Upon Further Review, California Voters Sending Mixed Messages [View article]
Though you have some logic to your premise you are proceeding from a flawed assumption, that is that the voters cast their votes in a way to condone the original intent of the las and by extension to continue spending on mental health. A broader political science view would suggest a better interpretation, which is that the massive defeat of the referendums must be taken into account to reveal the true sentiment and intention of the people....from which I would conclude that the people have had a belly full of 1. political tax ploys; 2. legislative abrogation of their responsibility and putting their excessive spending spree on the backs of the people; 3. shifting the real prople by disecting the massive deficit into several pieces to confuse and deflect the real problem....state debt spending. The voters are fed up, my friend and speculation of anything to the contrary would be an exercise in futility.
Upon Further Review, California Voters Sending Mixed Messages [View article]
For heavens's sake, how could you possibly think that voting against this measure (or mess is more like it) could possibly signal vote intent to spend more? That is a rather large - and I believe incorrect - leap of faith. California has become the unwilling, led by the unknowing into the unthinkable. The voters signal, to me, was unmistakable. They are fed up with the legislature screwing around with massive spending, special interests - lobbys - with more influence than the citizens, and ever increasing taxes with no hope of getting the state out of debt.
Upon Further Review, California Voters Sending Mixed Messages [View article]
Upon Further Review, California Voters Sending Mixed Messages [View article]