Zombie Cities: A Warning to Los Angeles from San Francisco, Seattle, Portland and Philly

Why I Reached Out to a Seattle Blogger: A Plea for a Focused Lens on a Failing City

REAL ESTATE NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — A couple of days ago, I found myself deeply engrossed in an email I was composing. The recipient was a Seattle blogger, who recently published a piece detailing the closing of a promising local store, Amazon Go. While his prose was somewhat elegant, I couldn’t shake off a feeling of intense frustration. Why? Because the post failed to address the complex web of underlying issues that led to the store’s closing.

In the text, I wrote, “How can you write a blog post about a Seattle store closing without even scratching the surface of the why it closed? You are fake news. Crime and censorship are king and queen of failed socialist city Seattle. You are their pawn. Try reading and telling the whole truth. The world might then begin to care about what you say.” To help him out, I included news reports about a Starbucks closure, retail theft and Seattle resident mass exodus. I’ve written plenty of warnings about California’s own exodus.

As the middle class gives way to more haves and have-nots, luxury lofts flourish in Los Angeles.

Might this email have come across as stern? Yes, but it needed to be. The city of Seattle, like many other urban areas in the United States such as San Francisco and Portland, is facing a range of deep-seated issues that are driving away its residents. So is Los Angeles. As the middle class gives way to more haves and have-nots, luxury lofts flourish in Los Angeles.

Let’s start with the glaring issue: the rise in crime rates. According to the Seattle Times, one in three Seattleites is considering leaving the city due to escalating crime and high living costs. Crime, as a social phenomenon, is influenced by various factors, but a well-documented connection has been established between crime rates and social policies. In Seattle, the prevalence of chronic criminal homelessness is a telling indicator of the failures in addressing the complex interplay between poverty, mental health, and addiction. City authorities have been unable to effectively manage these individuals, leading to a surge in crime rates that has sparked fear and insecurity among residents.

Then there’s the rise in living costs, another reason driving Seattle’s residents away. Housing prices have skyrocketed, causing unprecedented stress and financial hardship. Not surprisingly, Seattle’s housing market has become increasingly inaccessible for individuals earning lower incomes. According to a recent poll, renters, particularly those earning less than $20,000 a year, were more likely to consider moving out due to the city’s soaring housing prices.

However, there’s more to the problem than rising housing costs and crime. The increasing numbers of people considering leaving Seattle reflect deep-rooted social and economic disparities. Lower-income households have been pushed to the brink of housing insecurity, and homeownership has become an elusive dream for many. High-income earners are becoming increasingly concerned about public safety, with their concerns centered more on the city’s failing policies to combat crime effectively.

Despite these alarming statistics, the narrative portrayed by some media outlets remains one-sided and detached from reality. The city’s narrative must reflect the entire truth if we are to find solutions that address the root causes of these issues. Unfortunately, some news outlets and blogs continue to gloss over the complexities of these issues, painting an incomplete picture that does little to spur collective action or affect meaningful change.

This brings us back to why I reached out to the Seattle blogger. Just like many of us, he plays a critical role in shaping public opinion and awareness. Yet, his recent post, while eloquent and well-written, didn’t do justice to the complex and multifaceted issues at hand. Instead of a comprehensive analysis, readers received a superficial overview of the problem, devoid of depth and context.

So, I urge every blogger, reporter, and citizen of Seattle and beyond: don’t just scratch the surface. Delve deep into the issue, question the status quo, and most importantly, tell the whole truth. Seattle’s current state is a cautionary tale for all urban cities, and if we don’t learn from it, cities like Los Angeles may be next.

L.A. is hanging in the precipice. While taking the Metro train to properties and restaurants in Downtown Los Anglees over several days this week, more than 20% of my favorite restaurants were permanently closed, vacant. Although the Metro train was full of people breaking the rules (playing loud music, drinking, smoking, and even filling up the train with smoke by burning pieces of paper), Metro safety personnel almost never stepped foot on board a train, except very briefly. We never saw any sign of much-needed police on a Metro train. While L.A. currently has fewer used needles per square foot that some area, our goal should be 100% clean and safe streets, where women, children and pets can walk to schools, parks, shops and public transportation. Homeless addicts who want a clean, safe life plead, “call in the military!” Under the current system, homeless are being neglected, abused and killed like never before. Successful cities do not leave babies, puppies, criminals or incapacitated adults to fend for themselves. One thing is certain of a solution: rich, poor and middle class must follow the same rules.

