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ATTEMPTED RUSSIAN HACKING OF ELECTIONS: MICHAEL ERTEL DOTH PROTEST TOO MUCH

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From the website of Seminole County Supervisor of Elections MICHAEL ERTEL, nominated by Governor-elect RONALD DION DeSANTIS to be Florida's Secretary of State, with suzerainty over elections and corporate regulation:


No, Russians didn't hack Florida voting
August, 2018 update: We have received no evidence of any infiltration into the Seminole County system.

In response to reports of attempted Russian "hacking" into Florida voter data, Supervisor of Elections Michael Ertel has posted the information below, as well as penned a column for The Orlando Sentinel (click for column).

Debunk the Bunk (long, but important epilogue): You will be reading news reports today of a purported attempt to access Florida voter registration records by the Russian military. A couple of core facts about this story:

1) Florida voter registrations are public records. Anyone can get them by simply asking their local elections office.

2) The data and physical security measures our office employs for our technology infrastructure are top-notch. We have dug a cyber moat around the data so we can ensure access of sensitive information and systems by only those granted access.

3) We were aware of the cited phishing email the very moment it happened and took measures to ensure we were not impacted.

4) Like everyone who uses email, we are subject to dozens of phishing email scams daily -- we're sophisticated enough to catch them.

5) Important: Even if the bad guys would have accessed our local registration files (which they didn't), those files are in no way connected to vote counting.

6) I've said it hundreds of times, "you can't hack paper." Seminole County votes on trusted paper ballots.

7) In summation: Our election was not hacked by Russians. This whole exercise, however, does highlight two vital tenets of our republic: Elections are best run in our decentralized manner, allowing a greater obstacle for shenanigans; and competent, savvy, independent and principled elections administrators are looking out for you.

8) Like I always close... if anyone is trying to scare you into thinking your legitimate vote won't (or didn't) count, contact your local elections administrator.

Gov.-elect DeSantis taps Seminole County SOE for Secretary of State (Tampa Bay Times)

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I recall that Seminole County Supervisor of Elections MICHAEL ERTEL was cruelly unfair with our 2008 Democratic Congressional candidate, economist Faye Armitage, falsely claiming she was two minutes late (untrue) with her last batch of petitions, and refusing to transmit some of her indisputably timely-filed petitions to other counties in what was then the Seventh Congressional District for her race against then-Rep. John Luigi Mica.

Nasty man, this MICHAEL ERTEL.

As they say in East Tennessee, "I wouldn't trust MIKE ERTEL in an outhouse with a muzzle on."

Looks like he's just the man for Governor-elect RONALD DION DeSANTIS to try to steal the 2000 election.  Ambitious arachnid apparatchik deserves investigative reporting scrutiny.  Now.

The position of Florida Secretary of State was once elected, but voters amended the Constitution in 1998 to make it appointed by the Governor.


From Tampa Bay Times:


DeSantis taps Seminole County SOE for Secretary of State

Ertel will replace Secretary of State Ken Detzner, who was appointed to the role first by Gov. Jeb Bush in 2003 and then again by Gov. Rick Scott in 2012. 
Governor-elect Ron DeSantis' transition team announced the appointment of Seminole County Supervisor of Elections, Michael Ertel, as Secretary of State Friday. Photo courtesy Seminole County 
Governor-elect Ron DeSantis' transition team announced the appointment of Seminole County Supervisor of Elections, Michael Ertel, as Secretary of State Friday.
"As Supervisor of Elections in Seminole County — where he has been elected by the voters four times — Mike has proven that he is vastly qualified to lead the state's elections efforts as Secretary of State, and will strive to ensure that Florida voters are confident that elections continue to be fair and accurate," DeSantis wrote in a statement.
Ertel, who uses inspirational quotes from Abraham Lincoln and Franklin D. Roosevelt in his email signature, was appointed to his current role by former Gov. Jeb Bush in 2005. He was re-elected as the Seminole County SOE in 2006, 2008, 2012 and 2016.
His name will come to the foreground in 2019, as the 2018 midterm recounts and calls to investigate claims of voter fraud will likely spur election-related discussion and legislation this legislative session.
Before Ertel became an elections supervisor, he served as his home county's first public information officer and worked for the state's tourism marketing agency, Visit Florida.
He will replace Secretary of State Ken Detzner, who was appointed to the role first by Bush in 2003 and then again by Gov. Rick Scott in 2012.





