.

NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Friday, November 2, 2012

Democracy is abolished in California - Soon in America


California is now ruled by a corrupt Oligarchy of Billionaire
Cartels of labor unions and the super-rich.

Democracy Vanishes  -  California only illustrates where the entire nation is going
  • The so-called "elections" are totally controlled and funded by corrupt Billionaire Cartels of Labor Unions and the Super-Wealthy. 
  • Labor Union Cartels make up a tiny slice of California voters, but their massive campaign money has purchased the Democrat Party from top to bottom.
  • Super-Rich Cartels of Billionaires are personally funding statewide propositions and candidates for office.
  • The average voter who is not a union member or a Billionaire is totally fucked by corrupt Big Money buying the election.


The Billionaire Cartels  -  The Associated Press reports that the campaigns for and against the 11 initiatives on California's November ballot have raised an astonishing $350 million so far on causes ranging from leftist Governor Jerry Brown's tax increase to a labeling requirement for genetically modified food.
.
Californians have seen a corrupt handful of billionaires, millionaires and labor unions jamming the airwaves and mailboxes with a barrage of advertising. In many cases, the opposition campaigns are spending even more than supporters as they seek to kill initiatives that threaten their political power.
.
The initiative attracting many of the biggest donations is one targeting the political power of unions. Proposition 32 likely will end up with more than $120 million in spending for and against it.


The $350 million figure was compiled by MapLight, a nonpartisan group that seeks greater transparency in campaign spending, based on reports filed with the California secretary of state's office through Oct. 25.
.
The state's printed voter guides contain outdated information and few details about the money behind initiative campaigns. It's not just any voter who can put a proposed law before all Californians. It takes a lot of money, and so it's the wealthy individuals and interest groups that determine the 11 propositions that Californians are all voting on.
  • Atop the list of the wealthiest donors this election cycle is Molly Munger, a Los Angeles civil rights attorney and heir to a fortune accumulated by her father, a partner of Berkshire Hathaway founder Warren Buffett. She has given more than $44 million to her campaign for Proposition 38, a broad-based Marxist re-distribution of the wealth increase in the state income tax that would funnel billions of dollars into government.

  • Her half brother, Charles Munger Jr. give more than $36 million. That has gone primarily to support the initiative to curb unions' ability to collect contributions for political activities and to oppose Brown's proposed increase in the sales and income taxes, Proposition 30.
  • The California Teachers Association labor union which represents more than 300,000 public school employees, has given $32 million supports Brown's proposed tax increase to funnel billions into their retirement accounts.
  • Proposition 37, which would require disclosure labels identifying foods containing genetically modified organisms.  $41 million in donations from international food and chemical conglomerates such as Monsanto Co. and DuPont Co. are buying air time to defeat the prop reports the Daily Democrat.

Voter Fraud is Coming.
In California you can now register to vote online and then cast an absentee ballot.  Translation  -  No human being will ever see you register or vote at a polling place.  Over time what percentage of the "voters" will even be real people? 

California online Voter Registration 
  • Democrat passed online registration has flooded the voter rolls with semi-literate "mouth-breathers."  People so clueless and disinterested about public affairs that they could not manage to register to vote the normal way.  In other words, they are the perfect Democrat voters.


Democrat enacted onlive voter registration has pushed up the number of Californians who can now vote to record levels — passing 18 million for the first time — a leap that could affect the outcome of contests across the ballot next week.


More than 1.4 million new voters have signed up, nearly 50% of them online under a new law that kicked in six weeks ago allowing electronic registration. They tend to be younger and more left-leaning than the state's general voting population, according to Political Data Inc., a bipartisan firm that analyzed county reports.

That gives Democrats, who already dominate state politics, a big boost; they outnumber Republicans among the new voters by more than 2 to 1. The highest number of registered voters until now was 17.3 million, in February 2009 reports the Los Angeles Times.
 

These new and uneducated voters could have a serious impact in Gov. Jerry Brown's push for tax increases, which is teetering in the polls. Brown has been pitching Proposition 30 to college students lately in a blitz of campaign appearances and social media outreach efforts expected to last until election day.

Independent voters, whose numbers also have risen, are considered key to Brown's effort. A third of those who recently registered did so without a party preference or with a minor party.

The fresh registrants also could tip the balance in congressional races where Democrats hope to make gains in their uphill battle to retake control of the House.

In more than a dozen House districts, Democratic registration rose slightly. And the new voters could help Democrats seeking to secure the state Senate and Assembly supermajorities required to raise taxes.


No comments: