Liz Wolfe: How San Francisco's Failures Could Help Austin and Miami
Associate Editor Liz Wolfe discusses the political and economic fortunes of both Austin and Miami, plus potential reasons these pastures might not always be greener.

Once upon a time, the Golden State was the land of golden opportunity. In postwar America, California was sunny and sprawling, with a booming economy, plentiful employment opportunities, and comfortable middle-class neighborhoods. It was a great place to work, own a home, and raise a family. California was the American dream.
Over time, something changed. California was never exactly a cheap place to live. But more and more, it became prohibitively expensive—especially in and around San Francisco, the epicenter of the tech industry.
Some Californians, however, are voting with their feet. California lost residents in both 2020 and 2021. And many are leaving for places like Austin, Texas, and Miami, Florida, both of which have cultivated reputations as up-and-coming tech hubs, with cheaper housing and better governance. But have these cities really improved on San Francisco's model? Or are they doomed to repeat its mistakes?
That's the topic on this week's episode of The Reason Rundown featuring Reason Associate Editor Liz Wolfe.
Show links:
"California's Competitors," by Liz Wolfe
"Abolish Zoning—All of It," by Nolan Gray
"What the Chesa Boudin Recall Means for America," by Nick Gillespie and Regan Taylor
Audio production and editing by Ian Keyser; produced by Hunt Beaty
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Austin and other cities are doomed because those that flee to these places, vote the same way they did in shitville, CA. It goes to show who really is the low informed voter.
None of the people I know fleeing California are Democrats. So stop it with that meme that it's progressives metastasizing.
Die.
Please. Austin's essentially a colony of Silicon Valley at this point, and it's the biggest shitlib haven in the state. It's not an accident that so many Hollywood celebrities end up there if they decide to park it in Texas.
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"Over time, something changed."
Indeed. The Koch / Reason libertarian immigration agenda imported enough Brown bodies (IOW, obedient Democratic voters) to transform California into a single-party state. And we're just a few years away from the point at which all 50 states will basically be California — only with colder weather and fewer earthquakes.
#OpenBordersWillFixEverything
#LibertariansFor50Californias
Common sense and decency is being squeezed from both ends - the millions of illegals here already and pouring over the borders and by liberals spreading their nonsense by exporting themselves to other venues. Germany couldn't survive against a two front war and neither can we.
"It's really like a giant roaring sound, which is the sound of money on fire,"
That's Elon Musk on the billions he's losing from the plant in Austin.
> especially in and around San Francisco, the epicenter of the tech industry.
San Francisco is NOT the epicenter of the tech industry! The only tech offices there belong to web companies. The low hanging fruit of tech. All the big guys are south of SF. Google, Facebook. Twitter, Oracle, Intel, Motorola, etc. Tech companies aren't there because it's too damned expensive.
That's why there was this brouhaha over buses a few years back. SF Karens were pissed that all these corporate buses were commuting workers do firms SOUTH of the city. Because the tech jobs just aren't in the city. The exceptions for tech are some web pages and web services. But even the world's biggest web page (Facebook) isn't even there. Hell, even Berkeley has more tech companies than San Francisco.
p.s. And yes, the migration out of California is real. Looking at the demographics, it's primaries the middle class business owner. They're taking their small businesses and leaving. I have a friend who took his entire business and moved it to Tennessee. And businesses east of I-5 are actually booming because the counties there aren't dead set on milking businesses dry, and actually want to see successful businesses and an expanded tax base.
Correct.
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