A DEI Green New Deal Hydrogen Bomb

From American Thinker

That’s how Victor David Hanson describes this week’s catastrophic wildfires in California.

“It was a total systems collapse from the idea of not spending money on irrigation, storage, water, fire prevention and forest management, a viable insurance industry, a DEI hierarchy, you put it all together and it’s something like a DEI Green New Deal hydrogen bomb… Gavin Newsom was fiddling, he’s almost Nero Newsom. And this has been something that is just unimaginable… The systems breakdown. And to finish, what we’re seeing in California is a state with 40 million people. And yet the people who run it feel that it should return to a 19th century pastoral condition. They are de-civilizing the state and de-industrializing the state and de-farming the state. But they’re not telling the 40 million people that their lifestyles will have to revert back to the 19th century, when you had no protection from fire… You didn’t have enough water in California. You didn’t have enough power. You didn’t pump oil. So we are deliberately making these decisions not to develop energy, not to develop a timber industry, not to protect the insurance industry, not to protect houses and property. And we’re doing it in almost a purely nihilistic fashion.”

And any honest accounting underscores the truth of his assessment.

LA is burning. And the derelict people responsible are worried that they are found out as charlatans and empty suits. The leftwing voters who enabled them are getting angry over the inferno that their chosen politicos green-lighted — as if they are shocked, shocked by the consequences of their voting. 

Here are just some of the most glaring examples of the misgovernance of California which contributed to the catastrophe, in case your source of news brushes past them with feature stories of loss and nonsense about climate change. (Average annual rainfall in California has remained unchanged since the late 19th century and California has not been in drought conditions since 2022. Sometimes it does rain in California. Sometimes it does not. Therefore, particularly wise management of water resources is necessary and that has been ignored.) It has not created or maintained existing water reservoirs, it has not created fire breaks, it has forbidden the removal of dry brush in its forests. The people holding elective office have demonstrated indifference and incompetence to the citizens of the state. A week before the fires broke out, a fire weather watch was declared. The mayor of Los Angeles Karen Bass (a long time Castro fan) left anyway for a junket in Ghana which hardly ranks among her job duties. Her deputy mayor for public safety was on leave after the FBI raided his home “allegedly for making a bomb threat against City Hall earlier this year.” 

On her very first day in office, the mayor allocated $1.3 billion to address homelessness and cut $17.6 million from the fire department. DEI has been a greater priority for her and her three female fire chiefs than preventing and responding to fires. The openly-stated philosophy motivating her priorities were that there were too many white male firefighters, and great efforts were made to force them out and not rehire any more of them (even though firefighters normally need the kind of upper body strength few females possess). In Pacific Palisades where the fire first broke out there is a reservoir capable of holding

clarices pieces

117 million gallons of water. The LA Times first reported it was empty for repairs, but it has been empty since 2009.  The generously paid water chief, ($750,000 p.a.) Janisse Quinones knew months before the fires that the reservoir was empty. She had to know as well that many of the fire hydrants were missing or empty. No timely effort was made to seek help from Canada or elsewhere to bring in planes capable of scooping water from the Pacific where the governor had sent California’s rainfall after he destroyed dams to save a smelt fish.

Billions of dollars in loss, much of it uninsured. That is because the state imposed price controls on insurance premiums and insurers could not make a profit on the mandated state maximums so they cancelled the insurance. (The same dopes who elected the people who made this lamebrained decision doubtless will paint the insurance companies, not the feckless legislators, as blameworthy for their substantial losses. The only advantage of a failed public education system is a plethora of really stupid voters.)

Most of these failures were points made by the president-elect years ago, who had experience as a builder working in California, all of which Governor Newsom ignored because play-acting at governance with a good hairdo seems to work well enough for Californians

Given the giant web of bureaucracies regulating the construction of housing in California, it will be a long time, if ever, before the burned-out areas will be able to be reconstructed. And when and if they are, those homeowners will be hit with massive taxes (taxes which will continue to be allocated for everything but essential services, if history is a guide.)

What another AMAZING “coincidence” California had just passed new tax laws, if your home burns down and you don’t rebuild within 2 years (impossible in California) you lose your tax basis. Your property taxes SKYROCKET to the new values of the property “Think about a home that was purchased many years ago for $5 million. Let’s say they were paying $65,000 a year in property taxes. Property goes up a lot over time, especially in these areas. Maybe the value today is $30 million. They go to rebuild it. If it was not, if they couldn’t transfer the tax basis, you’re looking at like $400,000 a year that they would have to pay” “In 2020, California voters approved a bill that basically said that if your house burns down in a fire, you can transfer the tax basis of that property to something that you buy or something that you build. But you only have two years to do it.” So some of the most expensive homes and properties the entire world now will get reassessed to pay maximum property tax values. 

Despite shelling out $24 billion on “homelessness’’ (likely to friendly leftist NGOs for salaries and political operations) homelessness has increased under Newsom by 40%.) Michael Shellenberger has a fine explanation of how the Left’s absurd hatred of Western civilization and human progress has led to this point. (Read it all for the best understanding.) Among the reasons for their failures is this:

…they are beholden to affluent, radical Left environmentalist and social justice donors who live in places like Marin County and Hollywood. These are the same people who bankroll radical Left groups like the Sierra Club and Natural Resources Defense Council, who have successfully blocked desalination and water storage plants, the proper clearing of flammable debris in forests, and effective management of landscapes around housing development, for over 45 years. Before that, the same groups and financial interests halted the expansion of nuclear power, which is the perfect energy source for desalination. [snip] For decades, Hollywood cranked out movies and TV depicting the exhaustion of natural resources and climate as causing the apocalypse. Yesterday, some reporters and scientists blamed climate change for the lack of rain in LA. That’s ridiculous. There’s no trend in annual rainfall from 1877 to 2024. We have wet years and dry years. Destroying civilization turned out to be expensive, not cheap. Californians pay the highest taxes for the most expensive gasoline, electricity, and water in the nation. [snip] Both ancient wisdom and modern psychology teach us that one can understand a person’s motivation by the consequences of their actions. California’s Democrats, progressives, and politicians lied when they said their highest priority was protecting the people of California. They lied when they said they cared about social justice. And they lied when they said they cared about protecting the environment. Instead, what they cared about was destroying the civilization they had long ago decided was evil. All civilizations require a story. The story that built Los Angeles and California was one of human progress. The story that destroyed it was of human sin. For decades, progressives, Democrats, and the news and entertainment media preached that civilization was evil and doomed. Slavery, indigenous genocide, and climate change were proof. And now, as the city of angels smolders, it’s clear that progressives reaped what they sowed.

In the meantime, fires still smolder, many suspected to have been caused by arsonists, and gangs of looters prowl areas where homeowners have evacuated. Newsom finally called in the National Guard to better control against it, but it’s about a week late.

In a better world the state could be put into receivership and its assets properly managed, absent that, many agencies and offices in the state are ripe for a thorough accounting and housecleaning.

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Tom Johnson
January 15, 2025 6:10 am

“Nero Newsom” is an apt name. He fiddles (with $50 million to stop Trump), while LA burns.

leefor
Reply to  Tom Johnson
January 15, 2025 8:32 pm

I first read it as Nero Newstorm.

c1ue
January 15, 2025 6:16 am

Shellenberger said in his interview with Tucker Carlson, that roughly half of all fires in LA are started by homeless. A great proportion of them being meth addicts – apparently going without sleep for weeks and months makes a lot of them pyromaniacs. He also said that homelessness is primarily a result of drug addiction.

Scissor
Reply to  c1ue
January 15, 2025 6:53 am

In the circle of Californian politics, open borders allow drugs to flow, immigrants to take services to ensure a steady supply of homeless citizens, as well as constraining funds for fire departments. Now the fire loss of homes will lead to depression, drug use, higher rents and more homelessness.

Richard Greene
Reply to  c1ue
January 15, 2025 8:14 am

Shellenberger made up that “roughly half” statistic and it is irrelevant for forest fires too., Another BS artist?

There is a serious, rapidly growing problem of homeless people burning down their own tents. But NOT starting forest fires.

Rising number of homeless fires threatens LA neighborhoods – NBC Los Angeles

Forest fires are almost all manmade and 90% of all manmade forest fires are believed to be caused by autos, power equipment and downed power lines. None of those forest fire causes are the fault of homeless people.

Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 9:16 am

“Shellenberger made up that “roughly half” statistic and it is irrelevant for forest fires too., Another BS artist?”

your posted article says nothing about percentage of homeless fires nor does it contradict the “roughly half” statement. It is a red herring.

OTOH:

https://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news/rash-of-homeless-encampment-fires-continues-across-southland/

https://www.foxnews.com/us/los-angeles-facing-growing-number-of-fires-at-homeless-encampments-reports

https://www.thecentersquare.com/california/article_16d64d5a-8258-11ee-a239-4bcd778b8772.html

I see a BS artist here, but it isn’t Schellenberger.

Richard Greene
Reply to  Gino
January 15, 2025 12:58 pm

Shellenberger makes up statistics with no data and that’s fine for you

You are a hypocrite

You require every sentence of my comments to be backed by a link to a study.

The link I provided was to an investigation of the types of fires homeless people DO start. They accidentally burn down tents in urban areas. They are not blamed for forest fires for a good reason that I also explained. But with no link, Thats not good enough for you because you LIKE what Shellenberger claimed, never mind his lack of data.

The subject is forest fires, not tent fires or urban fires in general

What percentage of wildfires are caused by humans in California?

95%
People — whether purposeful, reckless or simply careless — are responsible for about 95% of California’s wildfires. In 2023 alone, people caused more than 7,000 wildfires in California; nationally, it was more than 50,000.

What Causes Wildfires? | WFCA

There are ZERO data for the number or percentage of forest fires in CA started by homeless people. Shellenberg is implying he knows. Shellenberger is a BS artist. You are a BS artist believer.

Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 1:29 pm

Richard Greene makes up statistics with no data

Who’s the hypocrite?

Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 7:44 pm

You’ve graduated from BS to just pure Horsesh!t now.

The money quote:

“As I reported yesterday, over half of all fires that the LA Fire Department puts out are started by the homeless, who may well have started some of the fires ravaging LA. Gavin Newsom spent $24 billion of taxpayer money to increase homelessness by 40% since he took office. Karen Bass ran on a promise to force the homeless inside into shelters but has not done so.”

The subject is fire preparedness and government officials priorities. You do a dishonest bait and switch to “forest fires in CA”. Here’s a hint, from the data given so far, the fire started within LA city limits. So the money quote is valid, LAFD, city, AND state government preparedness is the heart of the issue.

Your empty article link did not support your comment and I provided you 3 links showing Schellenberg’s assertion was supported. Your attempt to deflect his point about government culpability to statewide wildfires is dishonest and your comments are a weak attempt to create a red herring.

BTW, if your own assertion that “There are ZERO data for the number or percentage of forest fires in CA started by homeless people.” then YOU are the one making up the statements – “They are not blamed for forest fires” –your own words above. Which I suspect is actually false because our local CALFire certainly notes when they have responded to Bum fires along the Salinas River.

Apparently you can’t recognize a hypocrite when he’s staring at you from the mirror.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Gino
January 16, 2025 8:49 am

“Roughly half” is not a statistic. It is a guess or an estimate, which may or may not be backed by statistics.

rhs
January 15, 2025 6:17 am

At least as a gas, Hydrogen should be on the way out with failures like these:
https://cleantechnica.com/2024/12/23/another-day-another-hydrogen-transportation-failure-first-mode-edition/amp/

Ron Long
Reply to  rhs
January 15, 2025 9:34 am

Hydrogen still works great for fusion bombs which is what i was hoping to encounter in the report.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  rhs
January 15, 2025 10:04 am

So, the idea is to separate hydrogen from oxygen in water (electrolysis). Sound like a perfect fit in LA today.

Tom Halla
January 15, 2025 6:17 am

Los Angeles County has more registered “voters” than people eligible to vote.

Scissor
Reply to  Tom Halla
January 15, 2025 6:57 am

And making it illegal for poll workers to check ID’s is not sane. Newsome is the real life American Psycho.