Seminole County elections chief in running to be next Secretary of State

Michael Ertel, the long-time elections supervisor in the Orlando suburb, is a veteran, like Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis. 

Michael Ertel has been Seminole County's supervisor of elections since 2005 {via Twitter]
The long-time supervisor of elections in suburban Orlando's Seminole County, Michael Ertel, is a leading candidate to be Florida's next secretary of state.
Ertel, 49, is a Republican who was appointed supervisor by former Gov. Jeb Bush in 2005 when the previous elections chief resigned. Ertel previously applied for secretary of state when the post became vacant in 2012 after Kurt Browning resigned.
Like Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis, who will make the appointment, Ertel is a veteran who served in the Army. Two phone messages left with Ertel on Monday by the Times/Herald were not returned.
"I think it's no secret that he's interested," Pasco County Supervisor of Elections Brian Corley said of Ertel.
Ertel has a web site that is headlined "Rebuilding trust in Florida's elections."
His interest in the statewide post comes as the politics in Seminole appear to be shifting from red to blue.
Once a deep-red county, it's increasingly competitive. Democrat Andrew Gillum outperformed DeSantis in the governor's race, and a Republican House member, Bob Cortes, lost his seat to a Democrat last month.
Ertel is a personable and media-savvy elections administrator who has a very active social media presence on Facebook and Twitter.
Ertel drew attention in the 2016 election cycle with his online efforts to "Debunk the Bunk" and discredit false rumors of election chicanery.
Many election supervisors would feel reassured, having one of their own in charge of statewide election administration. Tensions surfaced on occasion during Gov. Rick Scott's tenure between supervisors and Secretary of State Ken Detzner.
DeSantis must soon pick up the pace of making many high-level agency appointees. He'll take office as Florida's 46th governor five weeks from today.

Dave Barry's 2018 Year in Review (WaPo)

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Florida's best satirist strikes again.  Happy New Year!







Dave Barry’s Year in Review 2018

You thought 2016 and 2017 were bad? Let’s look back at this past year.
Story by 

Illustrated by Ryan McAmis

We can summarize 2018 in two words:
It boofed.
We’re not 100 percent sure what “boofing” is, despite the fact that this very issue was discussed in a hearing of the United States Senate Judiciary Committee. All we know for certain about boofing is that it is distasteful and stupid.
As was 2018.
In spades.
What made this year so awful? We could list many factors, including natural disastersman-made atrocities, the utter depravity of our national political discourse and the loss of Aretha Franklin. Instead we’ll cite one event that, while minor, epitomizes 2018: the debut of “Dr. Pimple Popper.” This is a cable TV reality show featuring high-definition slo-mo close-up videos of a California dermatologist performing seriously disgusting procedures on individuals with zits the size of mature cantaloupes. You might ask, “Who on Earth would voluntarily watch that?” The answer, in 2018, was: MILLIONS OF PEOPLE. That is the state of our culture. We can only imagine what new reality shows lie ahead. We would not rule out “Dr. Butt Wiper” or “People Blow Their Noses Directly Onto the Camera Lens.”

Is there anything good we can say about 2018? Only this: It got us out of 2017. But even that didn’t work out as we hoped.
As you recall, we, as a nation, spent all of 2017 obsessing over 2016: the election, the Russians, the emails, the Mueller probe, the Russians, the Russians, the Russians. … That was all we heard about, day after soul-crushing day, for the entire year.
So when 2018 finally dawned, we were desperately hoping for change. It was a new year, a chance for the nation to break out of the endless, pointless barrage of charges and countercharges, to move past the vicious, hate-filled hyperpartisan spew of name-calling and petty point-scoring, to end the 24/7 cycle of media hysteria, to look forward and begin to tackle the many critical issues facing the nation, the most important of which turned out to be …
… the 2016 election.
Yes. We could not escape it. We were like Bill Murray in “Groundhog Day,” except that when our clock-radio went off, instead of Sonny and Cher singing “I Got You Babe,” we awoke to still MORE talk of Russians and emails; MORE childish semiliterate presidential tweets about FAKE NEWS and Crooked Hillary; MORE freakouts by cable TV panelists predicting that — forget about the previous 300 times they made the same prediction — THIS time impeachment was IMMINENT, PEOPLE. IMMINENT!!
Meet the new year: same as the old year.
So at some point during 2018, normal, non-Beltway-dwelling Americans simply stopped paying attention to current events. Every now and then we’d tune in to a cable TV news show to see what kinds of issues our nation’s elite political/media class was grappling with, and we’d see a headline like “PORN STAR STORMY DANIELS: TRUMP DIDN’T USE A CONDOM.”
That was when “Dr. Pimple Popper” started to look pretty good.
So we’re very glad that 2018 is finally over. Once again we’re on the cusp of a new year, another chance for change. And once again, we find ourselves feeling stirrings of hope — hope that the coming year really will be better. Why do we feel this way? Why, despite all our past disappointments, do we believe things really can improve? Because we are morons, apparently.
So let’s not get too excited about 2019. Our emotional state, going forward, should be hopelessness leavened with despair, as we can see when we look back at the grotesque boof-a-palooza that was 2018, starting with …

