CHRISTOPHER RUFO: “Spencer Pratt grew up in a California that delivered all of the public services in the background without much fuss, and consequently, one could live out the California archetypes of the surfer, the burnout, or the party animal, and it was more or less as depicted in the movies…Pratt has a better understanding of the California Dream than a rigid, humorless apparatchik like Nithya Raman, who views the state as raw material for an ideological formula.”
Spencer Pratt grew up in a California that delivered all of the public services in the background without much fuss, and consequently, one could live out the California archetypes of the surfer, the burnout, or the party animal, and it was more or less as depicted in the movies.…
— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@christopherrufo) May 7, 2026
As Jonah Goldberg wrote in 2024 regarding Chicago’s Mayor Daley:
Daley was a real New Deal-style liberal, but he would have no use for Shorism or Lakoff-ism. He barely spoke American. He once declared he was proud to welcome the “poet lariat” of Chicago. He complained of his enemies, “They have vilified me, they have crucified me, yes, they have even criticized me.” He famously defended the Chicago police (which, we should concede did some indefensible things) by saying “Gentlemen, get the thing straight once and for all—the policeman isn’t there to create disorder, the policeman is there to preserve disorder.”
But he knew how to get snow cleared.
Again, I’m not trying to romanticize Daley, but I guarantee you a great many current residents of Chicago (or New York, Portland, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C.) would be far, far, happier to pay taxes for Daley-style government than to pay for what they have now—even if you convinced people that taxes are really just membership fees.
Democrats in Los Angeles would similarly accept a lot of corruption in their local government — if it still delivered basic services, such as putting out fires and repairing roads:
🚨 WATCH: LA Mayor Karen Bass bragged about paving 60 miles of roads before being reminded the city has 22,000 miles total.
That’s just 0.27%, and residents are still stuck dealing with damaged streets.pic.twitter.com/dPlNbigimf
— Derrick Evans (@DerrickEvans4WV) February 21, 2026