Yes the voters did vote against a tax to fund the stadium. However, I think its the amount that the city would have to put up that would be the issue. If the Taylor group comes back with a plan that would require some money from the city, but the money would also be paid back over a number of years, and the amount if reasonable, the city council could vote to take the money out of the general fund. Or the city council could vote to make city land available to the developers as part of the city's payment, with that lands worth being paid back down the road.
In other words, if you have the entire city council on board, and they're ballsy enough, they could allocate the money for the arena without a vote of the taxpayers.
Americans don't protest like people of other nations.
If police come to disperse, they will leave in America. Not in other nations...
That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard. If that were true, minorities and women still couldn't vote.
Well, hopefully we'll all still be able to cheer for the team when they move and watch them develop, mature, and win a championship in Anaheim.
In other words, if you have the entire city council on board, and they're ballsy enough, they could allocate the money for the arena without a vote of the taxpayers.
I tend to support the "warning" idea just because the Anaheim deals that were reported seemed pretty lousy and moving to SoCal is one thing that could really set Sacramentans off. But I also think it could backfire because a move to SoCal is such a slap in the face. It does seem that we finally have a determined and united council though.I very much see it as a warning and perhaps orchestrated with the NBA, a serious warning, and now we'll see how the city and people react. Maybe a demonstration makes sense. Sure can't hurt. Good idea.
It's been mentioned already, but the idea should definitely be to demonstate in favor of building an arena, not against the Maloofs for exploring a move.
I tend to support the "warning" idea just because the Anaheim deals that were reported seemed pretty lousy and moving to SoCal is one thing that could really set Sacramentans off. But I also think it could backfire because a move to SoCal is such a slap in the face. It does seem that we finally have a determined and united council though.
Indeed...it's not the Maloofs fault, and don't blame them as businessmen for exploring all other options. I'm just not sure that there's more than a couple dozen people that would show up to city hall to 'protest' keeping the Kings here unfortunately. I'm all or it if something large scale gets organized, but I just don't see it happening.
I was strictly speaking from the "if they're bluffing" perspective, then it could be a bad move, especially if the Anaheim deal is as lame as the one that had previously been reported. It does seem like this has lit the fire under the right people but public opinion may be a different matter.This is not a shot against Sacramento, but if you put off that market, in favor of a far bigger market, it might be worth the trade-off to the Maloofs.
I was strictly speaking from the "if they're bluffing" perspective, then it could be a bad move, especially if the Anaheim deal is as lame as the one that had previously been reported. It does seem like this has lit the fire under the right people but public opinion may be a different matter.
The people of police-state Egypt never protested in the streets for over 30 years of one-man iron fisted domination. Only when nearby Tunisia showed them the way did they take to the streets to call for change. Now there's massive demonstration ongoing all over the Arab world against repressive totalitarian rule.
America has a very long history of public demonstrations from rallies for labor union rights nearly a hundred years ago, civil rights protests, Vietnam war protests, and on and on. Even today the Tea Party rallies draw thousands all across the land when organized. If the demonstration is peaceful at least nowadays we don't gun down protesters.
I guess if I go to a Kings rally in peace my sign will say - "Don't Tread On My Kings"
That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard. If that were true, minorities and women still couldn't vote.
I'm talking about protests and demonstrations today. You're right. America was practically built on rejecting English oppression and throughout U.S. history protests have garnered a better life for people today.
I don't know where it went wrong, but compare Vietnam protests and the Iraq/Afghanistan protests and you will see that people have definitely become more lenient.
It seems like any anti-government demonstration that the U.S. has today turns out scores of people and thats it. People come just to say they did "something" and go back to their everyday life the next day.