A Freely Elected Feudalism

Feudal Future Podcast – Restoring the California Dream - Joel Kotkin
The Feudal Future Podcast, two Chapman University professors warning of California’s slide into feudalism, or, more accurately, manorialism.

Most historians of the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West would admit of centuries of misrule and foreign pressures leading to its disappearance.  The Fall was incremental with most people adjusting to the slowly deteriorating conditions.  Then, on the heels of persistent and growing disorder, the Visigoths sack Rome in 410 AD.  The evidence of decline was visible on the ground in the depopulation of many urban centers – Rome’s population in the 5th century had fallen to 50,000 – and in overgrown and decaying infrastructure.  A healthy middle class faded with the weakening of commerce and the spreading lawlessness, and people began to cluster around powerful land barons.  Western Europe became feudal.  And so is California.

Feudal California has been a consistent theme of mine for a number of years.  I’m not alone in this assessment.  Two Chapman University professors (Orange, Ca.), Marshall Toplansky and Joel Kotkin, have been sounding the alarm in their “The Feudal Future” podcast at https://www.feudalfuturepodcast.com/home51396438.  Check it out.

Professor Marshall Toplansky recently sat down for an interview with Siyamak Khorrami (see below) to explain what is happening to the socio-economic profile of California as it is sliding into feudalism.  In sum, California is losing its middle class.  A thriving middle class is a product of a vibrant commerce.  Commerce is fading in the state’s broad system collapse.  Sound familiar?  As the middle class flees for opportunity elsewhere, the leftover population begins to take on the character of the wealthy in their walled manors and a growing mass of the poor to service their needs.  How long will it be before we start calling California’s poor “peasants” or “serfs” and the state’s hyper-rich “Lord”?

This state of affairs wasn’t an accident.  It is a willful consequence of elected choices.  Decline and decay are popularly elected. It’s a one-party state with policy excesses never held to account.  A chief target of the excess is commerce – or more simply, the economy.  Doing business in California is like descending into Dante’s Inferno.  A reputation for hostility is cemented; businesses leave for more welcoming states; air quality improves because the economy is systematically depressed; and the young in their peak family-formation and income years take flight.  “Going green” (ev’s, solar panels, windmills, recycling galore, a war on fossil fuels, etc.) is going-going-gone for the middle class.

Please take time to watch the Toplansky interview.  It should be enlightening for anyone in California or seeking to avoid its fate.

RogerG

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