Be This Way
Unaffordable California – It Doesn't Have To Be This Way
April 2014 Update: Here’s a documented comparison of California taxes and economic climate with the rest of the states. The news is bad, and getting worse. But it doesn’t have to be this way! The state and local government policies that created an unaffordable California can be reversed: PERSONAL INCOME TAX: Prior to Prop 30 passing in...
By Richard Rider
Common Core: A Trojan Horse?
Common Core: A Trojan Horse?
The deceptively innocuous-sounding name belies the crippling effects a centralized K-12 education curriculum will have on the United States once it is allowed to take effect. Ze’ev Wurman, software architect, electrical engineer and longtime math advisory expert, feels Common Core is a federally-enforced “mediocre national benchmark” that “marks the cessation of educational standards improvement” and...
By R. Claire Friend