July 13, 2007
View From Lodi, CA: Is It All Over For The Golden
State? (With JoeNote to VDARE.COM readers)
By Joe Guzzardi
When I look back on my
twenty-year body of columns, I see dozens of
articles I wrote about
California’s population explosion.
Lord knows I have done my part to raise awareness
among the citizens regarding the
consequences of
unchecked population growth.
In 2003, in a
quixotic effort, I ran for
Governor of California in the
Recall Gray Davis election. My
platform stressed how damaging a dramatic population
explosion is to our
quality of life. Everything is negatively impacted:
schools,
hospitals,
construction,
crime and the
environment.
Talk about
flailing at windmills. No one listened—especially
people in the
state and
federal government who have the power to act.
I’ve said repeatedly: “More
people equals
more problems.” Every hour, according to
Californians for Population Stabilization, the
state’s population increases by 60 people—that’s one a
minute. Each of them will have needs to fulfill. How, I
wonder, are we going to do it?
I argued for meaningful controls of legal and illegal
immigration. Levy meaningful fines on
employers who hire illegal aliens. Take away the
job magnet that lures people from Mexico and Central
America.
Reduce the hundreds of thousands of
non-immigrant visas doled out without a second
thought.
Students and
workers who come to California on those
so-called temporary visas become permanent
residents. As the saying goes, nothing is more permanent
than a temporary worker.
Build a fence. Critics claim it
can’t or
shouldn’t be done. But of course it can. What better
way to deter illegal immigration? Immigration is one of
the variables in the population dimension that
can and
should be controlled.
Stress the wisdom of family planning. Don’t have more
children than you can nurture into productive citizens.
But now, according the projections issued in mid-July
by the California Department of Finance we have reached
the moment of truth. State demographers predict that
California’s population will hit 60 million by 2050.
That represents nearly a 75 percent increase during the
next four and a half decades. [State of California,
Department of Finance,
Race/Ethnic Population with Age and Sex Detail,
2000–2050. Sacramento, CA, July 2007.]
Demography is a
fascinating discipline. Unlike physics or chemistry,
it is not an exact science. Whether there will be 57 or
63 million residents over the next four decades no one
can truly predict.
But once the wheels of demographic change start
rolling, it’s hard to reverse them.
Expect to be steamrolled. Whether California ends up
with the lower or the higher number in the range, chaos
will rule.
Contemplate the impact growth will have on my home
town of, as the city father’s like to call it
,
“lovable, livable Lodi”. San Joaquin County’s
2000 population was estimated at 569,083 and is
projected to increase 213.5 percent by 2050. Lodi’s
current population is roughly 60,000. If it grows at the
same rate as the rest of the county, we’ll have nearly
200,000 residents by mid-century.
Other scary numbers are population increases of 3.5
million predicted for
Los Angeles County, 1.1 million, for
Orange County, 1.7 million for
San Diego County and 4.7 million for Riverside
County. Riverside’s population,
the “winner” in the demographic race to disaster,
will triple by 2050.
Whichever the exact number for the state’s population
or for Lodi’s turns out to be, the question is: “How
will people live?”
Naturally, to preserve our dwindling available land,
much talk centers around the concept of “smart growth”—
building up instead of building out.
This idea has been kicking around for ten years with
no sign of success. Smart growth’s best hope for
catching on will occur when not a single blade of grass
remains to
pave over.
In a curious twist, those most adversely affected by
population growth, the
white adult Californians who vote, may be taxed to fund
infrastructure improvements. They, however, are tax
adverse.
On the other hand, those residents who will soon make
up the majority of the state’s population,
Latinos, favor
tax increases.
The irony is that, according to the Public Policy
Institute of California, 63 percent of them are
not registered to vote.
The best California can hope for now is that the
state will become so unbearable a place to live that
people here will move away and others will stop coming.
JOENOTE TO VDARE.COM READERS
By 2050, the California’s
demographics will have undergone an unprecedented shift
created almost exclusively by lawbreaking. Because of
illegal immigration and the large families spawned by
illegal aliens, California’s Hispanic population will
increase to 52 percent in 2050 from 32 percent in 2000.
During the same fifty-year period, whites will decline
to 26 percent from 47 percent.
Many of the poorly informed
will delight when Hispanics dominate. The more aware
among us however know that during the next four decades
professionals and their tax-generating jobs will leave
California in a great big hurry. Social services that
lure aliens to the state will dry up for the most basic
reason: no tax dollars to fund them.
Within the next decade, I
expect to see more and more Hispanics, especially those
in the middle class, become immigration reform
activists. Their best interests are served by keeping a
firm lid on illegal immigration.
But, by the time that
happens, will it be too little, too late?
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English
at the Lodi Adult School, has been writing a weekly
column since 1988. It currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel.