[mobile site, backup mobile]
[Calitics en espanol]
Menu & About Calitics

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?

- About Calitics
- The Rules (Legal Stuff)
- Event Calendar
- Calitics' ActBlue Page
- Calitics RSS Feed
- Additional Advertisers
Daily Email Summary


View All Calitics Tags Or Search with Google:
 
Web Calitics
The Calitics Show:
Event Calendar
October 2008
(view month)
S M T W R F S
* * * 01 02 03 04
05 06 07 08 09 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 *
<< (add event) >>

Wire Services

ProgressiveCA Blogs

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Listen to Calitics Podcast on internet talk radioAdvertise Liberally Blue CA Ad Network

Afternoon Link Thread/Open Thread

by: Julia Rosen

Tue Apr 15, 2008 at 17:56:22 PM PDT


These all probably could have gotten full posts, but well I only have so much time these days.  Here are a few things that I have had open on my browser all day, intending to write about.  Any front pagers who want to add to, feel free.  Consider this an open thread.

  • Tack on another $1 billion to the state deficit.  Corporate tax receipts took a nose dive and we are down another billion from the projections in the January budget.
  • This Weintraub column on Arnold and marriage equality is worth a read, particularly in tandem with this Matthews post.  Here is my take.  The governor has been opposing marriage equality for political reasons, not ideological ones.  Now that he is a lame duck, he is feeling more free to express an opinion about marriage equality.  I don't expect him to sign Mark Leno's bill, but I could see him being more willing to if the hate amendment qualifies for the November election and then goes down in flames.  That of course does not factor in the Supreme Court ruling expected this summer.

    We are going to get marriage equality in this state.  It is just a matter of when.

  • Speaking of Matthews, this article from Sunday is pretty interesting.  Matthews argues that the governor needs to drop the education cuts so that the redistricting initiative has a chance.  I am not going to argue against moving away from education cuts by any means.  However, redistricting is such a minor issue this year given the budget deficit and the governor should not be making decisions about it based on the chances of redistricting.

    Sure we could have a better way to draw our lines,  but the 2/3rds requirements and Prop 13 have a much bigger impact on our state's disfunction than redistricting.  Oh and his "budget reforms" are a non-starter.  Matthews is correct that the discussion this year ought to be about taxes, which is directly related to the issues I listed above.

  • UC admissions rates dropped this year, but it was mostly due to demographics, not the budget cuts.  The millennial generation is huge and there are more kids applying that ever before.  In general admissions rates are down across the country.  This means added pressure on the CSU and community college system.

    On a personal note, my youngest sister is headed to Duke in the fall and I am rather proud of her, even though she picked it over my alma matter.

Julia Rosen :: Afternoon Link Thread/Open Thread
Tags: , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Arnold is a true believer (0.00 / 0)
Interesting column - I think Mathews is wrong to emphasize the rainy day fund - it should be lower on our list of priorities, something to enact once we have solved the current crisis. When your house is flooded and there's a huge hole in your roof, planning for a future rainy day fund isn't exactly the most pressing need.

Mathews is right that we need to reassess our tax system, and I agree that Arnold is a fool to insist on destroying public education the same year he wants to pursue redistricting.

But Mathews misses the key point - Arnold is a true believer. He's a true believer in slashing education spending. A true believer in low taxes despite the social and economic costs. A true believer in Milton Friedman's "shock doctrine" strategy of disaster capitalism. A true believer in breaking the power of unions.

And of course Arnold is a true believer in his own ability to deliver all of these things. In his mind Arnold Schwarzenegger is a unique source of political power in California. He is the alpha and the omega, the charismatic leader who can radically reshape California politics and governance all on his own.

One would have thought that 2005 would have disabused him of these notions, but it appears to have done nothing of the sort. And so he's going to get smacked again by voters. It's a shame though that his comeuppance comes at such a high cost to Californians and the services they depend upon.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave


here's one that deserves it's own thread (0.00 / 0)
Check out the SFSU College Republicans plan to raise money to keep out the brown people. They were recently awarded the honor of being chosen as the "best" chapter in the entire country. Today's meeting was on "Islamo-Fascism Awareness" -- I am not kidding.

- John McCain

As to admissions (0.00 / 0)
The huge crush of people applying to UC puts even more pressure on the community college system - because when UC gets huge application numbers, and lets in big freshmen classes, that leaves fewer spots for deserving transfer students coming out of the community colleges. I've got several students on pins and needles right now waiting to see if they got into Berkeley or UC Santa Cruz.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

youngest sisters (8.00 / 2)
Aww, congrats to your sister!

I'm a blubbering, gushing mess of pride over my youngest sister. She is finishing up undergrad this year, and was admitted to ALL the law schools she applied to. Now she's tearing her hair out trying to decide between Harvard, Stanford, Michigan (full ride), and a few others. I've got no horse in the race (UCSD doesn't even have a law school), just trying to cheer from the sidelines. Normally Harvard would be a no-brainer, not only just that it's Harvard, but for her specialty and everything, it's just perfect. But with student loans getting harder to come by, and uncertain times ahead, she's really sweating the idea of going into debt a couple hundred grand.  


And congrats (8.00 / 3)
to yours.  Wow she must have done well on the LSATs.

Stanford would put her a lot closer to you than Harvard, but then again it is Harvard.

I'm thrilled that all four of us kids get to hang out as adults for the first time together the weekend of the 25th.  My bro is flying my sisters out for the Coachella music festival and has rented a house.  It's going to be so much fun.


[ Parent ]
Michigan (8.00 / 1)
I have several friends who graduated from UM's law school and had nothing but positive things to say about it. And a full ride to UM would open SO many doors. Then again, Harvard opens a lot of doors too. (Just don't let her go to Stanford!) A good dilemma for your sister, really.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

[ Parent ]
Calitics Premium Ads

Advertisers

California Friends
Shared Communities
Resources
California News
Progressive Organizations
The Big BlogRoll

Referrals
Technorati
Google Blogsearch
Blog Network:

Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
Powered by: SoapBlox