Reply to  Scissor
January 15, 2025 10:11 am

California State Government is “Organized Insanity”

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Steve Case
January 16, 2025 8:53 am

I question the word organized.

abolition man
Reply to  Tom Halla
January 15, 2025 9:31 am

Commifornia leads the nation in making voter verification impossible! The FBI claims that the 2020 election was fair, but they also spent two years and ~$50,000,000 investigating Russian collusion!
Need I say more!?

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  abolition man
January 15, 2025 10:05 am

Yes. Say more. And then say some more. And don’t stop.

Richard Greene
Reply to  Tom Halla
January 15, 2025 1:24 pm
Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Richard Greene
January 16, 2025 8:56 am

First link does not disprove the assertion.
Second link is broken.

January 15, 2025 6:32 am

‘In the meantime, fires still smolder, many suspected to have been caused by arsonists…’

Like this one?

‘Residents in Woodland Hills, California, many of whom were preparing to evacuate due to the nearby Kenneth fire at the time, noticed a man biking around the neighborhood holding a blowtorch and attempting to light trash cans with tree debris and a dead Christmas tree on fire, according to Fox 11 Los Angeles. Shocked locals eventually held him down, handcuffed him with zip-ties and called the police.

Sierra remains in the custody of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD). However, it’s not immediately clear whether the LAPD will honor the detainer placed on him, as local law enforcement officials are subjected to strict sanctuary policies at the city and local level that largely forbid cooperation with ICE agents.’

The ‘shocked locals’ should prepare to be even more shocked when CA’s DEI-obsessed legal system comes down on them like a ton of bricks.

https://www.themainewire.com/2025/01/illegal-immigrant-arrested-near-la-fire-with-blowtorch-is-a-convicted-felon-with-history-of-violence/

Scissor
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
January 15, 2025 7:04 am

More insanity. Democrats fight for the “right” of illegals to remain in the U.S. Federally, they voted against deportation of illegal immigrant sex offenders. It’s eerily similar to the tolerance of groomer gangs in the U.K.

January 15, 2025 6:33 am

Newsom signed an executive order to reduce permitting requirements for rebuilding after the fire, so it probably won’t take most people more than 2 years to rebuild.

https://www.gov.ca.gov/2025/01/12/governor-newsom-signs-executive-order-to-help-los-angeles-rebuild-faster-and-stronger/

Nothing like protecting your loyal donors.

Scissor
Reply to  Crane Laws
January 15, 2025 7:15 am

We’ll see what happens. Maybe some self insured mega rich people will be able to rebuild so quickly, for the majority, years of frustration awaits them. Even for many people whose surviving houses are in neighborhoods that burned, return of utilities, infrastructure, and cleanup is going to be painfully slow.

There will be major problems with underinsured, uninsured, and over stressed insurance providers. There is going to be a wave of bankruptcies that have to be dealt with and this is a slow process.

John Hultquist
Reply to  Crane Laws
January 15, 2025 9:37 am

With so many buildings now rubble there may be high demand for workers, material, equipment and anything else needed to build. And maybe not. My county requires builders to submit house plans for evaluation and approval. Those folks will be swamped with work. If you look at the empty properties in the burned town of Paradise CA {use all the tools of Google Earth} you begin to realize the issues.

heme212
January 15, 2025 6:51 am

aren’t fire protection and policing the two main reasons for municipal government?

John Hultquist
Reply to  heme212
January 15, 2025 9:46 am

I don’t think so. I’ll guess land use development decisions, including roads and utilities as the most important. Fire and police are — in small towns — contracted with the County.

abolition man
January 15, 2025 7:02 am

As a 3rd generation Californian, I watch with horror the torture, mutilation, and rape of the once great Golden State! Fortunately, I realized decades ago that the momentum towards a one party, socialist state was nearly unstoppable, so I limped off to a mountain retreat to lick my wounds and try to recover from my punishment for being born white and male!
Now that I identify as a Native American lesbian woman, I could probably journey back safely to my ancestral home; but I now realize that the place I grew up in no longer exists! The Long March of the Marxists through the institutions of La La Land has turned into the Long Slide down into the Hellhole that addled Commifornians call Utopia!
We know from history that you can vote FOR communism, but you can only shoot your way out of it! So I will exercise, eat healthy, and save up ammo; in the hopes that someday, in the not too distant future, the citizens there will ask to return to the First World and full membership in the US of A! I’m sure that most of us here would welcome a return to sanity and common sense; just imagine a state with numerous, modular nuclear power and desalination plants along it’s coast, and gas that costs less than $6 per gallon! A man can dream, can’t she!

Reply to  abolition man
January 15, 2025 7:19 am

With your new identity- you could get any job you want in the state government of Wokeachusetts. Guaranteed.

abolition man
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
January 15, 2025 9:23 am

I’m thinking about going back to California, since I would now qualify for $200,000 to $750,000 a year job when overtime is included; and apparently no actual work is required!

Reply to  abolition man
January 15, 2025 11:41 am

Notwithstanding your new identities, probably best to lay off the ‘ammo’ talk lest you invite a late night visit from the State’s enforcement division.

abolition man
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
January 15, 2025 12:06 pm

I appreciate your concern, Frank, but ever since that unfortunate boating accident all I can do is provide ammo for friends and allies. My state is rather gun friendly, but if anyone wants to find my weapons their going to need SCUBA gear and a rather large magnet!

JonasM
Reply to  abolition man
January 15, 2025 2:06 pm

Wow, you too?

abolition man
Reply to  JonasM
January 15, 2025 3:01 pm

Quite the coinquidink, ain’t it!

January 15, 2025 7:14 am

“her three female fire chiefs”

If female governors and mayors were reasonable about giving jobs to their female cronies – that would be one thing but NO. The same thing has happened here in Wokeachusetts with governor Maura Healey. Most top jobs in state government are filled by women and each agency is now pushing the woke thing – a full court press. And while they’re at their climate lunacy – they’re trying hard to stop all forestry, which of course was my career for 50 years. I am livid.

hdhoese
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
January 15, 2025 9:37 am

Speaking of forestry are there any fire towers now, or just for tourists? Tough job but used to see lightning strikes quickly.

Reply to  hdhoese
January 15, 2025 12:07 pm

Not sure if any are still open. I know of several that have been locked up for years. The state now mostly has small planes fly around during “fire season” or whenever needed.

Reply to  hdhoese
January 15, 2025 1:27 pm

Cameras can catch the lightening strikes and smoke as well as better that the 20 yr old kids.

But either way, if they are just going to let it burn, what difference does it make?

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  DonM
January 18, 2025 6:20 am

lightening strikes”

But what about lightning strikes?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
January 15, 2025 2:52 pm

 they’re trying hard to stop all forestry, which of course was my career for 50 years. I am livid.

Unless all the forests are cut down for wind turbines and solar farms, the increasing forest productivity will make this experience greatly prized in the relatively near future. Probably beyond you care but the knowledge is vital to future prosperity, even if it is no more than fire control. But the biomass could be used for useful energy production.

A key factor in the loss of billions in the LA fires was the lack of proper forest management.

StephenP
January 15, 2025 7:24 am

How would EV fire trucks have dealt with this situation?

Scissor
Reply to  StephenP
January 15, 2025 8:33 am

Just fine.

Reply to  StephenP
January 15, 2025 1:33 pm

They would have driven up to, and parked next to the dry hydrants just like the others diesel trucks. Then after waiting an appropriate amount, they would have gone back for re-charge.

(technically dry-hydrant means something altogether different than ’empty hydrants’, but ’empty hydrants’ just sounds to goofy.)

Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 7:48 am

Clarice Feldman is an extremely biased against Democrats.

Her knowledge of CA fires is poor and she just wants to blame the politicians. This is an article by an angry, biased woman,.

Manmade forest fires are common in CA. Usually accidents but sometimes arson. This fire started during extreme winds when fire figting planes and helicopters could not fly for a few days as the winds spread the fires. There was NOTHING a Republican controlled state would have done differently that would have made a difference for the first few days.

CA is 1/3 forests. It has a goal of forest management for one million acres per year. It would take 33 years to cover all the forests.at one million acres per year. That is an impossible job. Forest management is an annual job everywhere, not a once in 33 year job for 3% of the total CA forest area.

