QUOTE (Daddy's Little Ninja @ Jun 11 2010, 05:14 AM)

From the CFS SB it seemed to be the land of extremes. Ultra poor barrens used for prodecut testing by corps and ultra wealthy stars in walled estates and little to choose between them.
Yeah, that's uhm not really any different from how it is right now -- it's not a parody of something, that's real life. As far as corporations go, you have the giant Target/Best Buy store with the huge glass thing on the roof and the giant rotating Target symbol above the modern art front entrance like something from Las Vegas (but with less lights) just down the street from the Jim Henson company. But if you walk half a block to the alley behind them, there are homeless people living there. A few weeks ago when I was there, there was a homeless person camped out in front of the big McDonalds there. All of LA, but especially the West (towards West Hollywood) and the East (getting towards Montebello) is a huge city of contrasts. It's really amazing.
Traveling a couple hours East, you get to San Bernardino. Just 30 minutes up into the mountains above San Bernardino, you have Lake Arrowhead, where a lot of ordinary people live (like all parts of CA it has seriously poor people up here too), but you also have multimillion dollar mansions (like 40-50 million dollars asking price for the small ones) owned by movie stars and other crazy rich people.
QUOTE
According to statistics published by Morgan Quitno, San Bernardino was the 16th most dangerous US city in 2003, 18th in 2004 and 24th in 2005. San Bernardino's murder rate was 29 per 100,000 in 2005, the 13th highest murder rate in the country and the third highest in the state of California after Compton and Richmond. Police efforts have significantly reduced crime in 2008 and a major drop collectively since 1993 when the city's murder rate placed ninth in the nation. Thirty two killings occurred in 2009, a number identical to 2008 and the lowest murder rate in San Bernardino since 2002, but only a third of cases led to arrests.
There's a good sized homeless shelter in San Bernardino too as well as a sizeable homeless population that, like LA, pretty much blends in.
Southern CA has its seriously poor people and its seriously rich people, it really is a land of extremes. You can find middle ground wherever you go, though, there's always gradations.
There are probably awakened and paranormal critters wandering through all the woods down here. Despite the picture of LA as a gleaming city of metal, there's a lot of undeveloped forested area around it (as well as developed forested areas), then the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range starts roughly level (horizontally) with LA, right by San Bernardino. Seriously, whatever you want, skiiing, surfing, it's within a 3 hour drive down here, a small microcosm of the entire world.