A journey through Los Angeles, the adopted home of Vice President Kamala Harris, offers a masterclass in urban dysfunction. As you drive through the streets of the southside, and along Central Avenue, the historic main street of black LA, now mostly Hispanic, the ambience is increasingly reminiscent of Mexico City or Mumbai: broken pavements; battered buildings; outdoor swap meets; food stalls serving customers much as one would see in the developing world.
Democrats, particularly in deep blue California and even bluer cities like Los Angeles, can clearly win elections. But what they can’t do is govern effectively. Virtually every Democratic city in the land is now in decline. Crime, especially of the violent variety, is rising. That’s shadowed by continued out-migration to less dense, more conservative areas, a trend that’s seeing the country’s biggest cities lose out economically.
But if signs of progressive failure are clear from New York to San Francisco, it’s Los Angeles where I feel it most keenly. I’ve lived here since 1975. Back then, the idea that this diamond in the sands could tarnish was unimaginable. But it has. Once a middle-class haven with a broad industrial base, LA now suffers the highest poverty rates in the state, and among the worst in the country. Dovetailed by failing schools and parks, and an exodus of residents and businesses, long-term prospects of this great American city look bleak — a future that could yet be translated right across the country.
Beyond making life miserable for residents and visitors alike, the chaos on the southside has clear demographic consequences. When I arrived, almost 50 years ago, LA was the undisputed king of urban growth in America. From a population of barely 100,000 in 1900, the city grew to nearly four million. Now, though, the trend has reversed. Today, the city and county of Los Angeles, together home to 10 million people, has fewer residents than in 2010. Even worse, the state department of finance now projects that the county’s population will drop by over one million by 2060.
This is not an exodus, as some assert, of the poor, nor of blubbering Trumpistas. Rather, many emigres now come from the city’s once-vibrant, multi-racial middle class. According to an analysis of IRS data, many are middle-income families in their childbearing years. LA is also losing the minorities and foreign-born residents who for decades sustained the city’s economic and demographic vitality. These days, African-Americans and Latinos instead flock to places like Houston or Miami in search of opportunity. “We are becoming more dystopian,” says John Heath, a lawyer and south LA native. “We can’t house people affordably and only build luxury, and there’s no place for a middle class.”
There’s a vicious circle here. As ambitious Angelinos leave, so too do the jobs that might have induced them to stay. That’s clear enough in entertainment, the city’s signature industry and a key funder of progressive politicians such as Harris. Consider Disney’s fabled Pixar studio, with production moving to other states or overseas. The once-promising space industry is in danger of being kneecapped too: just look at the departure of SpaceX.
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Subscribe“I’m not there to ‘serve’ the public, I’m there to enforce the law and f*****g nick bad guys.” Over and out.
Surely, that is serving the public (good).
This is ‘serve’ in the U.K. context and means ‘social worker’ and not law enforcer.
Fallen, fallen is Babylon the great.
I lived and worked in LA in 1999-2001. Me and my wife became Christians weeks apart. She by listening to Focus on the Family, and me from listening to Truth for Life while driving to work. We arrived with two children, and left with four and we had a blessed stay and enjoyed life in the great city. Crime was not something we ever noticed, people where friendly and God fearing.
Reading this article it’s hard to believe what is ongoing, and it makes me really sad. How is it possible that this great city is slowly turning into a run down desperate place for so many, with crime, poverty, food-lines, slums and what not. The author points to the democrats, but what is it about their governing that changes this place, changes this people? Is it the introduction of lawlessness through ungodly laws and policies that oppress the weak and corrupt the minds, that elevate what is morally wrong and base at the expense of truth, justice and righteousness? Is it the removal of God from every educational institution and public office?
This was written about another great city that fell:
“‘And many nations will pass by this city, and every man will say to his neighbor, “Why has the Lord dealt thus with this great city?” And they will answer, “Because they have forsaken the covenant of the Lord their God and worshiped other gods and served them.”’”
It’s been well-documented how and why LA problems have occurred. For instance, Freddie Sayers (Unherd editor-in-chief) produced an insightful documentary on this website about a year ago, including interviews with the people responsible for making decisions on the ground in LA. There have been other articles since.
It’s got nothing to do with your imagined deity.
The author points to the democrats, but what is it about their governing that changes this place, changes this people?
Theirs is a philosophy built on envy, an abandonment of individual responsibility and accountability, and a belief that govt can and should be involved in every aspect of life, including those where the public sector has no experience or business being. The same scene is being replicated in Chicago, Portland, Seattle, and so forth. Policies that, on the surface, are presented as solutions to whatever the problem is have this perverse way of perpetuating the problem, almost as if that’s by design. Bottom line – their governing philosophy never considers the possibility of having been wrong and needing to correct course.
Vidar, heads up, THERE IS NO GOD.
As the observation says, you can ignore reality for as long as you want, but you can’t ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.
The ‘progressives’ (itself alluding to Marx) are experts at trying to batter reality into the shape of their dogma. With the results described here.
I hope the folk of Texas and Florida can resist the democrat refugee’s tendancy to try and replicate the disasters they fled from!
