News from the South - Florida News Feed
Quarreling Florida Republicans seek compromise on TRUMP Act | Florida
SUMMARY: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis expressed optimism about reaching a compromise on the recently passed immigration bill, known as the TRUMP Act. During a budget proposal announcement, he indicated he had productive discussions with legislative leaders and aimed to unite on immigration strategies, despite previously threatening a veto. DeSantis emphasized the importance of aligning with conservative values and listening to voters’ concerns regarding immigration. He acknowledged the Legislature’s successes over six years and reiterated the need to address the immigration issue in a special session, although lawmakers delayed action on certain topics until their regular session begins on March 4.
The post Quarreling Florida Republicans seek compromise on TRUMP Act | Florida appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Chris Hayes’ ‘Sirens’ Call’ is a thorough look at the fight for attention in modern age
SUMMARY: In “The Sirens’ Call: How Attention Became the World’s Most Endangered Resource,” MSNBC host Chris Hayes explores the history of attention as a commodity in the digital age. He examines how social media, websites, and news outlets vie for limited attention, leading to a chaotic public discourse characterized by personal attacks and superficial interactions. Hayes discusses the societal impacts of this “attention age” and contextualizes it within current debates surrounding platforms like TikTok and the influence of tech figures. While his proposed solutions for managing this attention crisis feel incomplete, they offer a glimmer of hope for change.
The post Chris Hayes’ ‘Sirens’ Call’ is a thorough look at the fight for attention in modern age appeared first on www.news4jax.com
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Tallahassee’s going Looney Tunes over immigration • Florida Phoenix
Tallahassee’s going Looney Tunes over immigration
by Diane Roberts, Florida Phoenix
February 3, 2025
Ron DeSantis is spittle-spouting, white boot-stamping, holding-his breath-till-he’s-blue, screaming-till-he’s-sick mad.
He’s toddler mad, Elmer Fudd mad: like, vewy, vewy angwy.
The Florida Legislature has defied him; dissed him; insulted him.
They showed up for the special session he demanded, gaveled in, gaveled out, and declared their own special session.
Then they trashed his hateful immigration bill and passed their own, infinitesimally less hateful, immigration bill.
The slap-fight is on, y’all.
DeSantis called the Legislature’s bill “toothless,” “grotesque,” and “weak, weak, weak.”
The Legislature, belatedly remembering they’re a co-equal branch of government, channeled their inner Bugs Bunny, and proclaimed, “Of course, you realize this means war!”
House Speaker Daniel Perez and Senate President Ben Albritton called DeSantis’ rant a “blatant lie and accused him of bullying.
Plus, he wouldn’t return their phone calls.
The governor’s bill would have made it a state crime for the undocumented to cross the sacred border of Florida, even though some will have legally sought asylum and most are not, by any stretch of the imagination, criminals.
The bill would have forced Western Union, MoneyGram, and the like to police the citizenship of anyone trying to send money abroad.
If some hapless cop failed to be sufficiently “tough” on alleged “illegals,” DeSantis would have that cop arrested.
See, DeSantis is the hero of his bill, the sheriff valiantly saving White America from the Invading Horde — including the guy mowing your lawn.
So what if that guy ends up stateless, separated from his family, or back in a country where he’s likely to be killed?
It’s not like he’s an American.
Trumpier than thou
DeSantis insists he’s the one to double and triple down on the Gestapo-adjacent policies hourly spewing out of the Oval Office: He’s the Trumpiest! He wakes up every morning feeling the Trumpiest!
But the Florida Legislature, knowing the Naranja Suprema de Mar-a-Lago responds best to shameless flattery, called Daddy to ask what he wanted in the bill and named it the “Tackling and Reforming Unlawful Migration Policy Act:” TRUMP.
Sycophancy is not the same as cleverness.
But never fear: It’s not like the Legislature has suddenly discovered empathy. Their bill is almost as inhumane as DeSantis’.
