Dan Walters points to a very interesting article in the Economist comparing Texas with California. He chose his favorite paragraphs for Capitol Alert, but this was the key paragraph from my perspective:
No state has quite so many overlapping systems of accountability or such a gerrymandered legislature. Ballot initiatives, the crack cocaine of democracy, have left only around a quarter of its budget within the power of its representative politicians. (One reason budget cuts are inevitable is that voters rejected tax increases in a package of ballot measures in May.) Not that Californian government comes cheap: it has the second-highest top level of state income tax in America (after Hawaii, of all places). Indeed, high taxes, coupled with intrusive regulation of business and greenery taken to silly extremes, have gradually strangled what was once America’s most dynamic state economy. Chief Executive magazine, to take just one example, has ranked California the very worst state to do business in for each of the past four years.
By contrast, Texas was the best state in that poll.



These daily emails about enterprise zones are often forums for the EZ Policy Blog author to repeat anti-tax rants and comments about how high taxes are in California. I for one do not mind paying higher taxes to get us out of this mess. The anti-tax zealots are a big part of our problem. I would also encourage as many of the anti-tax people as possible to move to Texas where public services are virtually non-existent.
Steve Wahlstrom