Thomas D. Elias
Immigration Reform? LOL. Don’t Look for Movement This Year
The grand compromise on immigration passed by the U.S. Senate 10 months ago is all but history, despite talk from President Obama and other Democrats about “comprehensive reform.”
Corporate Snobbishness Toward Class Action Suits Is a Problem
Talk to corporate executives and they will say California is a difficult place to do business, in part because consumers can file class action lawsuits willy-nilly, even when their companies haven’t screwed up. Talk to corporate executives and they will say California is a difficult place to do business, in part because consumers can file class action lawsuits willy-nilly, even when their companies haven’t screwed up. It ain’t necessarily so. Yes, the Consumers Legal Remedies Act, a 44-year-old law, lets customers sue for damages even after a warranty has expired, even when there has been no risk to health or safety. They are supposed to be able to do this if the maker of a product knows it has a major defect but ...
Word to Voters: Be Wary of Petition-Carriers
Here’s a piece of advice for registered voters: When petition carriers accost you outside supermarkets, big box stores or shopping malls asking you to help advance a plan to carve California into six states, don’t sign. For this is one of the dopiest, goofiest ideas ever to come up in California, which has a long history of flirting with – and sometimes adopting – nutty schemes. This plan would ...
Common Cause of Deaths on Death Row – Old Age
Few topics divide California as consistently or as evenly as the death penalty. The last time voters had their say on it, they opted by a vote of just over 51-49 percent to keep it around. How avidly do supporters of capital punishment maintain their opinions? Two years ago, when the Prop. 34 ballot initiative aimed to dump capital punishment in California and disband the state’s only Death Row, in San Quentin Prison, its supporters raised $7.3 million while those wanting to keep the death penalty had barely $300,000.
Despite Boastful Talk, Brown GOP Rival Brings Little Else to the...
Jerry Brown has been called a lot of names in his 45-year political career, from Gov. Moonbeam to the old man. Until now, no one accused him of being a do-nothing dud. Changing the state’s school-funding formula, balancing the budget after years of deficit, proposing a massive water transportation plan and spearheading a successful campaign for a tax increase were not enough to make Mr. Brown a busy man, says his most likely fall reelection rival.
Gov. Brown Learned His Untaxing Lessons from Davis’s Sad Ending
If there is a state budget surplus, let’s return it to the people we took it from, goes the demand these days from conservative Republicans, led by Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, who now represents a lot of barren desert and would like to be governor of California. Quite a siren song, and one we have heard before, most recently 14 years ago. Who wouldn’t like to open the mail and find a fat check from the state?
New Vaccination Form Eases Path for Myths to Proliferate
For almost two months, parents of California public school pupils have been able to claim with no proof that their religion precludes getting their children vaccinated against once dreaded and disabling diseases like polio, rubella, mumps, pertussis and smallpox. This enables parents who believe in myths to ...
A Gaseous Lesson – Sometimes It Is Better Not to Build
Remember the enthusiasm of Sempra Energy back in 2009 when it had just about finished its $975 million liquefied natural gas importing plant at Costa Azul, on the coast just north of Ensenada, in Baja California? Almost giddy at the prospect of circumventing many California regulations and bringing LNG to North America from places like Indonesia and Russia, Sempra won approval from Mexican authorities by promising to sell some of the plant’s throughput for use there. And that is ...
How to Distribute School Funds When Money Is Left Over
Gov. Brown and a lot of public school officials are just now rediscovering how right the 18th century Scottish poet Robert Burns was when he observed that “the best laid plans of mice and men oft’ go astray.” The latest example in California is the new public school funding formula Mr. Brown aggressively pushed last year, giving...
Immigration Reform, Not a Chance for This Year
There’s one big reason why, no matter how much happy talk you hear about “comprehensive immigration reform” from President Obama and members of Congress, it’s unrealistic to expect...