We need to peg all public sector salaries to GDP per capita. That goes up, they get a pay rise. If it goes down they take a pay cut. Just like everyone else. That would focus the minds of Karen Bass and Sadiq Khan on the job we employ them to do – as distinct from the one they think they should be doing.
No solution until your remove the vote from the welfare class and from government employees.
I know it’s easy to produce examples of mental govt employees, but by and large they’re normal people living normal lives. Surely they are just as perturbed by junkies sh*tting in the streets and crime running rampant? Aren’t they? It doesn’t make any sense.
Government employees are estimable citizens, most of them are good people. But they have a core conflict of interest as our taxes are their income, and any public program no matter how wasteful or disastrous is a job opportunity for them.
Quoting the article “The plebs and the remaining middle class simply don’t matter compared to the key backers of progressive governance: the non-profit “blob” and public sector employees. ”
As for the non-profit “blob”, a Milleiesque approach to the public funding of NGO is long overdue.
LA will always be an appealing place to live, no matter how bad things get. It’s a shame that it has gotten to this point, but there are so many great things about this city and area that you would be surprised at how much shit people put up with to live here. I moved out to the burbs long ago, and don’t miss DTLA one bit, but if you can turn a blind eye to the homeless (which isn’t as difficult as one might think), then you can still reap the benefits. It is still a culturally rich place with tons of hidden gems, although less so with the issues it has ignored for so long.
Not defending any policies, the democrats are definitely blowing it here.
No representation without taxation.
Voters need skin in the game
Is it just possible that LA was never in touch with reality. It was the home of hedonists and every whacky personal growth industry built on me, me, me. The delusional, illusional world of Hollywood, of body glamour, diets and fame, In the long term it was never going to work. It was like giving the keys of the city to a bunch of adolescents. What do you expect, no one cares.
Some of LA is surely like that. But not most of it. It’s a pretty diverse place.
Part of it populated with Chinese ladies in neighborhoods like San Gabriel playing Mahjong with their friends. South Central is notoriously not West LA just east of the 405 freeway. But, there is Laurel Canyon where lots of aspiring Hollywood types bunk down in the homes owned by friends who actually are managing to make a thing of it in Hollywood.
The writer implies that similar issues plague New York, Chicago and other Democrat run cities.
London is heading that way too
I don’t want to draw too long a bow, but from an Australian perspective, our most progressive city is clearly Melbourne. It’s also got by far the most dysfunctional and sclerotic economy.
I am just old enough to remember Los Angles and California in general, in the erly seventies, before homelessness. That was when rents were still cheap, and there were plenty of places all over, even in the nice areas. upward mobility was easier then, too. The US after Neoliberlism- and the Clintons and Obamas are Neoliberals just like Reagan and his ilk were- since by now BOTH parties are epic fails, no doubt about it. It’s just their styles that differ. Many people are moving out of the English -speaking countries. For good reasons, since they are all on the same page anyway. This is way more than Trump v. Harris. Before 1980 apartments were still getting built, ut after that year, it went to commercial buildings and parking lots. And but for luxury housing, generally nothing else gets built that’s moderate or low income. It’s all by design. I don’t want to believe this, but given how HAPPY these politicians are with the status quo of decay for 44 years, I’m leaning towards that view.
The city got there by its own hand, just like a lot of other large, perennially blue cities in which intentions continue to carry more weight than results.
This is the story of progressivism. They say they are going to change the world. And they do: for the worse.
I’m likely a rare reader in that I was born in L.A. over six decades ago. Kotkin, like many policy types, is all about growth. I’d welcome a decline in population. The city master plan in the ’60s envisioned no more than about three million. The county now has ten, the city over four. Any “rush hour” now extends into unpredictable times, day or night, weekend or weekday, as the sprawl means there’s no “traditional” one-way-in and out of the downtown, which doesn’t attract but a fraction of the traffic, dispersed between many urban cores, suburbs, exurbs, and local commutes all tossed in. He is correct about the luxury lofts and such, as the stupid AB50 Scott Weiner (SF Dem) law allows giant residences–I mean hundreds of units–within a half-mile of a friggin’ bus stop, no parking required, no environmental reports, and multi-dwellings replace single-family tear-downs in any neighborhood, regardless of what the neighbors think. This alone is condemnation for the corrupt city council, mayor, and supposedly “socialist” allies.
I think the problem is probably associated with the economists who cannot abandon the belief that the bigger the economy, the greater the prosperity and to create a bigger the economy, it is necessary to increase the population. Despite, previously, the countries with the largest populations were associated with greatest poverty.
Increased GDP means more revenue for the state and bigger profits for the corporations. Hence the enthusiasm of public sector and corporate bureaucrats for mass immigration.
High density housing and no parking provision. Been contemplating this brutal crime for several years. And yet they get the votes.
If I were homeless, I’d move to LA, due to the nice weather for outdoor sleeping.
And the near immunity from police interference?
Joseph de Maistre claimed the Jacobin and Thermidorean terrors of the French revolution were divine punishment for the French for indulging Enlightenment philosophy and for committing regicide. I have come to think perhaps the social pathologies of many contemporary western cities are punishment (divine or otherwise) for embracing insane and wicked ideologies.
The last thing the left want is economic success. They gain their sense of purpose from generating victims so they can claim to represent them.