Yamaha leaving california. Newsom and the dems circling the drain

Democrats are traitors working to intentionally collapse America.

Democrats see California crashing and Americans hurting as proof their intentional collapse of America agenda is working.

Democrats = traitors
Cloward / Piven with a little Marxist / Islamist inspiration ) and White Colonialist Guilt with a sprinkling of Chinese disinformation
 
Yamaha is one of the greatest companies in the world. I love(d) their motorcycles and love their guitars and keyboards.
Gavin Newsom is an extremely stupid man. I mean, his destruction of California is truly one of the most epic political stories in American history.
He is an utter failure on every single level any human being can be measured by.
Hell yeah! I have a Yamaha Motif XS6. It is an amazing keyboard.

California is spiraling down the drain. :cuckoo:
 
While many companies have left, California continues to attract and retain businesses, with notable recent moves including apparel maker Dickies moving its headquarters from Texas to Costa Mesa in early 2025.
costa mesa?...not a great move....
 

The corporate exodus continues

Will voters in the previously golden state ever see the writing on the wall and throw the democrats out?
About the best we can hope for is to get a Republican governor from the upcoming election, which is actually a real possibility. But, overall, the stupid far outnumber the smart in that state. The city dwellers are hopeless. Their blood is blue. Far too many have been indoctrinated. And, they can't vote out the tit that feeds them.
 
About the best we can hope for is to get a Republican governor from the upcoming election, which is actually a real possibility. But, overall, the stupid far outnumber the smart in that state. The city dwellers are hopeless. Their blood is blue. Far too many have been indoctrinated. And, they can't vote out the tit that feeds them.
Unless a higher authority prevents democrat cheating california will remain a one-party state
 
About the best we can hope for is to get a Republican governor from the upcoming election, which is actually a real possibility. But, overall, the stupid far outnumber the smart in that state. The city dwellers are hopeless. Their blood is blue. Far too many have been indoctrinated. And, they can't vote out the tit that feeds them.
Yep.
They're Dead State Walking.
They're toast.
 
Unless a higher authority prevents democrat cheating california will remain a one-party state
I'm not so sure cheating affects California so much. As I said, the city dwellers can't vote out the tit that feeds them and their are millions and millions of tit suckers.
 
We will dip below 40 million Populace with all the Fleeing Rich folks and Self Deportations and Deportations and smart moves by average folks
 
I'm not so sure cheating affects California so much. As I said, the city dwellers can't vote out the tit that feeds them and their are millions and millions of tit suckers.
You could be right

Particularly since the sane Californians are leaving the state
 
The 5th largest economy in the world is circling the drain. They should be gone any minute now.
Of course california will not disappear although its in decline

But it used to be so much better
 
  • Big companies continue to leave California.
  • Overall, research shows the number of companies leaving is small.
  • But the departures include some of the nation's largest companies.

McKesson Corp.​


"Pharmaceutical giant McKesson left California in 2019. In terms of public companies, only Apple loomed larger in the Bay Area.

Then-CEO John H. Hammergren said that McKesson was moving its headquarters to Las Colinas, Texas (near Dallas) to "improve efficiency, collaboration and cost-competitiveness, while providing an exceptional work environment for our employees."

McKesson remains the highest-ranking Fortune 500 company to leave California in recent years."


Chevron​


"Oil giant Chevron had deep roots in California, going back to the 1870s when an early predecessor discovered oil north of Los Angeles. That didn't stop the company from moving to Houston in 2024.

Looking back on its move, the energy giant says that California's leaders have taken steps that made it "unappealing."

"While our relocation has very real benefits to our business, we also believe California policymakers have pursued policies that raise costs and consumer prices, creating a hardship for all Californians, especially those who can least afford it," Ross Allen, a spokesperson for Chevron, said in a statement to Business Insider. "These policies have also made California investment unappealing compared with opportunities elsewhere in the US and globally."


Tesla​


"Like some of his fellow tech CEOs, Elon Musk grew frustrated with the limitations of the Bay area before Tesla left for Austin in 2021.

"There's a limit to how big you can scale in the Bay Area," Musk said at the time.

Before the move, Musk had also clashed with officials over keeping Tesla's Fremont, California, factory open despite COVID-19 orders."


