I am doing so as an individual, not as a representative of any organization or coalition. And I am doing so because because I believe our civilization and our humanity depend on it.
Many people outside of California still do not understand the daily horror and chaos in our state.
Picture:
— a half-dressed women in a psychotic state, and still with a hospital identification band on her wrist, abandoned on a sidewalk in downtown Los Angeles, where she is likely to be raped;
— a bright and creative 14-year-old boy in Orange County found dead on the floor of his bedroom by his mother after he took what he thought was an oxycodone but turned out to be fentanyl;
— a mother desperately trying to save her homeless son from death by fentanyl on the streets of San Francisco and not being able to because California’s leaders and institutions are against her.
Those are all real people in current, real-world situations that our governor has proven, first as mayor, then as lieutenant governor, and now as governor, unwilling, or unable, to address.
This isn’t just a California problem. Most of the people we call “homeless” suffer from untreated mental illness and drug addiction. Illicit drug deaths nationally rose from 17,000 in 2000 to 93,000 last year, up from 71,000 in 2019.
We are living through two drug epidemics simultaneously, one from opioids, and the other from meth. Each is over 30 years in the making.
But the situation is the worst in California. The number of homeless people in California rose 31% over the last 10 years even as the number of homeless in the rest of the U.S. declined 18 percent. Where New York City shelters 95% of its homeless, Cali. cities shelter one-third.
Because Californians decriminalized three grams of even fentanyl and meth, and shoplifting under $950 worth of goods, prosecutors do not prosecute, police do not police, and residents do not report many crimes.
California’s leaders are turning the state into a third world nation complete with shantytowns. Somewhere around half of all fires in Los Angeles and the Bay Area are in tent cities and shantytowns euphemistically referred to as “homeless encampments.”
In them, the strong are allowed to prey upon the weak. Many of the fires are started deliberately as revenge and retaliation for violence and crime.
The killing of our children and family members by illicit drugs, our mistreatment of the mentally ill, and the chaos in our streets are not the only issues threatening our civilization. For example, rather than rethinking his opposition to nuclear energy...
... which many Democrats have done over the last decade, Newsom is moving forward with plans to shut down Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, which provides power to three million people, even as he permits the burning of dirty diesel fuel to avoid blackouts for 2.5 million people.
Rather than address racial disparities the governor’s appointees are lowering educational standards for all. Most nations, including developing ones, require students to have three or more years of algebra, and require students seeking science and technology careers to have five
But the governor’s appointees recently recommended students should take the same math classes in middle school through their sophomore year of high school instead of allowing high-achieving students to take advanced or even traditional math courses starting in the sixth grade.
And rather than put forest management on war-time footing, Newsom in 2019 actually cut the budget for forest fire prevention, which resulted in a full halving of the forest area treated for fire in 2020, all while accusing his political opponents of climate denial.
But the main reason to recall Newsom is for his actions and inactions on drug deaths, open air drug markets, and homelessness. We shut down our mental hospitals a half century ago because we thought they were cruel...
...but few were as cruel as enabling mentally ill people to inject, smoke, and die from the most addictive, intoxicating, and deadly drugs in the world by providing them the money, the equipment, and the tents and hotel rooms in which to do it.
All civilized societies address addiction, open air drug dealing, homelessness, and untreated mental illness the same way. They build sufficient hospitals, residential care, and shelters for their mentally ill, addicted, and homeless citizens, and require them to use them.
They disallow public camping, public defecation, and open-air drug dealing and drug use. They offer drug treatment and psychiatric care as an alternative to jail, not as optional, to people who break the law.
They send out mobile psychiatric and addiction care vans to get mentally ill, drug-addicted, and law-breaking citizens off the street. They make individual studio apartments a reward for sobriety, or progress toward one’s personal plan, not a “right” to everyone who demands one.
And they don’t allow drug dealers to sell deadly drugs on sidewalks, in parks, or on-line.
Everybody knows this, including Gavin Newsom, who is advised by the best mental health care and addiction professionals in the world. And yet he recently doubled down on the exact same policies that created the humanitarian disaster first place. Why?
In part because he wants to be president. And to be president, he believes he needs the political endorsements and campaign contributions from the ACLU, George Soros, and other interest groups that helped create the current crisis.
It is true that Newsom inherited a mess. Street drug addiction, camping in public, and the failure of our mental health system have been worsening for 30 years. The system is doomed to fail because the problem cannot be solved by counties.
But Newsom more than any other politician created the disaster, first as Mayor of San Francisco, then as Lieutenant Governor, and now has governor. It was Newsom who, in 2004, embraced the “Housing First,” anti-shelter agenda, which diverted money from building shelters ...
...to $1 million studio apartment units. It was Newsom who has failed to fix our state’s mental illness treatment system, despite his grandiose promises of single payer health care when he ran for governor in 2018.
And it has been Newsom who has refused to act against the drug dealers on street corners and on @Snapchat who are killing our children.
People rightly worry about mass incarceration, but if we shut down deadly drug markets, provide sufficient shelter, and treat the mentally ill, we won’t need mass incarceration because our cities won’t be overwhelmed with crime.
