Well, what does happen when the Left gets control.
According to Victor Davis Hanson the result is social dysfunction:
For years the open borders lobby accused “them” (whites? The establishment? Conservatives? etc.) of racism in wanting the border with Mexico closed, an end to state entitlements to illegal aliens (remember the Satanic Prop 187?), and deportations of thousands of aliens in state prisons (a cost nearing $1 billion per annum). But now the state legislature is largely controlled by those who in the past argued for de facto open borders and an expansion, not a curtailment, of entitlements for those without legal residence. So whom to blame? There is no “they” anymore. The outsiders are insiders and own the state—and its contradictions they once helped to ensure.
Ditto environmentalism. “They” (fill in the blanks: right-wing employers, CEOs, national companies, etc.) were the villains to be overcome in order to stop drilling off our shores, and to put ever more of our timber and recreational and scenic areas into no-use wilderness areas. We were not to build dams. No more canals. Put aside more farm land. No more nuclear plants. Forget coal. Tax gasoline and make it expensive to refine. It is fair to say now that the environmentalist agenda runs the state, and so there likewise is no more “them” to blame—and we must live with the results. I cannot begin to count in my own personal realm of knowledge the farmers who went broke, the high-tech engineers who moved to Nevada, the small business owners who shut down or moved out of state.
Anyone with capital who wants to start business X, knows that he can be put out of business by one supposed sexual harassment suit, a racial discrimination complaint, trying to fathom 500 pages of state EPA applications, a 10% income tax rate, and now a 9% sales tax to come. In California we hunt out the misdemeanor and ignore the felonies. Drive down my avenue, drop five trash bags of wet garbage on the side of the road, and the chances are great you will never be held accountable (even if your receipts are found in the trash and turned over to the sheriff), but please don’t wire an outdoor light in the barnyard without a permit. You see, anyone who nods and obeys the law and pays, we hound; anyone who simply won’t or can’t, or causes too much trouble, we the state employee simply ignore.
That last is a keen observation. Fresno has instituted a practice of staking out north end bars and following drivers leaving those bars home until - some two or three miles down the road - the police can intuit some reason for pulling the driver over. This guarantees a trip downtown, the collection of fines and fees to release the vehicle and the payment of thousands of dollars in attorney fees. Although the odds are that most such drivers may be above .08, a lot won't, but will still have to pay the fines (and, in one case, lose his job of thirty years.) Clearly, there are a lot of costs and externalities associated with this approach, but one thing definitely justifies the cost - revenue enhancement - which only works if the police fish in waters where people can and will pay the fines.
Likewise, in the course of a couple of months, I was amazed with the efficiency and tenacity of the Fresno "garbage SS", which makes sure that garbage can cannot be viewed from the street. There were fines associated with that, and I'm sure that enforcement was undoubtedly emphasized in the north end of town, where people have been disciplined to pay their bills. Admittedly, I instinctively felt that I should obey the law and, apparently, having the garbage can pushed back to the side of the house behind some trees was not in compliance, so I built a fence to shield the delicate vision of the roving garbage can compliance patrol from the site of the city-issued garbage can. On the other hand, I felt harassed over trivialities and had to wonder if there weren't more important things that the City should be resolving like cracking down on gangs and meth labs.
Strangely, the net result for this has been to undercut my previously unquestioned support for the police and local government. When enough people like me - who pay the taxes and obey the laws - start feeling that we are the ones being exploited, what then?
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When enough people like me - who pay the taxes and obey the laws - start feeling that we are the ones being exploited, what then? The answer to that question when posed in the 18th century was "The United States of America".
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