UNI88 wrote:dbackjon wrote:CA is well on the way to recovery.
Meanwhile, the Libertarian wet dream of Arizona keeps getting worse.
Hopefully, the newly moderated State legis will be able to undo some of the Conk damage here.
And what's the status of #3, The Hellenic Republic of Illinois?
Donk governor, senate & house. Gerrymandering to the extreme to make sure it stays that way for 10+ years. What I believe is the worst pension debt in the nation ($96 billion in unfunded pension liability). Raised income taxes 50% several years ago to begin to take care of pension debt but unfortunately it's not even enough to pay the interest on said debt. Despite a horrible credit rating, the Governor wants to borrow more money to pay for operating expenses ($8 billion in unpaid bills - and it's the household equivalent of getting a bank loan to buy groceries and pay the electric bill). State General Assembly (including Conks) voted against closing several empty or near-empty prisons to save money because AFSCME was against it. The Donks are in charge of a sinking ship but the Conks aren't bailing either.
A couple of weeks ago my wife talked about moving to another neighborhood and I told her the only way we were selling our house and moving was if it was to another state. There is no way that I would buy in Illinois in this environment and I'm damned scared about the state going down the tubes and us being stuck with a house that we can't sell. I don't want to be one of those Jack Azzes that threatens to leave if so-and-so wins the election but I am very concerned about where this is going and wondering whether it is time to move.
Everyone in Iowa thanks your wonderful state for their situation.
Bye-bye, jobs
Corruption, pension debt and tax fears cost Illinois a big investment
If anyone in Chicago or Springfield still denies that this state's sorry record of corruption and taxpayer debt is costing Illinois excellent jobs, take it from billionaire Nassef Sawiris.
The University of Chicago grad heads a global firm, Orascom Construction Industries, the biggest company in Egypt. He has set out to build a giant new plant to make fertilizer from natural gas in America's agricultural heartland.
Illinois and Iowa competed aggressively for the $1.4 billion project, which will create hundreds of precious, stable, good-paying jobs. Both states offered lavish incentives.
In the end, Illinois came up with the better package, according to Sawiris. Its tax code, tax rebates and the other breaks it offered were "financially superior" to the package proposed by Iowa, he said. Besides, Sawiris confided, he feels a sentimental attachment to Illinois, thanks to the education he received at Chicago.
Nevertheless, he chose Iowa for his investment, at a site just four miles from the Illinois border.
Why? Regular readers of this page already know the answer. Illinois is broke, with some $200 billion in debts and unfunded obligations. Any employer who locates here essentially volunteers to help pay for yesterday's excessive spending and reckless promises. What's more, many public officials have besmirched Illinois' reputation with their criminal activity. So convincing a shrewd and sophisticated multinational firm to invest long term in Illinois is a tough sell.
It's not just us talking. Sawiris explained his decision at a celebratory news conference last week with Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad gloating beside him:
"
The promises we got in Illinois were extremely attractive," Sawiris noted. But Illinois' promised benefits, he went on to say, "are not sustainable in our view given the balance sheet of the state of Illinois."
"Whatever tax regime exists today we have to take with a grain of salt," Sawiris said. "The unfunded pension liabilities of the state of Illinois were a big concern to us, let alone the hypothetical situations that exist in doing business in Illinois and Chicago."
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012 ... corruption
If fascism ever comes to America, it will come in the name of liberalism. Ronald Reagan, 1975.
Progressivism is cancer
All my posts are satire