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Bill Gross kicks the sick dog that is California

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Pimco bond guru Bill Gross ought to be feeling charitable: The share price of his $178-billion-asset Pimco Total Return fund hit a record high Thursday, thanks in part to his decision in recent weeks to load up on long-term Treasury bonds -- exactly what the rest of the world was clamoring for in Thursday’s big bond rally.

Instead, Newport Beach-based Gross uses his October commentary on Pimco’s website to lambaste what has become of California.

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Some excerpts:

Once ‘golden’ and the land of entrepreneurial opportunity, the state has turned from filet mignon to ground chuck and its residents are now on a short leash as opposed to masters of their own universe. Unemployment at 12.2% is near the nation’s highest and its Baa bond rating is the country’s lowest. Its schools are abysmal, competing with Louisiana and Mississippi for the lowest rating in the federal government’s National Assessment of Educational Progress. Perhaps more than any other state, California has been affected by its perverted form of government, requiring a two-thirds vote by state legislators to effectively pass a budget. In addition, the state’s laws are almost tragically shaped by a form of direct democracy more resemblant of the Jacksonian era, where the White House furniture was constantly at risk due to unruly citizens high on whisky and low on morals and common sense. But California’s problems, while somewhat unique and self-inflicted, are really America’s problems, and not just because the California economy is 15% of national GDP. While California’s $26-billion [budget] deficit is not directly comparable to the federal gap of $1 trillion-plus, they both reflect a lack of discipline and indeed vision to perceive that the strong growth in revenues was driven by the same excess leverage and the same delusionary asset appreciation that was bound to approach cliff’s edge.

All of that is well-put, but Gross, 65, isn’t telling demoralized Californians anything they don’t already know.

What his fellow Californians really might like to read are Gross’ ideas for beginning to fix what’s wrong with the state. Raise income taxes? Cut them? Junk Proposition 13? Offer new incentives for entrepreneurs? Forcibly annex Arizona?

The uber-rich Gross just paid $23 million for a Harbor Island mansion that he reportedly will tear down in favor of building something better. So he’s apparently planning to stay in California despite his dismal assessment of its economic and social situation.

Yo Bill -- we know we’re in a bad way. What should we do?

-- Tom Petruno

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