So when the
democrat dominated legislature submitted a cobbled together piece of
crap that looked like it was written that morning on the school bus, Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed it. Not to worry, the
state controller John Chiang is a Democrat; he'd never dock
their pay. Wrong. Chaing's math showed a budget that
minimally spent $1.85 billion more than it would
collect. Not even close. "No tickee, no laundry" said detective
Chaing, Democrats were surprised; then outraged.
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“John
Chiang just wants to sit there and beat up on kids,” cried Assemblyman
Mike Gatto of Los Angeles. “I now have to explain to my wife and
daughter why we won’t be able to pay our bills because a politician
chose to grandstand at our expense.”
The leader of the Democratic majority in the Assembly agreed, and
promised to employ the great American solution: a lawsuit.
“Chiang is now focused all the attention on himself so he’ll have the
next political move to become governor,” he said. “Now it will require
a lawsuit to educate him.” He argues the controller violated the
separation of powers in violation of the state constitution.
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While Democrats ralph, a nation sick of California excess raffs
out roud (oh stop it. Hollywood made those Charlie Chan
movies). Wes Pruden's tightly knitted narrative
offers so much more fun (teacher unions) that you'll want to avail
yourself, but his last is too good for me to pass up.
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One
state senator, Lonnie Hancock of Oakland, thinks he has found a novel
source of savings. The state of California is spending $184 million a
year to house and feed 714 prisoners on death row. California has
executed “only” 13 prisoners since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated
the death penalty in 1978.
Old age is the leading cause of death on death row, and Mr. Hancock
argues that there’s no point in spending millions to keep people alive
while it waits to kill them. This could be the beginning of another
California trend.
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Omg. The back of my head hurts from all this rafter.
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