Oracle​


"In 2020, Oracle left its longtime home in California. The computer technology giant isn't done moving yet.

Last year, CEO Larry Ellison said the computer technology giant would move its headquarters from Austin, where it had been for less than half a decade, to Tennessee.

"Nashville is a fabulous place to live," Ellison said, according to an Associated Press report. "It's a great place to raise a family. It's got a unique and vibrant culture .... It's the center of the industry we're most concerned about, which is the health care industry."


CBRE​


"Global real estate company CBRE monitors the number of companies leaving California. The firm itself left Los Angeles in 2020.

"Designating Dallas as CBRE's global corporate headquarters formalizes how our company has been operating for the past eight years," Lew Horne, head of operations in the Southwest, said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times in 2020."


Charles Schwab​


"Charles Schwab left for Westlake, Texas, in 2019 after it agreed to buy Omaha-based TD Ameritrade.

Schwab chairman and founder Charles Schwab singled out the business climate in California as motivation for the move: "The costs of doing business here are so much higher than some other place" he told Forbes.

The companies said in a joint statement that their new home would "allow the combined firm to take advantage of the central location of the new Schwab campus."

In 2023, SFGate reported that Schwab further reduced its presence in San Francisco, its former home.

"We've had an extremely positive experience in Texas," a spokesperson from Schwab said in a statement to BI. "From day one, the energy, innovation, and welcoming spirit of North Texas has far exceeded our expectations."


Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE)​


"In 2020, Hewlett Packard Enterprise announced it was leaving California, another COVID-19 era departure.

"Houston is also an attractive market for us to recruit and retain talent, and a great place to do business," CEO Antonio Neri said in a statement announcing the move.

Neri praised HPE's new home in Spring, Texas (a Houston suburb), but stressed that the company was not leaving Silicon Valley entirely.

"Our San Jose campus will remain a hub for technological talent and innovation," he said."



Palantir​


"Software giant Palantir left Silicon Valley in 2020. Before the tech company moved, CEO Alex Karp said he had concerns about California.

"I'm pretty happy outside the monoculture in New Hampshire," Karp told Axios in May 2020 when asked if he would move back to California as the COVID-19 pandemic was receding.

Karp said at the time that Palantir was narrowing down its list of future homes, which potentially included Colorado.

Palantir has been in Denver since August 2020."



SpaceX​


"Elon Musk promised to move SpaceX to Texas in 2024, part of a series of announcements that positioned his companies away from California.

In announcing SpaceX's relocation, Musk singled out a California law that forbids schools from requiring staff to inform parents of a student's gender identity.

"This is the final straw," Musk wrote on X in July 2024. "Because of this law and the many others that preceded it, attacking both families and companies, SpaceX will now move its HQ from Hawthorne, California, to Starbase, Texas."



Neutrogena​


"Kenvue, Johnson & Johnson's spun-off healthcare division, uprooted Neutrogena from California in 2024 as part of a corporate consolidation.

Roughly 100 employees were affected by Kenvue's decision to shut down Neutrogena's Los Angeles headquarters, SFGate reported. The well-known cosmetics company had been in California since it was founded in 1930 as a supplier to the stars.

Kenvue said it was relocating Neutrogena's operations to its then-planned global headquarters in Summit, New Jersey. In March 2025, the company held its grand opening of its new HQ."



Playboy​


"Hugh Hefner's bachelor pad is no more. And neither will be Playboy's home in California.

In August, the iconic men's lifestyle brand announced that it was moving to Miami. While Hefner's famous Playboy Mansion was in Los Angeles, the company was headquartered in Chicago from the magazine's inception in 1953 to 2012. Hefner, who died in 2017, wanted to be closer to Playboy's operations.

"Miami Beach is among the most dynamic and culturally influential cities in the country, making it the ideal home for Playboy's next chapter," CEO Ben Kohn said in a statement.

In an interview with Fox News, Kohn said it was too difficult to keep doing business in California.

"Given Florida and Miami's pro-business stance, leaving California, which is anti-business and a very difficult place to do business as an employer, we're excited to be relocating to Miami Beach," Kohn told the outlet. "And the city of Miami Beach has been phenomenal and helpful in the move."



Realtor.com​


"Relator.com said it was moving its Bay Area headquarters to Austin.