JANUARY

… which sees world tensions rise when North Korean leader Kim Jong Un states that he has a nuclear missile launch button on his desk. This leaves U.S. Commander in Chief Donald Trump with no viable military option but to fire up his Random Capitalizer App and tweet “I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his,” thereby leaving no doubt as to which leader is more secure regarding the size of his button. In an apparent effort to reassure everyone on his mental state, the president also issues a tweet in which he describes himself as “genius….and a very stable genius at that!” Which is EXACTLY HOW VERY STABLE GENIUSES TALK, OKAY??
The intellectual level of the national discourse soars even higher when it is reported that, during an Oval Office meeting on immigration reform, the president referred to some poorer nations as “s—holes.” This upsets many people, especially the frowny panelpersons of CNN, who find the word “s—hole” so deeply offensive that they repeat it roughly 15 times per hour for a solid week. Washington is consumed by a heated debate over what, exactly, the president said; the tone and substance of this debate are reflected in this actual sentence from a Washington Post story: “Three White House officials said [Sen. David] Perdue and [Sen. Tom] Cotton told the White House that they heard ‘s—house’ rather than ‘s—hole,’ allowing them to deny the president’s comments on television over the weekend.” (This is known in legal circles as the “s—house defense.”)
Meanwhile the Wall Street Journal reports that shortly before the 2016 presidential election, Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, arranged a $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels so she would keep quiet about an alleged act of executive outreach with Trump in 2006. Cohen responds that “President Trump once again vehemently denies any such occurrence, as has Ms. Daniels.” So that settles THAT.
A congressional squabble shuts down the federal government for three days, but what with the intense media focus on the s—hole and porn star issues, hardly anybody notices.
In non-s—hole news, the residents of Hawaii experience an exciting Saturday morning when they receive the following message on their phones from the state’s Emergency Management Agency: “BALLISTIC MISSILE THREAT INBOUND TO HAWAII. SEEK IMMEDIATE SHELTER. THIS IS NOT A DRILL.” Hawaii’s governor, David Ige, is quickly informed that it’s a false alarm, but 17 extremely tense minutes go by before he gets the word out on social media. Asked later about the delay, he says — we are not making this quote up — “I have to confess that I don’t know my Twitter account logons and the passwords.” This statement arouses powerful feelings of longing among high-level Trump advisers.
The fiasco leads to the resignation of the head of the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency, who immediately accepts a position as director of pet transportation for United Airlines.
In youth fads, the American Association of Poison Control Centers continues to receive reports of young people suffering ill effects from eating Tide detergent pods. Asked to explain why young people would persist in eating something that tastes terrible and makes them sick, an AAPCC spokesperson says, “As far as we can determine, it’s because they’re stupid.”
Speaking of stupid, in …

FEBRUARY

… with yet another government shutdown looming, Congress, whose irresponsible spending practices have put the nation on the road to fiscal disaster, faces a choice. It can either:
1. Continue to spend huge amounts of money that we don’t have, or
2. Not.
After much late-night drama, Congress agrees on a compromise deal under which it will continue to spend huge amounts of money that we don’t have. This display of leadership solves the budget problem permanently until March, when Congress will once again tackle the complex problem of government spending.
But the big story in Washington is the hotly debated release by congressional Republicans of the so-called “Nunes memo,” which, depending on which cable news network you listen to, either does or does not prove that the FBI, in its investigation of possible Russian influence on the 2016 election, abused the FISA process when it used the so-called “Steele dossier” — which was prepared by Fusion GPS, a research firm originally hired by the Washington Free Beacon, a conservative news outlet, to investigate Trump, but dropped by that organization when Trump was nominated, then hired by an attorney for the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee, after which Fusion hired former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele as an investigator — to obtain a warrant to wiretap Carter Page, a foreign policy adviser in the Trump campaign who allegedly … Hey, wake up! This is important! Also there’s a Democratic counter-memo!

On the Stormy Daniels front, Michael Cohen acknowledges that he did, in fact, pay $130,000 to the porn actress, but he used his own moneyand the Trump campaign had nothing to do with it and it was all totally legit. So that settles THAT.
In sports, the 2018 Winter Olympics get underway in PyeongChang, South Korea, with the historic Opening Ceremonies highlighted by the release of 25 doves, which are immediately shot down and consumed by the North Korean men’s biathlon team.
In domestic sports, the Eagles defeat the Patriots to win their first Super Bowl, and huge crowds of joyous Philadelphia fans celebrate by destroying downtown Boston.
No, that would actually make sense. In fact the Philadelphia fans spend the night destroying their own city, then head home for a hearty breakfast of Tide Pods.
Speaking of classy behavior, in …

MARCH

… Secretary of State Rex Tillerson learns that President Trump has fired him when, during an official visit to Africa, he is ejected from his State Department plane at 35,000 feet.
No, seriously, Tillerson learns of his firing via a presidential tweet, which says: “Mike Pompeo, Director of the CIA, will become our new Secretary of State. He will do a fantastic job! Thank you to Rex Tillerson for his service!”
So midair ejection would actually have been more dignified.
Speaking of air travel: United Airlines, which received some unfortunate publicity in 2017 when it “reaccommodated” a 69-year-old man by dragging him, bleeding and screaming, off his flight, has an eventful week involving traveling dogs (these events actually happened):
• On Monday, a United attendant on a Houston-to-New York flight orders a passenger to stow a bag containing a French bulldog puppy, Kokito, in the overhead bin. This does not turn out well for Kokito.
• On Tuesday, a German shepherd named Irgo, whom United was supposed to fly to Kansas City, instead gets flown to … Japan! Meanwhile a Great Dane that United was supposed to fly to Japan winds up in Kansas City. It is probably a good thing that both of these breeds are too large for the overhead bin.
• On Thursday, a United flight from Newark to St. Louis is diverted when United realizes that a dog that was loaded onto the plane was supposed to go to Akron.
Responding to public outrage over these incidents, United Airlines issues an apology, but sends it to the wrong email address.
Speaking of incompetence: Congress averts yet another government shutdown by passing, with President Trump signing, a bill under which the government will — prepare to be shocked — spend a truly insane amount of money that it does not have. With the spending problem addressed, Washington then turns to more pressing matters, specifically the Stormy Daniels crisis, which escalates when Daniels files a lawsuit to invalidate her nondisclosure agreement on the grounds that Trump didn’t sign it. This issue dominates the news cycle, especially on CNN, which puts Daniels’s extremely outgoing lawyer, Michael Avenatti, on Full S—hole Rotation, which means he is featured on every CNN news program and also handles weather and sports updates.
Abroad, the Russian news agency Tass reports that Vladimir Putin, who campaigned on the theme “A Vote for Putin Is a Vote for Not Dying Under Mysterious Circumstances,” has been declared the winner of the 2018 Russian presidential election, as well as, in the interest of efficiency, the 2024 and 2030 elections.
In entertainment news, Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway, seeking to atone for the 2017 envelope fiasco, return to the Academy Awards stage and triumphantly announce that the winner of the Oscar for best picture is “Gone With the Wind.” Fortunately by then nobody is watching.
The fiascos continue in …

