Granting that this is the Reno News & Review, I understand that some readers do visit California. Many enjoy the envy-of-the-nation parks system, and some of those may be unaware that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has proposed closing 48 of the stateโs gems.
Ordinarily, I welcome news like this because it highlights the shortsightedness of the knee-jerk anti-tax crowd. Theirs is a simple ideology: Taxes, bad. No taxes, good. And because they couch their arguments in terms many people accept uncriticallyโfree enterprise, deregulationโthey are insidious enemies of society.
Chaining the gates Schwarzenegger has designated would reportedly save a puny $9 million. Thatโs pocket change even to the Governator, who earned more than $20 million a picture during his movie career. (Equally irrelevant but equally annoying: Depending on whose figures you accept, $9 million would fund four hours of war in Iraq).
California is home to 37.5 million people, so $9 million comes to 24 cents per person per year, just two cents per month. Friends of the parks have launched a drive to point that out. Theyโre asking supporters to tape two pennies to a piece of paper, write an appropriate message (“Please donโt close the parksโ would do), stick it into an envelope and send it to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, State Capitol Building, Sacramento, Calif. 95814.
But youโre not a Californian, so why should your input matter?
Because closing the parks is a classically dumb move, the kind of thing conservatives do because itโs easier than thinking. And because if the state gets a million pennies, nobodyโs going to check return addresses.
If that troubles you, you could point out that you visit California often, you buy gas and food and occasionally a motel room there, and if the parks close, the money will stay home.
In other news: A recent survey on www.Careerbuilder.com purports to list the 10 sexiest jobs in the United States. Itโs light on specifics, but interesting in the way a lot of internet junk is interesting: It has no connection with reality, but somehow seems important. Counting down:
10. TV News Anchor/Personality: Because they โtalk with authority, seem to know everything and make you feel like youโre best friends.โ If you can fake that sincerity, everything else is easy?
9. Construction worker: No reason. Well, there is a reason, but it makes no sense.
8. Military professional: Not that whole protecting-the-nation thing, but because โtheyโve got the ultimate uniform.โ
7. Artist: โTheyโre doing what makes them happy, not what makes them money.โ But they canโt pay for dinner.
6. Nurse: โThey bring you morphine when youโre hurting.โ
5. Cowboy: โFew archetypes are as ingrained in our culture.โ But if a cowboy wants to take you out, he has to borrow money from an artist.
4. Firefighter: Canโt argue with this. My wife wonโt let me.
3. Athlete: Depends on your standards. Be warned, though, that theyโre the second most self-absorbed people on this list.
2. Cocktail waitress: Sure, they look great. But their feet hurt, theyโre tired, and they want to go home. Plus thereโs nothing you can say that they havenโt heard.
1. Model/entertainer: Oh, please. In another life, my job included interviewing models for magazine covers. I rejoiced at the assignment (I was single then), and it was terrific โฆ for about five minutes. To the last scrawny, whining bulimic, they were crazier than loons, more self-centered than jocks and routinely put $20 worth of surf โnโ turf in the plumbing before we left the restaurant. Iโd rather take up with a TV news anchor.
