Fixing California: The Green Gentry’s Class Warfare
28th October 2013
Historically, progressives were seen as partisans for the people, eager to help the working and middle classes achieve upward mobility even at expense of the ultrarich. But in California, and much of the country, progressivism has morphed into a political movement that, more often than not, effectively squelches the aspirations of the majority, in large part to serve the interests of the wealthiest.
The modern Regressive movement is predicated on rich white people fooling non-rich and non-white people into believing that the rich white people hate the same people that the non-rich and non-white people hate, namely rich white people, and that the rich white people will strive mightily to arrange things so that rich white people (like themselves) will suffer for the benefit of non-rich non-white people. (This is the cornerstone of every Democratic Party platform since Roosevelt.) The fact that this works so well is a primary data point for the notion that non-rich and non-white people come from the left side of the Bell Curve.
Primarily, this modern-day program of class warfare is carried out under the banner of green politics. The environmental movement has always been primarily dominated by the wealthy, and overwhelmingly white, donors and activists. But in the past, early progressives focused on such useful things as public parks and open space that enhance the lives of the middle and working classes. Today, green politics seem to be focused primarily on making life worse for these same people.
My, what a surprise! Aren’t you surprised? I’m sure surprised.
In this sense, today’s green progressives, notes historian Fred Siegel, are most akin to late 19th century Tory radicals such as William Wordsworth, William Morris and John Ruskin, who objected to the ecological devastation of modern capitalism, and sought to preserve the glories of the British countryside. In the process, they also opposed the “leveling” effects of a market economy that sometimes allowed the less-educated, less well-bred to supplant the old aristocracies with their supposedly more enlightened tastes.
In other words, Regressives.
The gentry, of course, care little about artificially inflated housing prices in large part because they already own theirs — often the very large type they wish to curtail. But the story is less sanguine for minorities and the poor, who now must compete for space with middle-class families traditionally able to buy homes. Renters are particularly hard hit; according to one recent study, 39 percent of working households in the Los Angeles metropolitan area spend more than half their income on housing, as do 35 percent in the San Francisco metro area — well above the national rate of 24 percent.
The phenomenon of rich people complaining that their taxes are too low is part of the same scheme — If Warren Buffet loses half of his income, he might yawn, but if I lose half of mine, I lose sleep trying to figure out how to make ends meet. (That inconvenient little truth never makes it into the ‘news media’, which are typically run by rich white people who aren’t likely to give the game away.)
The green gentry’s power has been enhanced by changes in the state’s legendary tech sector. Traditional tech firms — manufacturers such as Intel and Hewlett-Packard — shared common concerns about infrastructure and energy costs with other industries. But today tech manufacturing has shrunk, and much of the action in the tech world has shifted away from building things, dependent on energy, to software-dominated social media, whose primary profits increasingly stem from selling off the private information of users. Servers critical to these operations — the one potential energy drain — can easily be placed in Utah, Oregon or Washington where energy costs are far lower.
When Apple manufactures stuff, it doesn’t do so in California, so California energy prices don’t mean shit to Apple. (Substitute ‘Microsoft’ for ‘Apple’ and ‘Washington’ for ‘California’ if you like.)
Even more critical, billionaires such as Google’s Eric Schmidt, hedge fund manager Thomas Steyer and venture firms like Kleiner Perkins have developed an economic stake in “green” energy policies. These interests have sought out cozy deals on renewable energy ventures dependent on regulations mandating their use and guaranteeing their prices.
Which is how AlGore got to be a multi-millionaire, despite having the carbon footprint of a small city — not so much selling out as buying in, you might say.
Ironically, the biggest losers in this shift are the very ethnic minorities who also constitute a reliable voter block for Democratic greens. Even amid the current Silicon Valley boom, incomes for local Hispanics and African-Americans, who together account for one-third of the population, have actually declined — 18 percent for blacks and 5 percent for Latinos between 2009 and 2011, prompting one local booster to admit that “Silicon Valley is two valleys. There is a valley of haves, and a valley of have-nots.”
And yet they still vote for the people whose policies are screwing them — the root of the phrase ‘low-information voter’, which is a polite way of saying ‘stupid ignorant voter’.
Due to the rise of the green gentry, California is becoming divided between a largely white and Asian affluent coast, and a rapidly proletarianized, heavily Hispanic and African-American interior. Palo Alto and Malibu may thrive under the current green regime, and feel good about themselves in the process, but south Los Angeles, Oakland, Fresno and the Inland Empire are threatened with becoming vast favelas.
And the Crust are good with that.
This may constitute an ideal green future — with lower emissions, population growth and family formation — for whose wealth and privilege allow them to place a bigger priority on nature than humanity. But it also means the effective end of the California dream that brought multitudes to our state, but who now may have to choose between permanent serfdom or leaving for less ideal, but more promising, pastures.
Like, say, Texas.
October 28th, 2013 at 05:52
Historically, progressives were seen as partisans for the people
Historically seen and wrongly seen. The purpose of socialism/progressivism/nazism/communism was always to establish a new feudalism and new nobility. Now, with the hatred expressed in race/class/gender politics and environmentalism, they will have it.