APRIL

… when the abandoned Chinese space station Tiangong-1, which has been anxiously watched by scientists as its orbit decayed, plunges back to Earth and, in a worst-case outcome, fails to land on attorney Michael Avenatti, thus enabling him to continue appearing on CNN more often than the Geico gecko.
Meanwhile President Trump, faced with — among other problems — a continuing immigration crisis, increased Russian aggression in Syria and a looming trade war with China, launches a barrage of assault tweets at what is clearly the biggest threat to the nation: Amazon.com. Trump is forced to back down when the retail giant threatens to suspend the White House’s Amazon Prime membership and cancel delivery of a large order placed by the Defense Department, including six nuclear submarines, two aircraft carriers and a missile defense system with a five-star average rating from other nations. (Disclosure: Amazon CEO Jeffrey P. Bezos owns The Washington Post.)
In sports, Patrick Reed wins the Masters Tournament, prompting jubilant Eagles fans to celebrate by destroying what little is left of Philadelphia.
Responding to alleged Russian infiltration of Facebook and massive breaches of user data, the Senate Committee of Aging Senators Who Cannot Operate Their Own Cellphones Without the Assistance of Minions holds a hearing intended to answer such probing questions as:
• What IS Facebook, anyway?
• Where does it go when you turn off the computer?
• Is there a print version?
• Is Facebook the one with the video of a cat riding a dog?
• How the heck do you get a cat to do that, anyway?
Patiently attempting to answer these questions is Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who wears a suit and tie and does a solid job of impersonating a regular human, except for not blinking and at one point having a tentacle emerge briefly from his left ear.
Abroad, the big news is a historic summit between South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. In what observers see as a major breakthrough, Kim agrees to sign a letter of agreement explicitly acknowledging, for the first time, that he has exactly the same hairstyle as Bert, of Bert and Ernie.
In sports, Patrick Reed wins the Masters Tournament, prompting jubilant Eagles fans to celebrate by destroying what little is left of Philadelphia.
Speaking of celebrations, in …

MAY

… the biggest story by far is the wedding of American ex-actress Meghan Markle to Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, who is in the direct line of succession to the British throne behind Prince Louis of Cambridge, who is behind Princess Charlotte of Cambridge, who is behind Prince George of Cambridge, who is behind Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, who is behind Charles, Prince of Wales, who is 70, but any year now could get his shot at becoming the anachronistic ceremonial figurehead of one of the world’s most second-rate powers. With the stakes so high, the media giddiness level soars to Defcon 1; the wedding cake alone gets more media coverage than Africa and global climate change combined.
In other international developments, hopes for a summit meeting between Kim Jong Un and President Trump soar when North Korea releases three American prisoners, only to be dashed when North Korea refuses to accept, in exchange, Stormy Daniels. Later in the month hopes soar again when North Korea announces that, as a good-faith gesture, it has destroyed its Punggye-ri nuclear test facility, only to be dashed again when satellite imagery of the explosion reveals that what the rogue nation actually blew up was a 2006 Hyundai Sonata with what a U.S. intelligence source describes as “really bald tires.”
Meanwhile Trump announces that the United States will withdraw from the 2015 multination nuclear deal with Iran on the grounds that (1) it is deeply flawed and (2) he does not own any golf courses there.
In entertainment news, Roseanne Barr sends out a tasteless, idiotic tweet and immediately has her network show canceled, thereby illustrating a key difference between being a sitcom star and being president of the United States.
In sports, the wettest Kentucky Derby in history is won by the favorite horse, Justify, after the rest of the field is eaten by sharks.
Speaking of eating, in …

JUNE

… President Trump flies to Quebec to attend the G-7 summit. Hopes that the meeting will produce a historic agreement on global climate change, or at least a nice group photo, are dashed when, during dinner, Trump becomes embroiled in a heated policy disagreement with the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United Kingdom over the issue of ketchup.
From Canada the president flies to Singapore for the on-again, off-again, now on-again historic summit with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. This meeting is more productive, ending with the two leaders signing a letter of agreement in which North Korea promises to think seriously about denuclearizing, in exchange for the formula for pumpkin spice latte.
On the domestic front, the president is forced to reverse his administration’s policy on separating immigrant children from their parents in response to a widespread and passionate international outpouring of criticism from his wife, Melania. Trump insists, however, that he remains “as committed as ever to protecting our borders by building a purely imaginary wall.”