Some skilled Los Angeles residents even find jobs in Seattle, not far from its own hordes of homeless. Seattle big tech industry is doing super. With almost no rules, lots of free stuff, cheap drugs and no taxes to pay, homeless drug addicts are feeling no pain in a sense, while being treated more harshly than feral animals in some ways. The hard-working middle class is getting squeezed, squashed and robbed. Like Seattle, criminals and closed businesses are creeping into Los Angeles. Everyone must get the facts. We’ve seen particularly bad, dangerous cities in the 70s. While some “starving” artists love the gritty city inspiration, the average Downtowner will ultimately not cope with a dirty, dangerous city. Everyone must face the truth. Without sunlight, California has nothing. There are many clean, safe big cities in the world. Los Angeles must strive to be one of those.

My email to the Seattle blogger was a plea for responsible reporting from all cities. Portland today embraces the zombie apocalypse model; deadly Philadelphia is even worse — so bad that the police don’t even care any more. It was a call for him, and others, to lend their voices to the unheard and to hold a mirror to the city’s faults. In sharing the whole truth, we can begin to engage in a dialogue that leads to transformative solutions. Let us not be pawns in the game of misinformation, but rather, champions for the truth, for it is only through an honest lens and sunlight that we can start to address and rectify the issues plaguing our beloved cities, especially LA.

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California Exodus and the Big Cover-Up

Who’s moving to greener pastures?

Californians Leaving for Other States: Why They Don’t Want You to Know

REAL ESTATE NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — Middle-class taxpayers are fleeing the state, and Governor Gavin Newsom does not want anyone to know the truth, neither does the University of California, nor does the L.A. Times. The radical left leaning rag even goes as far as to try to bully the truth tellers by calling them “haters.” In this article, we’ll reveal the real story, and will expose the real haters and lovers of the once golden state. As with anyone who loves theirself, they continuously try to improve themselves so that they may be of better service to others. For those who love the state, they focus on improving the state so that it can be a better place for all. Those who hate the state would obviously be against improving the state, thus try to block the first step in improvement — recognizing the need for improvement.

Even the LA Times has been forced to admit that there was an uptick in movement away from the state. In the final quarter of 2020, another 139,000 people departed California than arrived. The rag tried to poopoo this drop, as if it was nothing. In reality, this signals a monumental change for the state that once attracted far more residents than other states than it lost to other states. That old positive trend has now completely reversed. The Times has also admitted that growth has been slowing in recent years. The paper fails to disclose the reasons for the exodus from the state: exploding crime, rising prices, rising taxes, rampant homeless encampments, growing trash, growing psychosis and growing dangers, combined with an inability for local municipalities and police departments to protect citizens. Women and children cannot walk safely to schools, parks and stores, thus cannot fully enjoy a normal, healthy life in too many parts of the state.

The L.A. Times tries to make the problems sound like temporary, transitory issues. The problem is that some of these issues may not be very temporary, and, like overall inflation, California’s problems may actually be transitory from bad to worse. We can see with our own eyes, and hear with our own ears, about friends and acquaintances who are moving to Arizona, Nevada, Texas and other states. While calling exodus fears “overblown,” CalMatters admits that twice as many Californias moved away from the state compared to those who moved here from other U.S. states.

Google has directly taken part in the cover-up by using its algorithm to automatically bury websites and posts about the exodus, while raising the visibility of articles that attempt to deny the exodus. Google cannot, however, deny that some form of exodus is occurring, and certainly cannot deny that more Californians are recently considering leaving the state, as can be easily seen on its own Google Trends, with exodus interest accelerating rapidly during the state’s extreme bout of virus hysteria, tyrannical lockdowns and ineffective mandates that continue to this day. The real pandemic is the dangerous epidemic of propaganda that continues unabated in the state, yet another reason that many leave to live in areas with people-friendly, business-friendly honest, transparent governments and local culture of free speech.

Politico reports that the state’s population may have peaked. The San Francisco Bay Area has shriveled the most, including Berkeley and Oakland. In addition to those moving away, the birth rate dropped below the death rate, and immigration from Mexico and other countries slowed. Penske moving truck records confirm the California exodus, with a preponderance of those moves to Texas.

The Loft Blog team has lived in California for many decades, and we prefer to stay. We prefer to help the state recognize its recent failings so that California can turn itself around. Before that can happen, we must accept the inconvenient facts, from which we may then determine the reasons why more are moving away from CA than are moving here from other states. By making the tough changes, California has a great chance to reverse these trends, and to once again regain its status and title as the most attractive state in the union, as The Golden State.

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More Angelenos consider moving away from California.

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, DRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.