Colorado
Related: About this forumThe Short, Unhappy Life of a Libertarian Paradise
Colorado Springs has always leaned hard on its reputation for natural beauty. An hours drive south of Denver, it sits at the base of the Rocky Mountains southern range and features two of the states top tourist destinations: the ancient sandstone rock formations known as Garden of the Gods, and Pikes Peak, the 14,000-foot summit visible from nearly every street corner. Its also a staunchly Republican cityheadquarters of the politically active Christian group Focus on the Family (Colorado Springs is nicknamed the Evangelical Vatican) and the fourth most conservative city in America, according to a recent study. Its a right-wing counterweight to liberal Boulder, just a couple of hours north, along the Front Range.
It was its jut-jawed conservatism that not that long ago made the citys local government a brief national fixation. During the recession, like nearly every other city in America, Colorado Springs revenueheavily dependent on sales taxplunged. Faced with massive shortfalls, the citys leaders began slashing. Gone were weekend bus service and nine buses.
Out went some police officers along with three of the departments helicopters, which were auctioned online. Trash cans vanished from city parks, because when you cut 75 percent of the parks budget, one of the things you lose is someone to empty the garbage. For a city that was founded when a wealthy industrialist planted 10,000 trees on a shadeless prairie, the suddenly sparse watering of the citys grassy lawns was a profound and dire statement of retreat.
To fill a $28 million budget hole, Colorado Springs political leaderswho until that point might have been described by most voters as fiscal conservativesproposed tripling property taxes. Nearly two-thirds of voters said no. In response, city officials (some would say almost petulantly) turned off one out of every three street lights. Thats when people started paying attention to a city that seemed to be conducting a real-time experiment in fiscal self-starvation. But that was just the prelude. The city wasnt content simply to reject a tax increase. Voters wanted something genuinely different, so a little more than a year later, they elected a real estate entrepreneur as mayor who promised a radical break from politics as usual.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/06/30/colorado-springs-libertarian-experiment-america-215313
sandensea
(22,850 posts)I know people who've lived there for about a decade. There was a spate of burglaries - nearly all unsolved because (you guessed it) the police dept. was forced to do its detective work on the cheap.
Things, I'm told, have gotten better since around 2012. It really is a beautiful place.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)"Galt's Gulch" in Chile was one of those grandiose schemes based on Rand's horrid novels that descended into infighting, charges of profiteering, and dueling lawsuits within 2 years of the initial announcement. I suppose someone should have mentioned to the true believers that Rand's flawless logic was all based on faulty premises.
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/bn53b3/atlas-mugged-922-v21n10
I was almost hoping they'd pull it off down there in the hope that men like the Koch boys would retire to the Gulch and stop poisoning US politics. Alas, it fell apart in record time, even before some of the states they've poisoned with libertarian rubbish have rebelled and raised taxes because--hey--government is necessary. Who knew?
colsohlibgal
(5,276 posts)The old joke was they are just republicans who want to smoke pot.
True enough, they are anti tax but are oblivious to the fact you need cash to run any government.