It strips out the remittance part and the cop-arresting part, but takes away in-state tuition for Dreamers–you don’t want to educate young people who, through no fault of their own, were brought to the US as small children.
Let them mow lawns and pick tomatoes and put up dry wall!
Oh, wait: We’re getting rid of the people who do those jobs.
Sen. Randy Fine claims it will “save” the state $45 million.
It will not. The state does not pay these students’ tuition. They pay it, just like every other Florida student.
Fine doesn’t care: His specialty is performative hatred and blue-ribbon Trump toadying, qualities which are about to get him elected to the U.S. Congress from the 6th District.
On April Fools’ Day, no less.
Egg Farmer
The main difference between the bills is that the lawmakers’ doesn’t make the governor Emperor of Immigration, as he desires.
Instead, it puts in charge one Wilton Earl Simpson, Commissioner of Agriculture.
This is a calculated slap upside the gubernatorial head.
Snarling like an enraged mole rat, DeSantis posted on the Elon Musk Cartoon Channel (aka X), “Wilton Simpson has voted to give drivers licenses and in-state tuition to illegals. He even refused to oppose allowing illegals to practice law in Florida. Do we want the fox guarding the henhouse?”
Wilton Simpson is a chicken farmer.
Simpson spat back: “I’m not the one who opposed and ran against President Trump.”
Simpson added, “DeSantis’ routine attacks on farmers don’t sit well here in Florida — and apparently not with folks across the country either.”
Mee-freaking-ow.
Torch songs
Democratic lawmakers allowed themselves a rare moment of schadenfreude mixed with music.
During a meeting in the Capitol, House Minority Leader Fentrice Driskell played Goyte’s “Somebody That I Used to Know,” calling it a great break-up song.
It goes: “Now and then I think of all the times you screwed me over/But had me believing it was always something that I’d done.”
Florida Republicans are not famous for brain power, but it looks like they realize Ron DeSantis is increasingly impotent — irrelevant, even.
Donald Trump doesn’t like him.
Come 2026, he’s out of a job.
Lawmakers don’t need to suck up to him any more.
Maybe he’ll run for U.S. Senate against former Florida A.G. Ashley Moody, the woman he appointed to fill the seat of now Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Maybe he’ll run for president in 2028, although the nation took a good look at him in 2024, and the nation said, “Oh, HELL no!”
Whatever his future, these days DeSantis is becoming shrill, declaring he’ll veto the Legislature’s bill, flying around the state (at taxpayer expense, naturally), telling Floridians to get up in their lawmakers’ faces and demand complete capitulation: “You have your marching orders.”
Any politician who dares disobey him will face a primary opponent more to the governor’s liking, bankrolled by DeSantis’ Florida Freedom Fund.
And more! He just hasn’t decided yet what other terrifying vengeance he will wreak.
DeSantis is Yosemite Sam without the rustic charm — same absurd fantasies about ridding himself of pesky varmints impeding his bid to get back into Donald Trump’s good graces, same inability to figure out how: “Don’t rush me, I’m-a-thinkin’! And my head hurts.”
Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Florida Phoenix maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com.
News from the South - Florida News Feed
Lawsuit alleges first deaths from disastrous 2023 train derailment in Ohio
SUMMARY: A new lawsuit has been filed alleging wrongful deaths due to the 2023 East Palestine train derailment, marking the first time fatalities have been connected to the incident. The suit includes claims against Norfolk Southern railroad, citing poor cleanup efforts and lack of health warnings from the EPA and CDC. Residents report lingering health issues and demand accountability. Alongside this, other recent lawsuits emphasize inadequate compensation from a $600 million class action settlement. The derailment released hazardous materials, leading to severe community impact and ongoing health concerns, with some hospitals attributing pet deaths to toxic exposure.
The post Lawsuit alleges first deaths from disastrous 2023 train derailment in Ohio appeared first on www.clickorlando.com
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