A hydrant system that delivered enough water pressure to meet the unprecedented, perhaps once in a generation, water demand in LA would be extremely expensive.
San Francisco is often considered to have one of the best fire hydrant systems in the United States, particularly due to its dedicated “High Pressure Fire Hydrant” system,

The LA fires did not start because of politicians, poor forest management, water shortages or low hydrant water pressure.

Clarice Feldman includes many factual errors besides the false theme of blaming the fires on Democrats. Some i quickly spotted:

She claims Bass cut the fire budget by $17.6 million on her first day in office. FALSE. Bass actually took office on December 19, 2022. The $17.6 million cut, a tiny percentage of (about 2%) of the whole budget in May 2024. 17 months later! This is also irrelevant because the fire department consistently overruns its budgets. In fact a union pay raise for fire fighters alone is expected to cause a $50 million 2024/2025 budget overrun. Plus the cost of the LA fires, even more so.

Officials said that the Santa Ynez Reservoir had been closed since about February 2024 for repairs to its cover, leaving a 117-million-gallon water “gap”, It was scheduled to reopen in February 2025. Feldman claimed the reservoir had been closed since 2009. Clarice Feldman is a conservative hack writer.

I did more research for this comment than Feldman did for her American Stinker article.

John Hultquist
Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 9:59 am

The historic view {Google Earth} of the Santa Ynez Reservoir for 4/26/2011 shows it to be empty. May 24, 2009 is the most recent year when water is seen. So, visual evidence suggests it was emptied in the 2009/2011 period.

Reply to  John Hultquist
January 15, 2025 1:37 pm

But Dick did research….

Editor
Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 11:35 am

How a fire starts is often unimportant, the point being that fire conditions are the main factor, and in bad conditions a fire is going to start for some reason or other. The job of a fire department includes prevention and preparation. Prevention includes ensuring that flammable flora and other material is kept cleared around houses. You don’t have to clear the whole forest, just around the houses, but burns (or goats) to reduce forest load are still useful. Preparation includes ensuring water supply, functional equipment, a plan, and training. If a fire department isn’t ready when a fire starts, it’s too late. Painting fire hydrants in political colours isn’t preparation.

Reply to  Mike Jonas
January 15, 2025 2:05 pm

I haven’t researched anything.

But … a while back the EPA mandated that all drinking water reservoirs needed to be covered. It appears that this Santa Ynez Reservoir ‘repair’ was associated with the cover, and (therefore maybe) meeting drinking water standards.

But there is no valid reason that reservoir could not have been full and available for emergency use fire protection with the outlet valve closed. Worst case, it would likely have needed to have been filled with treated water … maybe $200,000 worth of water to be thrown away later if there is no need for fire protection.

Regulated planning for infrastructure, using prescriptive methods, generally wastes a significant amount efforts/resources in the box checking criteria. And the documents are useful primarily for satisfying the requirement that there is a long term plan.

The planning documents associated with the actually operation/maintenance of the water distribution system, and how the the temporary mothballing of the Santa Ynez fits in, will be an interesting read for a bunch of people.

(HR managers in a large cities may be seeing applications from LA Public Works upper/middle management. If you do, ask them why they are proactive wrt their self-preservation, but not proactive wrt the lives of others)

Curious George
Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 11:37 am

Who is Clarice Feldman? Is she Richard Greene?

Reply to  Richard Greene
January 15, 2025 1:58 pm

A hydrant system that delivered enough water pressure to meet the unprecedented, perhaps once in a generation, water demand in LA would be extremely expensive.

So is the cost of fully rebuilding suburbs including public infrastructure.

abolition man
Reply to  jayrow
January 15, 2025 3:05 pm

Not to mention those 24 confirmed deaths! But I’ll bet those poor victims will once again be voting the DemoKKKratic ticket come the next election!

Kevin Kilty
January 15, 2025 8:25 am

No timely effort was made to seek help from Canada or elsewhere to bring in planes capable of scooping water from the Pacific where the governor had sent California’s rainfall after he destroyed dams to save a smelt fish.

Please don’t get me wrong. Newsom is a total political animal who lies early and often, but the empty staus of the San Ynez reservoir and the smelt or snail darter or whatever are not connected in this instance because I believe those fish are a Central California issue. Instead, the reservoir was empty because, I guess in California, it takes years to get approval and round-up the resources to fix even critical infrastructure.

