So Long, California—Thanks For The Memories!
About six weeks ago, I received an e-mail from my
California
reader-friend Bob who wanted to know how I was enjoying
Pittsburgh's December weather.
For his part, Bob told me that he had spent his day biking along
Newport Beach, sipping
iced tea
and making new friends of the
opposite
sex.
Of course, Bob was giving me a hard time. He knew full well that
Pittsburgh temperatures hadn't been out of the single digits in
days.
But Bob's e-mail reminded me of another one that I received
while I still lived in
Reader
Here was my reply to Nancy:
"Well, it depends what the season is. During the
winter months as long as three minutes may go by. I drive
off, make a few loops out of my neighborhood, and turn into the
Mini-Mart where I'll see several illegal immigrants filling up.
"But in the summer, I may spot one in less than three seconds.
I'll open the door and right down the street someone is
mowing a
lawn or
tearing down a roof."
Although I didn't quote my answer to
Days—perhaps weeks—pass without sighting a single alien.
The change is
refreshing and energizing.
Several factors prompted my decision to leave
Highest among them is that, after more than
twenty
years of teaching in the
The insistence by school bureaucrats, government hacks and
ethnic identity activists that we all celebrate diversity even
though it had been
shoved down
our throats mostly through illegal immigration became
intolerable.
Today, I look back at
Illegal immigration's
stranglehold on
In my Lodi News-Sentinel
column
this week,
I wrote about my former Lodi Unified School District teaching
colleagues fired because of the
state's budget crisis. A friend who teaches physical
education is circulating flyers to raise awareness among parents
that she hopes will save her job. Yet, billions in services for
illegal aliens continue virtually uninterrupted. [Lodi
Unified Will Issue 390 Lay-Off Notices to Teachers, by
Jennifer Bonnett,
This is
In the
Los Angeles that I grew up in, people felt
lucky
and proud to be part of the community. The same held true
for Lodi,
referred to in 1986 when I moved there as "lovable, livable
Now Los
Angeles is a mess—more
Mexico than America. Those whose professions keep them
anchored in
In
Compare Los Angeles and Lodi to All-American Pittsburgh where
the concept of California life is beyond comprehension.
When you walk around downtown
The city's most popular restaurant is
Primanti Brothers—not
some in vogue fusion cuisine sashimi joint like
Koi
where your
total entrée weighs eight ounces. Primanti's serves
mile-high meat sandwiches piled with French fries and
coleslaw stacked between the bread.
The
Pittsburgh Pirates are just that—the Pittsburgh Pirates. The
Pirates don't offer
"Mariachi Night" and
Iron City, not
Tecate, is the beer of choice at the ballpark.
We don't have a Spanish language Latino night like
"viva los Dodgers", co-hosted by the
Pirate entertainment centers on the
"Great
Pierogi Race". (Watch one
here.)
The announcers call the competition in
Pittsburghese, an American dialect unique to
The pierogi,
for those who don't know, is ethnic food
If my affection for
The sad truth is that although
I have
many friends and happy reminiscences of my
I still own
my Lodi
home and as absentee landlord I might have to visit. But I
hope I don't.
The house
in which I lived two decades is a now major sore spot for me. My
solidly middle class neighborhood is
devastated by the
minority mortgage meltdown.
Consecutively,
two
minority, no-money-down, sub-prime owners occupied the house
directly next door. In between owner number one and number two,
the home stood vacant for nearly a year. The second owner, upon
taking possession, never mowed his lawn let alone paint or put
on a new roof. Now, falling apart, it is empty again.
As with other
similar
houses in the neighborhood, values have plunged. Long-time
owners are bewildered about how it all happened—and why it
happened so quickly. If I were still there, I could
explain it to them. But would they understand that
immigration
pandering gone wild cost them hundreds of thousands of home
equity value?
Saying good-bye to California where I was born, spent my youth
and—after leaving and coming back again—thrived during my middle
years is tough. Yet
what choice do I have? The
Of course,
Looking ahead while being thankful for my great
For now, I'll content myself with my new life in
immigration-free Western Pennsylvania, counting down the days
until spring and waiting for my California income tax rebate
(reportedly it may be
in
I.O.U. form) to arrive in my mail box.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.