Californians are the new Mexicans

Posted: June 19th, 2009 under Society.
Tags: , , ,

California is the new Mexico, and Californians are the new Mexicans: They emigrated during boom times to what they saw as greener pastures.  Even in good times, they were seen with annoyance by the locals.  Now, when the tide has gone down and everyone is in dire straits, that local annoyance has turned to resentment.  They shouldn’t be here.  They should go back to where they came. They shouldn’t have come here in the first place. We don’t want any more of their kind.

Blue Velvet dvdrip

The Great Waldo Pepper dvd

download Shakespeare in Love movie

Once Bitten film

Christine psp The Fantastic Planet buy Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy hd

Reversible Errors Final Destination 3 video

You think I’m going overboard with the comparisons?  Read the following:

Bend [Oregon], a former timber town that now has 80,000 residents, was particularly popular among those drawn to the often rainy Northwest because it is located on the sunny side of the Cascade Range. Now the Mexicans who contributed to Oregon’s growth are in some cases adding to its economic struggle. As of May, Oregon had the second-highest unemployment rate in the nation, at 12.4 percent, behind Michigan.

Not all of the newcomers are from Mexico, of course. Lost equity, lost jobs and the possibility of foreclosure also threaten people who moved here from just across the Cascade Range, on the wetter western side of Oregon, as well as some from Seattle or the East. Measuring Mexico’s economic impact on Oregon and its struggles is difficult, and economists say that Oregon, which has less than a tenth of the population of Mexico, has not always been directly affected by its neighbor’s fortunes.

“Mexico immigrants can never win in Oregon,” said Philip J. Romero, an economist who has advised governors in both states. “In a boom, ‘They are crowding the roads and bidding up house prices.’ In a bust, it’s: ‘They alone caused the price of my house to drop by hundreds of thousands of dollars. They came up here without a job, and now we can’t absorb them and they’re competing for my job.’”

“Shhh,” Biff Ingels, a transplant of four years, standing outside the main job counseling center here, said when asked where he had lived before. “Mexico,” he said in a whisper.

Zachary Lauritzen, a student teacher at Summit High School, on Bend’s west side — the side some residents call “Little Mexico” — said he was teaching a lesson in government when the topic prompted him to ask how many students had lived in Mexico.

“Half of them raised their hands,” Mr. Lauritzen said.

The previous paragraphs could have been written almost anytime in the last decade, almost anywhere in the Southern US.  However, they were originally not written about Mexicans.  They were written about Californians.

Those lines were taken almost verbatim from a 6/18/2009 article in the New York Times.

A Bunch of Amateurs movie

24: Redemption dvd Why “almost”? Because the words “California” and “Californian” were replaced with “Mexico” and “Mexican”, respectively.  This is how they read originally:

Bend, a former timber town that now has 80,000 residents, was particularly popular among those drawn to the often rainy Northwest because it is located on the sunny side of the Cascade Range. Now the Californians who contributed to Oregon’s growth are in some cases adding to its economic struggle. As of May, Oregon had the second-highest unemployment rate in the nation, at 12.4 percent, behind Michigan. California, which has not released its May figures, ranked fifth in April.

Not all of the newcomers are from California, of course. Lost equity, lost jobs and the possibility of foreclosure also threaten people who moved here from just across the Cascade Range, on the wetter western side of Oregon, as well as some from Seattle or the East. Measuring California’s economic impact on Oregon and its struggles is difficult, and economists say that Oregon, which has less than a tenth of the population of California, has not always been directly affected by its neighbor’s fortunes.

“California immigrants can never win in Oregon,” said Philip J. Romero, an economist who has advised governors in both states. “In a boom, ‘They are crowding the roads and bidding up house prices.’ In a bust, it’s: ‘They alone caused the price of my house to drop by hundreds of thousands of dollars. They came up here without a job, and now we can’t absorb them and they’re competing for my job.’ ”

“Shhh,” Biff Ingels, a transplant of four years, standing outside the main job counseling center here, said when asked where he had lived before. “California,” he said in a whisper.

Zachary Lauritzen, a student teacher at Summit High School, on Bend’s west side — the side some residents call “Little California” — said he was teaching a lesson in government when the topic prompted him to ask how many students had lived in California.

“Half of them raised their hands,” Mr. Lauritzen said.

Welcome to the unwanted club, Californians. Firestorm download

Practical Magic full movie

.

Know Thy Enemy download

____________________
Written by Jean Valjean
Share on:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Blogplay
  • Add to favorites
  • Fark
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Twitter


3 Comments »

  1. Heh. I guess I was ahead of the curve. I never liked California or its citizens. No problems with Mexico, though.

    Comment by Bob the Commenter — June 19, 2009 @ 6:52 pm

  2. Isn’t Oregon where all the retired California police and firemen go?

    Comment by Daniel — June 20, 2009 @ 5:42 pm

  3. It certainly could be:

    http://www.justanswer.com/questions/axkh-retired-california-police-officer

    but someone that lives in Oregon would probably be better able to answer that. Any Oregonites out there?

    Comment by Jean Valjean — June 20, 2009 @ 6:51 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment