Proposition 14 – Brewster’s Billions: NO.
 “Brewster’s Millions” tells the story of a fictional character in 1902,
 who, in order to inherit $7 million, must first spend $1 million in a 
year and have nothing to show for it. In 2004, California voters were 
convinced to spend $3 billion on Stem Cell research – or about $260 
(plus interest) for every family in California. A recent report found 
that $2.1 billion went to beneficiaries with links to the board that 
doles out the money. That money is now all but spent, with nothing to 
show for it. So, they’re back with another bond, this one for $5.5 
billion (about $478 per family). This is amusing only as fiction.
Proposition 15 – How Not to Succeed in Business: NO.
 From the “How Tone Deaf Can They Be” file comes this proposal to 
reassess businesses annually in order to hike their property taxes. 
That’s because the state-ordered lockdowns, the arrests of shopkeepers 
trying to keep their businesses going, combined with California’s 
highest-in-the-country income and sales taxes and anti-business 
regulations, have left California’s small businesses flush with cash. It
 is still possible to build a successful small business in California, 
as long as you start with a successful large one. And remember, 
businesses don’t pay taxes: YOU pay business taxes, as a consumer 
through higher prices, as an employee through lower wages or as an 
investor through lower earnings (think 401k).
Proposition 16 – Judging People by the Color of their Skin and Not the Content of the Character: NO.
 In the Parents Involved Case of 2007, Chief Justice Roberts noted that 
“The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop 
discriminating on the basis of race.” California voters had come to the 
same conclusion when they passed Proposition 209 in 1996, which forbids 
state government from discriminating or giving preferential treatment 
“on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity or national origin in 
public employment, public education, and public contracting.” Prop 16 
repeals this civil rights protection for all Californians and opens a 
new era of official discrimination based on race.
Proposition 17 – Bank Robbers for Biden: NO.
 If there were any doubt of the Democrats’ contempt for the electorate, 
this should dispel it. This bill gives felons on parole the right to 
vote. Enough said.
Proposition 18 – High School Voters: NO.
 Wait, there’s more! Here’s a proposal to give 17-year-olds the right to
 vote in primary and special elections. Democrats are counting on their 
good judgment, experience and common sense to counter the influence of 
their nagging, annoying and totally unreasonable parents.
Proposition 19 – Fire Sale: NO.
 Right now, parents can leave the family home to their family without a 
crippling property tax hike. This bill ends that exemption, purportedly 
to add more money for firefighting. It’s a good bet that more family 
homes will be lost in fire sales than in fires.
Proposition 20 – A Step Back from the Abyss: YES.
 Long version: This measure repairs some of the damage of Jerry Brown 
era laws that have made California less safe. It increases penalties for
 many theft and fraud crimes that Brown reduced to misdemeanors, 
requires convicts to submit DNA for state and federal databases and 
restores the ability of parole boards to keep dangerous prisoners behind
 bars. Short version: Jerry Brown opposes it.
Proposition 21 – Rent Control with Nothing to Rent: NO.
 There’s an old soviet-era saying, “What good is a free bus ticket in a 
city with no buses?” The same is true of rent. Rent controls are very 
effective at drying up the supply of rental housing in any community 
where they’re imposed. Those currently renting do very well, but they 
hold on to their old apartments and landlords stop building new ones. 
Presto: nothing to rent – but at a very affordable price.
Proposition 22 – Let My Uber Go: YES.
 One of the worst bills ever enacted by the California legislature (and 
that says a lot) is AB 5, that essentially ended independent contracting
 in California. This measure exempts app-based drivers, meaning 
independent contractors put out of work by AB 5 can still take an Uber 
to a free state.
Proposition 23 — Bringing Venezuelan Heath Care to Dialysis Patients: NO.
 Two years ago, SEIU tried to impose price controls on dialysis. They 
lost and are back with this measure that imposes onerous and expensive 
requirements to have physicians on duty at dialysis clinics and 
prohibiting them from going out of business without state approval. This
 will help dialysis patients by assuring higher prices and will help 
encourage new clinics to open by forbidding them ever to close. Makes 
perfect sense.
Proposition 24 – When in Doubt, Don’t: NO.
 This measure purports to expand consumer privacy, but the Electronic 
Frontier Foundation, a consumer privacy group, calls it “a mixed bag of 
partial steps backwards and forwards.” Here’s what is crystal clear: it 
will unleash a new regulatory agency with vast powers to prosecute 
businesses that run afoul of the increasingly intricate consumer privacy
 laws in California. Another nail in the coffin of the once “Golden 
State.”
Proposition 25 – Catch and Release: NO.
 When suspects are arrested, they’re jailed until posting bail to assure
 they show up for trial. Surprisingly, many suspects don’t want to; go 
figure. Jerry Brown and the lunatic legislature did away with this 
process in 2018, replacing cash bail with “risk assessments.” This law 
was temporarily suspended pending this referendum, but the leftist 
Judicial Council did away with bail for most crimes during the COVID 
scare, resulting in the arrest, immediate release and subsequent 
re-arrests of criminal suspects the same day for different crimes. A NO 
vote would repeal this insane law.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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