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William Murchison
William Murchison
22 May 2012
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What Barack Obama has going for him in 2012 is, well, put it this way: human nature. Witness the French. … Read More.

Voting With Their Feet

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"Californians, here they come — right back where they ... " Wait a minute, hold on, this ain't the place they mostly "started from" — Texas, I mean; my home state. But, gosh, are "they" coming, here and elsewhere, to escapes the miseries of unemployment and high taxation in the once-Golden State?

California remains, in many respects, a wonderful state, and I don't have the slightest interest in bashing it. How could a state that nurtured Ronald Reagan not have wondrous, praiseworthy attributes? I recently spent some time there at the Hoover Institution, located at one of my alma maters, Stanford. I can attest to the continuing worth of these noble institutions and to the beauty of their surroundings. I like California, even if more people, reportedly, are leaving it rather than getting there for the first time. My point is a larger one — a good Leninist point, I might add.

The late — hardly to be lamented — Lenin observed during his campaign to enslave Russia that, as respecting where the Russian people wanted to live or not live, they were "voting with their feet." A memorable phrase. People do vote that way. They do it all the time. They register their approval or disapproval of a place, and its living conditions, by staying put or moving along.

A corollary proposition is that the people in charge, unless they happen to be stupid or else as mean and vicious as Lenin, need to notice what's going on. The people in charge don't want to lose a referendum like that. A place gets drained that way — of talent, resources, initiative, gumption and other indispensable commodities. When the first-rate people move on, a first-rate place becomes second-rate or worse.

California's brains-and-people drain came to notice several years ago. From 1985 to 2000, 111,000 Californians moved to Colorado; another 199,000 sidled over into neighboring Nevada — though whether the real estate collapse there has propelled some of the new immigrants in new directions, we don't know just yet.

Various websites exist to guide Californians toward acclimation to Texas.

One Californian headed our way noted that in Texas, "I can have a five-bedroom, 3,000-square-foot (plus) home with a pool for one-third the price of my 1,350-square-foot home near the freeway." That's assuming, no doubt, he's got a buyer for his home near the freeway. He goes on: "I can put 10-12,000 extra in my pocket each year due to no Texas state income tax." (California's top marginal rate is 9.3 percent.)

The point — to reiterate — is that the patience of ordinary people cannot be taken for granted by those who govern them. Hard as it is to get up and move, not least in markets where unemployment is large and home sales are tiny, move is what many do. This kind of truth compels those at the top of a state's pecking order to decide how inhospitable to business they want regulations and taxes to be. A reduction in one or both commodities is a friendly signal: We want people to live here who like to work. We make it easy for them to do so and prosper.

It's sort of the pleasure/pain syndrome. You like pain? Fine. But we haven't got that much of it. What we've got — in economic terms, and to the extent we can manage it — is pleasure and delight.

"Never trifle with the marketplace" is an axiom that the present species of American politician needs some help in retaining. The marketplace both purrs and bites back, depending on how it's treated. Example: California. Example: Health insurance companies cutting and leaving markets in which, thanks to ObamaCare, they can't make a profit, such as children's insurance.

The attraction of so-called "Austrian" economics — which makes a big thing of these marketplace signals — is much talked of nowadays in analysis of the tea party movement. Why not? The marketplace, when left free enough, tells a free American what he needs to know. You want one more reason why tea party folk desire more freedom from overbearing government? That's it.

William Murchison is the author of "Mortal Follies: Episcopalians and the Crisis of Mainline Christianity." To find out more about William Murchison and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
News Flash: 115,000 returned surveys out of 400,000 is a good rate of return. The results that Mr. North has worked so hard to cherry picked his data from is statistically quite valid.
Why does Mr. North believe that the US military is composed of such delicate flowers that they will be unable to handle a transition that other western militarys have had no significant problems implementing? Are Israeli, British, French, and Canadian troops made of tougher stuff than ours? The truth is the we have seen this sort of issue before. Demagogues like Mr. North in another era said that the sky would fall if you forced white troops to share living quarters and meals with black troops. Integration happened and the sky did not fall. WHEN the ban is ended - have no doubt, it will, sooner or later, be ended - our disciplined professional military will make the change without significant problems.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Mark
Fri Dec 3, 2010 6:55 PM
What is the moral of the story. That when you choose to represent our country there are ethics and standards desired by our fellow men and woman. To say that Col North is being to hard on those that have issues is not a correct or fair statement. He is stating that for Americans to keep there head above would require keeping it out of the gutter and there would be better and stronger unity and would result in a more victorious armed forces. In so many words it is hard to live up to standards at times but the final outcome proves who had the guts to do it for a better government. Someday it will be run by the Lord and he is not going to choose a bunch of pansies to be in his kingdom.
Reign
Comment: #2
Posted by: Reigne
Sun Dec 5, 2010 9:29 PM
25 years ago my sisters, 15 years older than me , moved to Central Oregon where the conservative population lived a fairly rural lifestyle in a small town. Californians started to move there and to other towns in Idaho, WA, and MT. People in all of those states had bumper stickers on their cars that said, "Don't Californicate Oregon" etc. My siblings said those Californians chose to come to a small rural ski community and once they arrive they want all the amenities, rules, regulations, laws of California. Everyone just wanted them to go back to California. But today, my two sisters are two of the most liberal advocates of that laid back way of life and thought process. The whole of Oregon has slid into the deep much and mire of "left-over hippieness". Change can happen to anyone in small incremental measures over a period of time. (brainwashing)
I live in Nevada now and see it moving over the mountain here ; like the Blob, sliding over the community smothering the Nevada brains with their California Liberal group think, robotic ways, a social plan; in a one size fits all for this state. So, these liberals are moving from states where the economy is bad, but what is not reported in this article is the invisible film of propaganda they are cloaked in and are bringing with them. Their communistic thoughts and ways are pervasive as they move to a community near you. Poor Reno, NV! Harry Reid is rubbing his hands together in greed with an evil and wicked smile while welcoming them into his fold. It will be difficult for this state to ever get back to its rugged individualist principles and roots on which this state was founded.
Comment: #3
Posted by: julie
Wed Mar 30, 2011 12:00 PM
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