California is very beautiful and looks fun, but the modern context seems less than its historical appeal (homelessness, fent zombies, shit covered streets). Are there places that offer the full Californian experience without all of that or is it all baby and bath water.
California history is only good as a pop culture thing, purely in the modern era. Prior to that, when the spics and their missions littered the place it was genocidal and if you learn anything about their history those were effectively concentration camps. It’s been very heavily whitewashed by christcuck politicians in the 80s and 90s
>>2875746>Are there places that offer the full Californian experience without all of thatCalifornia is a paradise if you aren't a retarded loser sperg. It allows you to live your interests if you are smart and motivated enough to understand the game there.>(homelessness, fent zombies, shit covered streets)if you are a depressed loser, you wont get anywhere. You'll just keep seeing the bad instead of the good cool parts of the state.
California is 40 percent larger than Italy. Almost half of the state is a park. If you go down the list of the most violent places in California nearly all of them are centered around LA, San Bernardino and Oakland. But it's mostly LA. And nearly all of the violent crime in the state is committed by Hispanics and Blacks. With that said, there are a ton of awesome spots in California. The National Parks are amazing. Yosemite, Kings Canyon and Sequoia are 3 of the best parks in America. Yosemite is easily my favorite national park. For road trips, the drive up route 1 from Moro Bay to Carmel is the best drive in America. Orange County has some of the best beaches in the US for surfing. Ever beach from Newport Beach to Oceanside is great. Lake Tahoe has some of the best skiing in the US. They get a ton of snow and they have the best weather. The resorts are huge and there are a few cheaper places like Sierra, Donner, Soda Springs and Diamond Peak. Sugar Bowl still has tickets for less than $90 too. Personally, I'm not a big fan of Disney. I live 20 minutes away and I go maybe once every 4 years. But I do really like Knotts Berry Farm and Six Flags. Knott Scary Farm at Halloween is one of the best Halloween attractions I've ever done in the US. Six Flags has great rollercoasters if you're into that. My best advice for visiting California is this, go to the beaches in Orange County. Visit Yosemite. Go in September after the crowds are gone. Do some Halloween attractions in the theme parks. Spend one afternoon, at the most, in LA. That's all you need. Don't come to California and not rent a car.