Reply to  Kevin Kilty
January 15, 2025 12:04 pm

Rud made a similar comment about the water released for the missing smelt was not a contributor to the lack of water to fight the fires.
I’m glad to be corrected in my misconception.(Though it’s still dumb to deprive the farmers of water where it is done.)
But that reservoir being left empty for years is on the local and state Governments of CA.

Reply to  Kevin Kilty
January 16, 2025 4:12 pm

No timely effort was made to seek help from Canada or elsewhere to bring in planes capable of scooping water from the Pacific

As someone else pointed out salting the earth is never a good scheme.

KevinM
January 15, 2025 8:36 am

In a better world the state could be put into receivership and its assets properly managed
Does not sound like a better world to me.

Editor
Reply to  KevinM
January 15, 2025 11:23 am

Our permanently disfunctional local council was eventually replaced by an administrator for a few years. It was a big improvement. A new lot of councillors has now been elected and seem to be going OK. It is important that administration is only temporary. Same with the pro-democracy military coup in Algeria.

January 15, 2025 8:45 am

Gaven fiddles while California burns

NewsomFires
abolition man
Reply to  Mumbles McGuirck
January 15, 2025 9:25 am

Since that is a lyre, wouldn’t it be more appropriate to say that Gavin is just plucking around?

Reply to  abolition man
January 15, 2025 11:58 am

Yes, a liar on the lyre.

abolition man
Reply to  Mumbles McGuirck
January 15, 2025 12:07 pm

Bingo!

January 15, 2025 10:08 am

California is making it difficult to gather downed and dead wood for personal use:

Personal Use Firewood Permits and some details LINK

sherro01
January 15, 2025 10:46 am

Identify those who contributed to deaths and prosecute them for murder.
Geoff S

Editor
Reply to  sherro01
January 15, 2025 11:18 am

Personslaughter.

January 15, 2025 11:15 am

 Michael Shellenberger interviewed by Tucker Carlson on just this issue, and much more.

https://x.com/i/status/1878957424989863986

January 15, 2025 12:29 pm

25% of California residents are foreign born.
33% of California residents are on welfare.
33% of California’s electrical power is imported.
The last completed California water project was in 1967
The State Funded high speed railroad is $100 Billion short and 16 years late.

Be aware that Democrats have controlled the State Assembly continuously since 1958. The Assembly is responsible for authoring all revenue bills.

Bob
January 15, 2025 1:08 pm

California is an embarrassment.

abolition man
Reply to  Bob
January 15, 2025 3:09 pm

Like a college coed stumbling around the bar at closing time, telling everyone; “I am SOOO drunk!” You know that something bad is about to happen; you just don’t know exactly where or when!

observa
Reply to  Bob
January 15, 2025 10:34 pm

They have plenty of virtue signalling competition with the media in on it-
Charles Darwin’s grave spraypainted by protesters | Watch

observa
January 15, 2025 10:06 pm

Wokesters have to get their priorities right with resourcing-
‘Absolutely insane’: UK radiographers receive backlash over pregnancy question

Stephen Ireland
January 15, 2025 11:35 pm

“. . . To effectively contain a civilization’s development and disarm it across a long space of time, there is only one way: kill its science”.

Cixin Liu The Three-Body Problem serialised in Science Fiction World 2006 translated by Ken Liu 2014 p. 392 Head Zeus, published 2014

Boy, haven’t our elites done a good job of killing science over the past fifty years, with inevitable consequences now obvious to all (well, maybe not quite all). There still seem to be some who are unable or refuse to consider the evidence; evidence being one of those evil deceptions that underlies fair dinkum science

Sparta Nova 4
January 16, 2025 8:46 am

Could not make a profit. True, but given the rate data, the insurance companies could not break even, which would have caused a much wider spread loss of insurance;

Michael S. Kelly
January 16, 2025 2:57 pm

I’m glad I got out of California when I did, in 2008. Unfortunately, I wound up in Maryland (aka East California), and had to reflee to Virginia. Next stop: Tennessee, this time for good.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Michael S. Kelly
January 17, 2025 1:18 pm

Tennessee is good.