A Very Normal and Wonderful Independence Day Breathes Life Into Oppressive California
Make California normal again
By Katy Grimes, July 5, 2024 8:38 am
As I have reported before, living in downtown Sacramento for more than 30 years hasn’t always been a picnic. I frequently write about encounters with homeless vagrants in downtown, as well as in the park near my house. I also chronicle the escalating crime and violence in Sacramento – murders are now a regular event week in, week out.
A moment of relief was on July 4th in Plymouth, CA at the Trucks, Tractors and Trikes parade. And what a delight it was.
Plymouth is at the mouth of the Shenandoah Valley, the wine country of Amador County. There are forty-two wineries located in the heart of the celebrated Sierra foothill Gold Country. And the small towns, Plymouth, Amador City, Drytown, Fiddletown, Pinegrove, Pioneer, Volcano… are nestled into the hills, mountains, near rivers and lakes. And wineries.
When you enter the region, it’s as if you’ve stepped into a portal back to the old west and historic gold country. The towns have maintained and accentuated the old town appearance. And the people are genuine and the nicest.
The July 4th parade opened with the National Anthem. Then the fire trucks rolled through, followed by decorated pickups, tractors, more tractors, kids on tricycles, go-carts, vintage trucks, a Tesla truck, Shetland Ponies, horses and a really big goat.
Parade goers cheered. Adults enjoyed pomegranate mimosas and breakfast burritos from the Tin Roof Wine Cafe – and cold beer – plenty of cold beer.
While to many this sounds mundane or a little ho-hum, it’s not; it’s normal. Really normal. And that’s the point.
The gaslighting of the people by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Democrat Supermajority is breathtaking. Gaslighting is a form of psychological abuse where a person (politician) causes someone to question their sanity, memories, or perception of reality.
The way Gavin Newsom talks in absurd soundbites about California, you’d think the streets were paved of gold and the 40 million people are all successful venture capitalists.
We know California’s cities are a hot mess – and dangerous – even deadly.
Elderly Asian women aren’t brutally attacked in Plymouth or Sutter Creek the way they are in Oakland and San Francisco.
The streets of cities and towns in Amador County are not lined with squalid homeless tent camps. No one is pooping on the sidewalks in Amador City or Jackson the way they do in San Francisco (home of the public defecation map), Los Angeles and Sacramento.
There are no organized smash-and-grab retail thefts in Sutter Creek or Ione.
People are not pushed into oncoming trains the way they are in San Francisco.
Plymouth has no homicide, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, larceny-theft, arson, or even shoplifting to speak of.
This is not to say that it’s all roses in Amador County. But it’s normal. And we Californians need normal again.
California used to be known for its gorgeous weather, Hollywood movies, high tech, and for growing and providing beautiful agricultural products for the rest of the world. Today, California is known for its crazy Left wing politics, and for its crime and homeless epidemic. Yes, many parts of California are stunningly beautiful, but they aren’t in the dangerous big cities.
Whether you are forced to check the public defecation map to navigate the streets of San Francisco, are on the 57 freeway in Santa Ana looking at miles of homeless tent cities and camps, or you are dodging heroin-addicted homeless zombies around the State Capitol and on residential streets in Sacramento, the results are the same — Nearly one-third of the nation’s welfare recipients and drug-addicted homeless population lives in California.
Make California normal again.
All it will take is for voters to get engaged and vote. Find citizens to once again represent you – oust the career politicians who have facilitated the Golden State’s decay and degradation.
Help make California normal again. And tell your children and grandchildren about Former President Ronald Reagan, who always seemed to remember the bravery and courage of the original representatives from the 13 colonies, meeting together at a Continental Congress in Philadelphia, to draft and sign the Declaration of Independence, after being declared “traitors” by King George:
“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.”
…And seek out California’s normal again with fervor.
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Great article and great photos, Katy! Telling it like it is as always! Thank you! I just might have to check out Plymouth.
Our town also has the same sort of funky, nostalgic, kids of all ages, and unabashedly American parade which shuts down the town until 1 p.m. at which time most have a garden party or outing to attend- all decked out in red white and blue. No shootings, fights, drag racing or politics interferes with a good time. Although activists managed to get the show horses banned this year (cruelty to animals, don’t cha’ know)….
Sadly, “making California normal again” is no longer possible after we lost control of the voting process which results in long term incumbents (or switching jobs to avoid term limits) , highest taxes in the nation, wasting money on fanciful projects, and niche fantasy projects, increasing crime, and deceitful ballot measures.
I remain hopeful that we will start to see changes following the November national election.
Amador County sounds pretty sweet! Might need to visit one of these days and breathe in the wonder of it to steel myself against the nearby rapidly crashing SoCal urban center that affects everything around it.
Katy Grimes’ account took me back to visiting my grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins once-upon-a-time in not-quite-still-rural but rural-enough Maryland. Wonderfully normal.
Very sweet!
Gavin the Grim Reaper would describe this as going backwards.
Hmm, why?
As you so well laid out Katy, no poop on the streets, no one being pushed into trains on a regular basis. Just wholesome living! I bet the kids growing up there are free range!
As far as I am concerned urbanizing the state is backwards and proven to be dangerous!
Agenda 2030 is wrong and will further destroy this once great state.
Give me a pony or old truck over a bullet train to nowhere, any day, any time!
I am appointed advisor for State of California Department of Agriculture and a Sac State Alum. When I make day trips for meetings over past 2 years it is mind boggling the degradation of the down town, heart breaking really. What an article! Thank-You Katy and am sure you have to have eyes on the back of your head as you walk the streets of downtown. I loved downtown I lived on 22nd + H for more than 2 years. Recently had opportunity to head back to the reservation in Oklahoma and that did not work our, hopefully for the better. Going to stick around and keep up the battle. The California farmer is in trouble with almonds at 1.20 a pound if you are lucky. Corporate farming is taking over the days of the pioneer farmer are over for the major crops. When people start starving that could be the shock to jolt them out of their incoherence, and pull back the curtains of those that have their hands on the handle “gaslighting” the population as Katy so eloquently describes. -)
Great comments! And spot on. I am so concerned about what politicians are doing to our farmers and ranchers.
BTW – 22nd and H – by the scary house with the ghost?!!
Normal for Newsom and Democrat politicians who mostly control California is satanism and inverting anything good into bad.