West
Why Californicating the United States isn't going well
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New York lost more residents from July 2022 to July 2023 than California, almost 102,000 compared to 75,423, according to the Census Bureau.
But it’s the Golden State that has written the how-not-to guide. It’s the trend setter of blue state public policy, “known today for incubating ever more elaborate forms of wokeness and identity politics,” says Walter Russell Mead, as well as coercive government actions pursuing the electeds’ vision of Camelot.
When a little more than a year ago the Rose Institute of State and Local Government at Claremont McKenna College surveyed Californians who had expressed an interest in moving, “many respondents from across the political spectrum described concerns about the cost of living and other aspects of the economy.”
For the first time ever, California, under Gov. Gavin Newsom, has lost population for three years in a row. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
While “Republicans described concerns about politics and policy,” “very few Democrats did.” This should not be unexpected.
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However, the response from “one independent from near Santa Barbara” seems representative of a middle that is fed up. This person declared that California “is run by morons.”
Between the day (Sept. 9, 1850) it was admitted into the union and 2020, California’s population increased every year. It has now lost population for three straight years. From April 1, 2020, to July 1, 2023, the state suffered a net loss of 573,019 residents. Over that same period, New York’s population withered by 631,104.
Other states have lost people, as well, since the pandemic arrived. Most of them have been blue states, with red states taking in the refugees. As Power Line’s John Hinderaker puts it, Americans have voted red with their feet. The top destinations have been Florida, Texas, the Carolinas, Tennessee and Georgia, red states all of them.
In addition to California and New York, other big losers have been Illinois, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Maryland – all blue states, and all in awe of California’s legislative and regulatory patterns. As the New York Times noted in April 2022, state officials “love to declare that California is a leader in everything,” including “spearheading the resistance” to red states’ legislative agendas, which is a legislative agenda of its own.
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The Los Angeles Times made a similar argument when it declared “no state has had a bigger impact on the direction of the United States than California, a prolific incubator and exporter of outside-the-box policies and ideas.”
In one of the more prominent instances of emulating Sacramento, several other states followed California’s “lead” in outlawing gasoline- and diesel-powered automobiles and replacing them with, almost exclusively, electric vehicles.
The list of imitators includes Massachusetts (which lost 31,534 residents from April 2020 to July 2023), New Jersey (which had a modest overall gain of 1,802 but lost more than 153,000 domestically) and New York (-631,104), all of which emulated California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who unilaterally decided in September 2020 that he could make consumers’ decisions for them. (His executive order was approved two years later by the state’s unelected Air Resources Board.)
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Could be that there’s no causation, merely correlation, but maybe people are fleeing California for states where governors aren’t telling them what they cannot drive and what they must drive. Because outside of the laptop class, EVs are unpopular. Buyers don’t want them.
Other climate-related laws – legitimately passed and signed, not decreed – have also filtered outside of California. Bloomberg Law recently reported the state’s “first-in-the-nation measures requiring companies to disclose financial risks related to climate and report greenhouse gas emissions could embolden other states to take similar action in an effort to address climate change.”
Imitating California policies will inevitably impose a punishing cost of living driven by steep energy prices (inflated even further by the growing renewables fetish), exorbitant housing, excessive taxation, and labor compensation set artificially high by government; cut into businesses’ profits (and force them to make uncomfortable decisions, such as escape to more liberating states); stifle entrepreneurship; restrict liberties; invite homelessness; and subject millions to inept governance.
None of these are reasons to stay. All are reasons to flee.
California’s declining population means that along with a shrinking congressional delegation (the state could lose as many as five U.S. House seats by 2030), it’s likely losing some degree of its political influence across the country. If that means its capacity to advance progressive, blue state policies beyond its borders has been diminished, it’s good news. The entire country will be better off.
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West
The border in your backyard: Mexican cartels fuel record fentanyl, meth busts in Rocky Mountain states
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The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) made record seizures in four Mountain States last year, most of which were funneled through the southern border by two cartels.
In 2025, the DEA seized 8,729,000 fentanyl pills and nearly 3,100 pounds of methamphetamine across the four-state Mountain region that includes Colorado, Utah, Montana and Wyoming, the agency said in a news release.
“These numbers are absolutely staggering. Colorado saw a 76% increase in pill seizures year over year. Utah pill seizures doubled. This should not only be a wake-up call, but a jolt to every citizen in our four-state region,” said DEA Rocky Mountain Field Division Special Agent in Charge David Olesky.
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The Drug Enforcement Administration said, “This is the largest one-time seizure of counterfeit pills in Colorado history, and the sixth-largest single seizure of suspected fentanyl pills in United States history.” (DEA)
Nationwide, the DEA seized around 47 million pills.
In Colorado, the state saw its largest methamphetamine bust in April with 733 pounds of the drug and the largest one-time fentanyl pill seizure in November of 1.7 million pills.
Cesar Avila, DEA assistant special agent in charge who oversees Wyoming and Montana, told Cowboy State Daily that the bulk of the drugs were being distributed to cartel networks — the Sinaloa and Jalisco New Generation (CJNG) — in cities like Denver and Salt Lake City, which then distribute them in Wyoming.
“When you’re dealing with the user population, they are more in it for effects and not for the profit margins,” Avila told the newspaper. “They’re not necessarily doing it for the business side of things; they’re doing it more because they need that particular addiction.”
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The Drug Enforcement Administration said much of the fentanyl and meth seized from four Mountain states were funneled into the United States by drug cartels. (Getty Images)
Avila speculated that both cartels have a presence in most, if not all Wyoming communities.
South of the border, cartels primarily use tractor trailers to haul the drugs to the larger hubs, he said. The drugs are either transported by individual drivers or through the mail into Wyoming, he added.
“DEA remains committed to targeting the drug cartels who operate within our four states, and we will continue to dismantle the networks responsible for poisoning and killing people in our communities,” Olesky said.
So far in 2026, the DEA has seized more than 239,000 fentanyl pills and more than 10,000 methamphetamine pills, according to DEA figures.
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The Trump administration has declared war on fentanyl, first by targeting suspected drug smuggling boats at sea with military airstrikes and pressuring Mexico and China, the primary source of chemicals used to produce the illicit drug, through tariffs.
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San Francisco, CA
San Francisco teenagers talk openly about gun violence among their peers
The Bay Area has experienced a number of shootings where the suspected shooter were all young people. In November, gunfire rang out at Oakland’s Skyline High School and San Jose’s Westfield Mall and Burton High in San Francisco in December.
NBC Bay Area sat down with a group of young people in San Francisco, both survivors and perpetrators to ask them what was driving this gun violence amongst youth, the impact of social media when it comes to guns and what can be done.
High school teenagers, Ziggy Brown, Xavier Ballard, Terronnie Fields and Keenan Erwin, have attended programs at San Francisco’s United Playaz, a violence and prevention youth development program.
The 18-year-old Erwin was shot in December at Burton High in the city’s Portola neighborhood. He says there was a dispute with another student and that student shot him. Keenan’s femur was shattered.
“It was just crazy, hearing it happen to people and like not even thinking it could happen to you. What hurts more than that bullet was hearing your mama cry thinking that was her last time. Hearing you, seeing you breathe on this earth and hearing her cry,” he said.
NBC Bay Area asked them about the problem of gun violence amongst youth.
“No matter where you are, you could really just run into the wrong person that day,” Brown said.
“It could be anybody any age because it’s such a problem, like we have kids running around thinking that guns are cool to have,” Ballard said.
Brown and Ballard thought it was cool. In December 2024, the two ended up in juvenile hall for theft, robbing other people with a BB gun at Serramonte Mall. Ballard spent a week in a half in juvie. Ziggy three weeks.
“It’s such a bad mistake and it was so like dumb,” Ballard said.
Brown talked about a question his lawyer asked him.
“He asked me, ‘Why did you do that? He’s like, he spoke real to me. He’s like, Why did you do that dumb** s***? You’re speaking to me with intelligence. Why did you do that?’ I told him I didn’t love myself. I didn’t care about myself enough,” he said.
In 2021, gun violence replaced car crashes as the leading cause of death for children in the U.S. and has remained the leading killer, disporportionately affecting communities of color.
Social media is also having an impact on them.
“I feel like the social media is like it’s the humiliation part,” Ballard said. “It makes it to where people want to prove a point. Cause like for example, if somebody were to get like beat up or something and they seen it on the internet, then it’s like, okay, now I have to like get back.”
There is no data directly linking social media to crime, but research suggests social media is an accelerant. Erin Grinshteyn, an associate dean and professor at the University of San Francisco, studies gun violence as a public health issue.
“Social media has the capacity to disseminate gun violence information far more broadly than if you’re just exposed within your specific community,” Grinshteyn said. “What we’re seeing is that people who are exposed to gun violence in their community have negative mental health consequences. I think often times people think that a gun will make them safer, and all the research shows that having access to a firearm puts you in far more danger.”
Denver, CO
Broncos RB J.K. Dobbins (foot) involved in practice as AFC Championship game prep begins
If Broncos running back J.K. Dobbins has hurdles to clear to be activated from injured reserve for Sunday’s AFC Championship game, he appears to be off to a good start.
Dobbins was involved in the portion of practice open to reporters on Wednesday, including individual work and ball security drills. The team afterward listed him as a limited participant.
Head coach Sean Payton declined to say anything about Dobbins, including whether he had a realistic chance to play Sunday.
Quarterback Sam Ehlinger came away impressed after Dobbins’ first day of practice.
“He looked great. Y’all saw what I saw. He looked really good,” Ehlinger said. “I think our training staff has done a great job of getting him prepared. Obviously, a quick turnaround. He’s in shape and ready to roll, and hopefully we can have him on Sunday.”
Dobbins has been on injured reserve since the middle of November due to a Lisfranc injury in his left foot sustained Nov. 7 against Las Vegas.
The initial thought from sources around Dobbins was that his best chance to return this season was if Denver advanced all the way to the Super Bowl, allowing for the maximum amount of recovery time. Later in the season, though, head coach Sean Payton hinted that Dobbins had a chance to return earlier in the postseason.
Dobbins himself has told people in the Broncos’ building throughout his rehabilitation that he would be back for the playoffs, though ultimately, he was not ready to return for Denver’s divisional game last week against Buffalo.
Dobbins signed with Denver in June and was one of the NFL’s most productive backs over the first half of the season. In 10 games, he rushed for 772 yards (5.0 per carry) and four touchdowns. He sustained the Lisfranc injury when he got tackled by Raiders defensive lineman Tyree Wilson on a play Dobbins believed was an illegal hip-drop tackle.
Dobbins and the Broncos spent more than a week going through potential treatment options before the back eventually had surgery.
Wattenberg back. Denver starting center Luke Wattenberg had his 21-day window opened on Wednesday, and he returned to practice as a full participant.
That’s perhaps not a big surprise, and it wouldn’t be a stretch to think Wattenberg returns to Denver’s starting lineup Sunday, either. No. 2 Alex Forsyth, who has started the past three games in Wattenberg’s absence, was a limited participant Wednesday with an ongoing ankle issue that has caused him to miss snaps in each of the past two games.
Payton himself said when Wattenberg sustained a shoulder injury late in the regular season that it was right about a four-week injury and that the IR placement was about managing the roster down the stretch of the season.
Update on WRs. Rookie receiver Pat Bryant (concussion) took part in the open portion of Denver’s practice Wednesday and was listed as a limited participant, indicating he’s making at least some progress through the NFL’s concussion protocol. He was hit his head on the Empower Field grass on his third snap vs. Buffalo and was subsequently ruled out.
Second-year man Troy Franklin (hamstring) was at practice and had his helmet, but didn’t stretch with the team and didn’t have shells on like the rest of the players. He was listed as a limited participant.
The remaining list of players on the injury report who practiced fully: OT Frank Crum (ankle), S JL Skinner (quad), TE Lucas Krull (IR, foot) and LB Drew Sanders (IR, foot).
DiNucci was ready. Ben DiNucci was working for CBS Sports on Saturday night in a New York studio. When he heard the news about Bo Nix’s fractured ankle, he suspected he might be part of the ripple effect.
Not long after, he heard from Denver quarterbacks coach Davis Webb and general manager George Paton.
“Davis and George called me Sunday morning and said, ‘Hey, are you around?’” DiNucci said. “I still live in Highlands Ranch, so I’m local. I said ‘Yep. I’ll see you guys Monday morning at 8 a.m.’ and here we are.”
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