Well those stats are much better than simply pointing to surplus and calling it "good". One factor of hundreds being (seemingly) positive doesn't mean much in the overall picture.
Let's take it easy with the insults too. It wasn't a "rando blog source". The guy writes for California quite a lot and speaks in Cali quite a lot. There's credibility there.
If one of the dude's stats are wrong, point it out, but don't be a dick about it.
All told, more than a third (35.2%) of state residents were poor or near poor in 2018.
Right, 35% in 2018. I can't find what it was in 2020 ( I didn't go all out looking for it, but I didn't see it anywhere) but 2020 is when the guy wrote that article, and it's possible it went up 2-3%, making his "nearly 40% claim more reasonable. I wouldn't say he muffed it, or that his article lacks credibility considering that.
More stats from 2020 have Cali doing well in some places and not so-well in others.
Another link has mixed indications as well.
Some major Liberal issues, like Affordable housing and Income inequality ratio, show California to be well behind the curve.
California is 49 in affordability, no surprise, but #10 in economy and #22 in health.
Texas isn't so much better at 36 in affordability (and getting less affordable all the time), #15 in economy, and a lowly #41 in Health & Education. You know, services that taxes pay for.
Right, when Cali is 49 on an issue, it's no surprise, shrug it off, no biggie. But when Texas is 13 States better, that's "nearly the same". (You scoffed when the guy in the article claimed 35% was "nearly 40%" and said he muffed it....but 36 out of 50 is "nearly the same" as 49 out of 50....right?) Then 41, which is still better than 49, in Health and Education is "lowly". C'mon man, you're working too hard to convince yourself.
We can go back and forth all day and point to factors for reasons why one state is "doing better" than any other. Cali has some of the richest people, and richest counties, in the country, and also the most populous. *Of course* the state will bring in higher revenue. That has little to do with liberal or conservative policies, that's just math.
So then you can point to education, then I'll point to poverty levels, then you'll point to Gender Wage gap, then I'll point to unemployment....
Seems preemptive and a bit silly to be cheering.