In the article, “How California Became Unforgivable” by Jerry Roberts and Phil Trounstine, they basically describe six key factors that made California impossible to govern. They claim that California wields a "power with the damaged machinery of a patchwork government system that lacks accountability, encourages stalemate and drifts but cannot be steered." Basically, elected representatives in California have no authority, yet still hold responsibility. The six factors mentioned earlier include Proposition 13, budget initiatives, gerrymandering, term limits, boom or bust taxation, and the two-thirds vote. But how do these factors make California impossible to govern?
In Chapter 9 of the book “Major Problems in California History” the authors use the key term “Hollywood” which is known as the “film colony” where movie stars lived and played. The author uses the term “Hollywood” as life in a movie by stating, “The existence of “Hollywood” as a residential community proved that the kind of life depicted on the silver screen could be found in reality.” Also, the author uses the key term “Hollywood” as a glamorous version of the American Dream by stating, “Ordinary people became acquainted with the movie stars’ opulent lifestyle through stories and photographs in fan magazines. Another way the key term “Hollywood” could be considered is as a resort city also named “Hollywood” located in southeastern Florida.
California Rising: The Life and Times of Pat Brown by Ethan Rarick is a captivating read. As a reader you are immediately drawn in by Rarick’s lively, fast-paced, critical and fully informed work. Ethan Rarick illustrates the story of a pivotal era in which the idea “the future happens first in California” becomes a reality as told in the first biography of legendary governor Edmund G. “Pat” Brown. Rarick imparts boldly on those who charted its course – including Ronald Reagan, John F. Kennedy, and the Brown family dynasty.
The California and United States Constitution are similar and different in many ways, an example that manifests this is in California’s constitution where the Governor has the power to “line veto” a bill, meaning that he has the power to address some parts of a bill with still the availability of ignoring certain fragments. While in the United States, the president can “pocket veto” a law but cannot pick which sections he’d wish to keep or get rid of. However if he does not act within ten days of receiving the bill it can become a law without the presidential signature. Some similarities that reside between the two can be found in article three of the California Constitution, which divides the state government into three branches Legislative,
What does the article show about the different attitudes and points of view in Central California during the 1940's? Specifically, think about CHP, Japanese community leaders, Dr. Hamasaki, and the District Attorney. What do each of them think about the situation and why? The article shows the many different attitudes that were expressed from various people.
Topic: Compromise When California applied for statehood in 1849, Southern politicians became worried that if California were admitted to the Union as a free state, it would set precedent for Congress to be able to disallow slavery in the western territories. In order to calm these concern, Senator Henry Clay formulated another compromise called the Compromise of 1850. This comprised of five separate bills, each addressing a separate condition to the compromise. The first condition was that California would be allowed entry to the union as a free state.
8. Why did southerners object to California’s admission as a free state? The southerners objected to California’s admission as a free state because it would destroy the delicate equilibrium in the senate, perhaps forever. Potential slave territory under the American flag was running short and agitation had already developed in the territories of New Mexico and Utah for admission as non-slave states. The fate of California might well establish a precedent for the rest of the Mexican Cession territory, an area purchased largely with Southern blood.
Victor Davis Hanson wrote the fascinating article, “It’s Still a Mad, Mad California”, published by the National Review. Hanson writes that there is a major class divide in California that is perpetuated by the elite. He identified a hypocritical belief that the wealthy of California are advocating for equality and more liberties for the oppressed. Hanson writes, “High crime, the flight of small businesses, and water shortages cannot bound the fences of Nancy Pelosi’s Palladian villa or the security barriers and walls of Mark Zuckerberg and other Silicon Valley billionaires- who press for more regulation, and for more compassion for the oppressed, but always from a distance and always from the medieval assumption that their money and privilege
California, a state rich in natural resources with a long coastline, was a very ideal piece of land to many. As such, when America gained California, there was conflict over how it should be admitted into the union. The 36 30 line meant to dictate which slaves were slave or free split California in half. Eventually, California was admitted as a free state in the Great Compromise of 1850. This compromise allowed California to be admitted as a free state while also revising the Fugitive Slave Act, which now required US citizens to aid slaveholders by reporting all runaway slaves.
This cartoon was originally published by Jack Ohman for the Sacramento Bee in 2016. Ohman, finalist for the 2012 Pulitzer Award drew this cartoon to portray Americans and the inability to decipher what is truly dangerous. The cartoon about Ebola and other causes of death shows that the main concerns of our everyday lives should not be focused on the “breaking news story” of the newfound deadly disease, but it should be focused on the lack of effect that the everyday bad habits have on us. American awareness of the importance of living a healthy life is lacking, which is what Ohman was trying to achieve with the cartoon.
California was born in the middle of many issues of conflict. Crisis over slavery, political legitimacy, and conflict over land, labor, race and ethnicity ( Competing Vision 132 ).During the mid 1800’s California saw many transformations, some positive some negative. There was a slow reservations development for Indians, but a better established land ownership. With certain political figures, who rallied to remove laws, which discriminated against African Americans and rather high religious tolerance, California was taking a distinct shape.
The state of California has a rich history, and is also currently one of the leading states in agriculture. It contains a wide array of geographic features, varying from mountains to deserts, with lush, fertile farmland in between. The Mexicans fought to gain control of California from the Spanish, but soon lost it to the European settlers. When war erupted between Mexico and the settlers for control of California, the end result was California gaining Statehood with the United States. The Gold Rush of 1949 brought unprecedented prosperity.
The California Gold Rush The California Gold Rush; an era of hope, greed, destruction, and growth. The California Gold Rush was, in the 1800s, a direct pathway to the American Dream. In January 1848 James Wilson Marshall found gold in the American River. This new discovery spread throughout the United States and eventually throughout the world.
Although the 1956 Hungarian Revolution only lasted for a short period, there are many who believe that this revolution was the first step in decreasing the Soviet Union’s control over the Hungarian government. Despite the lack of an immediate change, the 1956 Hungarian Revolution had a major long-term effect by unifying the Hungarian civil society for future conflicts that took place between the Hungarians and the Soviet government. Towards the end of the Second World War the Soviet army came and occupied Hungary, and remained there until 1991. From the end of World War Two until the Cold War ended in 1991 the relationship between Hungary and the Soviet Union was characterized by the soviet intervention in the domestic politics of Hungary.
Commercialism Covers Reality in California When people talk about California, their first impressions might usually be the sunshine, the Hollywood celebrities and the huge entertainment industry of Disneyland and Universal Studio. Tracing back to the rise of these big businesses, it was the prosperity of US economy in the mid to late 20th century that led to the emergence of consumerism, which characterizes the consumer-oriented society that results in people consuming what they want instead of what they need. However, beneath the charming image that the mass media creates is a series of issues that many people might have long forgotten and neglected: the plight of socially vulnerable groups. Based on such context, by portraying contrasting