Wired reports that:
While ostensibly a plan to make the entire state of 38 million people more governable, the six-state initiative is being led and funded by a member of the Silicon Valley elite, many of whom would no doubt welcome the increased political clout that would likely come from carving out their own statehood. In the hands of most, the six-state initiative would look like a pure stunt. But with Silicon Valley behind it, this effort's chances at the ballot box can't be dismissed out of hand. Unlike most other would-be revolutionaries, Silicon Valley has a long record of taking ideas that sound outlandish at the time--affordable computers in every home, private rocket ships--and managing to make them real. It also has a seemingly endless stream of money that, combined with heavy doses of ingenuity and shamelessness, give its goofball ideas the fuel they need to take off.
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"Our gift to California is this--it's one of opportunity and choice," Draper said at a press conference yesterday where he announced the campaign had collected far more than 800,000 signatures needed to get the measure on the ballot. "We're saying, make one failing government into six great states."
(Score: 2) by mendax on Thursday July 24 2014, @04:56AM
The state legislature as a whole has to approve of it, something which will never happen, and then the Congress will have to approve of it, which will not happen in today's political climate. The chances that California will split up into two, let alone into six states, are lower than the chances of my feisty, evil black cat becoming gentle, even-tempered, and polka-dotted.
It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.