California has the highest income tax, highest gasoline tax, and highest sales tax in the United States. It spends significantly more than other states on homelessness and mental illness. We have a $80B budget surplus. And yet we have the worst outcomes.
Newsom has misled California. He has acted helpless as the disaster has grown worse. But this is a solvable problem. There are no technical or financial obstacles to right action, there are only political ones. And the main one can be addressed by recalling the governor.
I have been a Democrat and progressive for all of my adult life. I voted for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. I support single-payer health care, high progressive taxes, and subsidized housing. I have never voted for a Republican.
But the candidate most qualified to address the chaos is former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, the only person running who has dealt with the crisis directly as an elected official. After 20 people died from a Hepatitis A outbreak, Faulconer responded to shelter the homeless...
... provide mental health care, and address addiction. He was limited in what he could do, but he sought practical measures, including working with both Democrats and Republicans, to get them done.
San Diego still suffers from open air drug scenes, deaths, and homelessness because the problem can’t be solved at the county level. Shelter, mental illness, and addiction care must be provided at a state-level, to reduce costs, increase accountability, and eliminate waste...
Shutting down deadly drug dealing must involve law enforcement from across the state and thus be coordinated by the governor.
And Faulconer has taken the right position on other issues. He has said, for example, that he would keep Diablo Canyon nuclear plant operating. And he has promised to get forest management, to prevent high-intensity fires, on wartime footing.
While I am voting for Faulconer, any of the major candidates are likely to do a better job as governor than the current one, if only because they are not subject to the same pressure from irrational, dogmatic, and misleading interest groups.
All the major candidates have agreed to take a more rational approach to the drug death and homeless crisis than the current governor has. And all the major candidates have promised to keep Diablo Canyon operating.
If the recall passes, whoever is elected will need to run in next June’s primary and, if successful, in November’s run-off. The new governor will have time to demonstrate progress & explain his plan. If he fails to rise to the moment, voters can replace him with someone who can.
We are living through extreme circumstances, but only extreme circumstances can bring out the best in us. In addressing the drug crisis California can lead the rest of the U.S. in confronting a problem that has only worsened for 20 years.
We can solve these problems, save our state, and repair our nation.
A vote for the recall is a vote for your conscience. All of us who live in this state are stained by the crisis. We must act to save our children, our fellow citizens, and cities.
Hopefully this recall election will put an end to the gas-lighting of Californian concerns about out-of-control open drug scenes, crime & homelessness by East Coast media, even if it doesn’t result in the removal of @GavinNewsom
Even more hopefully it will lead to real change
Real change is possible, especially since California has the resources and simply needs the political will
Here’s the proven recipe for reform for the next governor
It’s amazing to see how many replies to the original CNN tweet are from Dems complaining that CNN did this story at all. They don’t want accuracy, they want reassurances. And that ship sailed long ago…
“It’s not because of Trump.”
That about says it all
Every Democratic instinct is to blame Republicans but California has been a supermajority for a decade
During that time, the homeless population rose 31% in California & declined -18% in rest of US… which is awkward
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Over the last decade, energy experts repeatedly assured policymakers around the world that increasing the use of renewables, while shutting down nuclear plants, would make energy supplies more secure, while lowering prices.
But those reassurances have come into question as gas prices have spiked, resulting in street protests & contributing to inflation
“The sudden slowdown in wind electricity production off the coast of the U.K. in recent weeks whipsawed through regional energy markets” — @WSJ
Media pundits & political leaders should have roundly condemned yesterday's assault by a white woman wearing a gorilla mask on black California gubernatorial front-runner @larryelder. Instead they downplayed it. The double standard is appalling.
Imagine for a moment that a white woman wearing a gorilla mask threw an egg at the first black American with a serious chance of becoming governor of California as he visited homeless encampments with black and Latino community leaders.
Imagine that, seconds later, both the gorilla-masked woman and a white man punched the candidate’s security guard. And imagine that somebody fired a pellet gun into the crowd.
“Making broad racial generalizations, and stripping minorities of agency, does not lead to racial progress — it does the precise opposite,”argued @Ravarora1 last summer.
Afterwards “I lost friends, former classmates, colleagues, and social connections.”
“The handful of young moderates in my social circle who support my work messaged me in private, saying they respected my views but were unable to publicly support or share them on social media”
“The editor of my local newspaper (who happens to be white), started taking to social media to accuse me of downplaying racism in our society and spreading misinformation…& described my views as “alt-right” (frequently used to describe white nationalism).”
When people die from floods, blackouts, and fires because you failed to upgrade sewers & evacuate; maintain & weatherize power plants; and manage forests: just blame climate change
They said climate change was an “inconvenient truth” but it‘s become quite convenient
“Anger seemed particularly palpable in Queens, where 12 people perished as water gushed into subterranean spaces, leaving residents to drown in their own homes. Many of those basement apartments were illegal, according to the city’s Department of Buildings.”
For many decades it has been big news for black Americans to be the “first” of anything, and for good reason. The history of white supremacy has meant that black achievement is something we all should celebrate.
We spent a decade discussing our first black president, before & after the election of Obama. Cities still celebrate the first black mayors, police chiefs, and governors. Why then aren’t we talking about the possibility of the first black governor of California, Larry Elder?