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by
Victor Davis Hanson
The
American
Enterprise
Online
War torn
Iraq has about 26 million residents, a peaceful
California
perhaps now 35 million. The former is a violent and
impoverished landscape, the latter said to be paradise on
Earth. But how you envision either place to some degree
depends on the eye of the beholder and is predicated on
what the daily media appear to make of each.
As a fifth generation Californian, I deeply love this state,
but still imagine what the reaction would be if the world
awoke each morning to be told that once again there were six
more murders, 27 rapes, 38 arsons, 180 robberies, and 360
instances of assault in California yesterday, today,
tomorrow, and every day. I wonder if the headlines would
scream about "Nearly 200 poor Californians butchered again
this month!"
How about a monthly media dose of "600 women raped in
February alone!" Or try, "Over 600 violent robberies and
assaults in March, with no end in sight!" Those do not even
make up all of the state's yearly 200,000 violent acts that
law enforcement knows about.
Iraq's
judicial system seems a mess. On the eve of the war, Saddam
let out 100,000 inmates from his vast prison archipelago.
He himself sat in the dock months after his trial began. But
imagine an
Iraq
with a penal system like California's with 170,000 criminals
- an inmate population larger than those of Germany, France,
the Netherlands, and Singapore combined. Just to house such
a shadow population costs our state nearly $7 billion a year
or about the same price of keeping 40,000 Army personnel per
year in Iraq. What would be the image of our
Golden
State if we were reminded each morning, "Another $20 million
spent today on housing our criminals"?
Some of California's most recent prison scandals would be
easy to sensationalize: "Guards watch as inmates are
raped!" Or "Correction officer accused of having sex with
under-aged detainee!" And apropos of Saddam's sluggish
trial, remember that our home state multiple murderer,
Tookie Williams, was finally executed in December 2005 -
TWENTY SIX years after he was originally sentenced.
Much is made of the inability to patrol Iraq's borders with
Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Turkey. But
California has only a single border with a foreign nation,
not six. Yet over 3 million foreigners who sneaked in
illegally now live in our state. Worse, there are about
15,000 convicted alien felons incarcerated in our penal
system, costing about $500 million a year. Imagine the
potential tabloid headlines: "Illegal aliens in state
comprise population larger than
San
Francisco!"
or "Drugs, criminals, and smugglers given free pass into
California!"
Every year, over 4,000 Californians die in car crashes -
more than the number of Americans lost so far in the years
of combat operations in Iraq. In some sense, then, our
badly maintained roads, and often poorly trained and
sometimes intoxicated drivers, are even more lethal than
IED's (Improvised Explosive Devices.) Perhaps tomorrow's
headline might scream out at us: "300 Californians to perish
this month on state highways! Hundreds more will be maimed
and crippled!"
In 2001, California had 32 days of power outages, despite
paying nearly the highest rates for electricity in the
United States. Before complaining about the smoke in Baghdad
rising from private generators, think back to the run on
generators in California when they were contemplated as a
future part of every household's line of defense.
We're told that Iraq's finances are a mess. Yet until
recently, so were
California's.
Two years ago, Governor Schwarzenegger inherited a $38
billion annual budget shortfall. That could have made for
strong morning newscast teasers: "Another $100 million
borrowed today - $3 billion more in red ink to pile up by
month's end!"
So is California comparable to Iraq? Hardly. Yet it could
easily be sketched by a reporter intent on doing so as a
bankrupt, crime-ridden area with murderous highways, tens of
thousands of inmates, with wide-open borders.
I
myself recently returned home to
California,
without incident, from a visit to Iraq's notorious Sunni
Triangle. While I was gone, a drug-addicted criminal with a
long list of convictions broke into our kitchen at 4 a.m.
was surprised by my wife and daughter, and fled with our
credit cards, cash, keys, and cell phones.
Sometimes I wonder who really was safer that week.
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(c)2006
Victor Davis Hanson
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