"Austin and Texas offer a strong and growing talent pool, a powerhouse economy with unparalleled housing growth, affordability of living only matched by its aspirational lifestyle, expansive tech and academic communities, and a dynamic and vibrant city at the heart of the thriving state of Texas. There is no better place for us to call home," CEO Damian Eales said in a statement.

News Corp. CEO Robert Thompson said the media giant was "proud" of the online real estate company's home. The conglomerate, which also owns Fox News and The Wall Street Journal, operates Relator.com through a subsidiary, Move, Inc.

"We are proud to be housed in a state which understands the crucial role played by business in providing opportunities for personal growth, professional success, and community achievement," Thompson said in a statement."



AECOM​


"Global consultancy firm AECOM left Los Angeles in 2021, saying that Texas offered more benefits.

"Dallas has emerged as a US hub for corporate headquarters and a compelling corporate talent magnet, particularly among our peers and public companies in the engineering and consulting sectors," a company spokesperson told The LA Times."



FICO​


"Financial data analytics firm FICO, officially known as the Fair Isaac Corporation, quietly moved to Bozeman, Montana, sometime in 2021.

The company, best known for its FICO score, previously moved its corporate headquarters from Minneapolis to San Jose in 2013.

It's not entirely clear why FICO left California."


 
15th post
  • Big companies continue to leave California.
  • Overall, research shows the number of companies leaving is small.
  • But the departures include some of the nation's largest companies.

McKesson Corp.​


"Pharmaceutical giant McKesson left California in 2019. In terms of public companies, only Apple loomed larger in the Bay Area.

Then-CEO John H. Hammergren said that McKesson was moving its headquarters to Las Colinas, Texas (near Dallas) to "improve efficiency, collaboration and cost-competitiveness, while providing an exceptional work environment for our employees."

McKesson remains the highest-ranking Fortune 500 company to leave California in recent years."


Chevron​


"Oil giant Chevron had deep roots in California, going back to the 1870s when an early predecessor discovered oil north of Los Angeles. That didn't stop the company from moving to Houston in 2024.

Looking back on its move, the energy giant says that California's leaders have taken steps that made it "unappealing."

"While our relocation has very real benefits to our business, we also believe California policymakers have pursued policies that raise costs and consumer prices, creating a hardship for all Californians, especially those who can least afford it," Ross Allen, a spokesperson for Chevron, said in a statement to Business Insider. "These policies have also made California investment unappealing compared with opportunities elsewhere in the US and globally."


Tesla​


"Like some of his fellow tech CEOs, Elon Musk grew frustrated with the limitations of the Bay area before Tesla left for Austin in 2021.

"There's a limit to how big you can scale in the Bay Area," Musk said at the time.

Before the move, Musk had also clashed with officials over keeping Tesla's Fremont, California, factory open despite COVID-19 orders."


Oracle​


"In 2020, Oracle left its longtime home in California. The computer technology giant isn't done moving yet.

Last year, CEO Larry Ellison said the computer technology giant would move its headquarters from Austin, where it had been for less than half a decade, to Tennessee.

"Nashville is a fabulous place to live," Ellison said, according to an Associated Press report. "It's a great place to raise a family. It's got a unique and vibrant culture .... It's the center of the industry we're most concerned about, which is the health care industry."


CBRE​


"Global real estate company CBRE monitors the number of companies leaving California. The firm itself left Los Angeles in 2020.

"Designating Dallas as CBRE's global corporate headquarters formalizes how our company has been operating for the past eight years," Lew Horne, head of operations in the Southwest, said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times in 2020."


Charles Schwab​


"Charles Schwab left for Westlake, Texas, in 2019 after it agreed to buy Omaha-based TD Ameritrade.

Schwab chairman and founder Charles Schwab singled out the business climate in California as motivation for the move: "The costs of doing business here are so much higher than some other place" he told Forbes.

The companies said in a joint statement that their new home would "allow the combined firm to take advantage of the central location of the new Schwab campus."

In 2023, SFGate reported that Schwab further reduced its presence in San Francisco, its former home.

"We've had an extremely positive experience in Texas," a spokesperson from Schwab said in a statement to BI. "From day one, the energy, innovation, and welcoming spirit of North Texas has far exceeded our expectations."


Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE)​


"In 2020, Hewlett Packard Enterprise announced it was leaving California, another COVID-19 era departure.

"Houston is also an attractive market for us to recruit and retain talent, and a great place to do business," CEO Antonio Neri said in a statement announcing the move.

Neri praised HPE's new home in Spring, Texas (a Houston suburb), but stressed that the company was not leaving Silicon Valley entirely.

"Our San Jose campus will remain a hub for technological talent and innovation," he said."



Palantir​


"Software giant Palantir left Silicon Valley in 2020. Before the tech company moved, CEO Alex Karp said he had concerns about California.

"I'm pretty happy outside the monoculture in New Hampshire," Karp told Axios in May 2020 when asked if he would move back to California as the COVID-19 pandemic was receding.

Karp said at the time that Palantir was narrowing down its list of future homes, which potentially included Colorado.

Palantir has been in Denver since August 2020."



SpaceX​


"Elon Musk promised to move SpaceX to Texas in 2024, part of a series of announcements that positioned his companies away from California.

In announcing SpaceX's relocation, Musk singled out a California law that forbids schools from requiring staff to inform parents of a student's gender identity.

"This is the final straw," Musk wrote on X in July 2024. "Because of this law and the many others that preceded it, attacking both families and companies, SpaceX will now move its HQ from Hawthorne, California, to Starbase, Texas."



Neutrogena​


"Kenvue, Johnson & Johnson's spun-off healthcare division, uprooted Neutrogena from California in 2024 as part of a corporate consolidation.

Roughly 100 employees were affected by Kenvue's decision to shut down Neutrogena's Los Angeles headquarters, SFGate reported. The well-known cosmetics company had been in California since it was founded in 1930 as a supplier to the stars.

Kenvue said it was relocating Neutrogena's operations to its then-planned global headquarters in Summit, New Jersey. In March 2025, the company held its grand opening of its new HQ."



Playboy​


"Hugh Hefner's bachelor pad is no more. And neither will be Playboy's home in California.

In August, the iconic men's lifestyle brand announced that it was moving to Miami. While Hefner's famous Playboy Mansion was in Los Angeles, the company was headquartered in Chicago from the magazine's inception in 1953 to 2012. Hefner, who died in 2017, wanted to be closer to Playboy's operations.

"Miami Beach is among the most dynamic and culturally influential cities in the country, making it the ideal home for Playboy's next chapter," CEO Ben Kohn said in a statement.

In an interview with Fox News, Kohn said it was too difficult to keep doing business in California.

"Given Florida and Miami's pro-business stance, leaving California, which is anti-business and a very difficult place to do business as an employer, we're excited to be relocating to Miami Beach," Kohn told the outlet. "And the city of Miami Beach has been phenomenal and helpful in the move."



Realtor.com​


"Relator.com said it was moving its Bay Area headquarters to Austin.

"Austin and Texas offer a strong and growing talent pool, a powerhouse economy with unparalleled housing growth, affordability of living only matched by its aspirational lifestyle, expansive tech and academic communities, and a dynamic and vibrant city at the heart of the thriving state of Texas. There is no better place for us to call home," CEO Damian Eales said in a statement.

News Corp. CEO Robert Thompson said the media giant was "proud" of the online real estate company's home. The conglomerate, which also owns Fox News and The Wall Street Journal, operates Relator.com through a subsidiary, Move, Inc.

"We are proud to be housed in a state which understands the crucial role played by business in providing opportunities for personal growth, professional success, and community achievement," Thompson said in a statement."



AECOM​


"Global consultancy firm AECOM left Los Angeles in 2021, saying that Texas offered more benefits.

"Dallas has emerged as a US hub for corporate headquarters and a compelling corporate talent magnet, particularly among our peers and public companies in the engineering and consulting sectors," a company spokesperson told The LA Times."



FICO​


"Financial data analytics firm FICO, officially known as the Fair Isaac Corporation, quietly moved to Bozeman, Montana, sometime in 2021.

The company, best known for its FICO score, previously moved its corporate headquarters from Minneapolis to San Jose in 2013.

It's not entirely clear why FICO left California."


Even with do much evidence to the contrary libs in california continue to pat themselves on the back and stubbornly cling to their failed policies
 
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