In other domestic news, Sen. Chuck “The Human Bandwagon” Schumer, citing studies showing that every living American adult except Mitt Romney has tried pot, introduces a bill that would decriminalize marijuana at the federal level and “create a massive bureaucracy tasked with wasting millions of dollars on things like bong-safety regulations.” The legislation would also create a trust fund under which a percentage of the federal tax revenue raised from marijuana sales would be set aside specifically to buy Cheez-Its.
Meanwhile, Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announces his decision to retire, creating an important opportunity for the nation’s political leaders to demonstrate that, although the public might have a low opinion of them as a group, it is nowhere near low enough.
In sports, the World Cup soccer tournament opens in Moscow with a beaming Vladimir Putin looking on as the host Russian team coasts to a 5-0 victory over a Saudi Arabian team whose players appear distracted by the presence directly behind their bench of what the Russians insist is a “strictly ceremonial” tank.
Speaking of ceremony, in …

JULY

… President Trump continues to have exciting foreign-policy adventures, starting with a trip to Brussels for a NATO summit, which gets off to a rocky start but settles down once the president’s advisers are able to communicate to him, via frantic hand signals, that NATO is actually our side. From there the president travels to Britain, where he has tea with the Queen and makes what he later tells the press is “a very generous offer, believe me, VERY generous” for the Crown Jewels.
Then it’s on to Finland for a summit meeting with Vladimir Putin. At a news conference afterward, the president tells reporters that Putin — and if we can’t trust Vladimir Putin, whom can we trust? — “strongly” denies interfering in the 2016 U.S. election. Trump adds that he, personally, sees no reason why Russia would interfere. This comes as a surprise to the U.S. intelligence community and pretty much everybody else with the IQ of cottage cheese or higher. After a firestorm of criticism, Trump clarifies his remarks, explaining that he actually meant to say that he sees no reason why Russia WOULDN’T interfere. Thus the pesky issue of the 2016 election is finally laid to rest.
In domestic news, the president nominates Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court. Accepting the nomination, Kavanaugh says: “If confirmed by the Senate, I pledge to give full and fair consideration to every case brought before me. Also every keg.” For their part, Senate Democrats release a statement promising to “consider Judge Kavanaugh’s qualifications in good faith and with open minds,” adding, “obviously we are lying.”
In state news, Colorado state legislators, fired up by the Chuck Schumer decriminalization bill, unanimously vote to legalize marijuana, only to be informed that marijuana has been legal in Colorado since 2012. After enjoying a hearty laugh, the legislators unanimously vote to order 300 large pizzas.
Meanwhile Seattle becomes the first major U.S. city to ban plastic straws and utensils in all restaurants. San Francisco, sensing a threat to its status as front-runner in the Progressivelympics, responds by banning food and beverages in all restaurants.
In financial news, Facebook stock drops more than $100 billion in a single day — the greatest single-day loss in stock-market history — after the company releases a quarterly report revealing that many people have trouble distinguishing between the “wow” emoji and the “sad” emoji. Despite this setback Facebook is still worth way more than General Motors and most other American companies that make actual things.
In sports, France defeats Croatia to win the World Cup. Jubilant Eagles fans, with nothing left in Philadelphia to destroy, lay waste to Delaware.
Speaking of defeats, in …

AUGUST

… a Virginia jury finds former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort guilty of tax evasion, bank fraud and having a name that can be rearranged to spell “Fart Upon Lama.” Only minutes later, Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleads guilty in New York to various charges, including arranging hush-money payments in 2016 to Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal “at the direction of a candidate for federal office” who is not named but was obviously Bernie Sanders.
No, seriously, the candidate was obviously Trump. Some of the hush money was reportedly paid by the company that owns the National Enquirer at the direction of its CEO, whose name — we swear we are not making this up — is David Pecker (which can be rearranged to spell “David Pecker”).
The Manafort-Cohen story gets massive coverage on CNN and MSNBC, with hordes of joyful panelists celebrating the now-inevitable impeachment of Trump by dancing around the studio singing “Ding Dong, the Witch Is Dead.” For its part, Fox News presents a timely investigative series on preventing salamander-transmitted diseases.
A Virginia jury finds former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort guilty of tax evasion, bank fraud and having a name that can be rearranged to spell “Fart Upon Lama.”
In a coordinated nationwide response to Trump’s repeated attacks on the press, sternly worded editorials rebuking the president are published in more than 300 newspapers, with a combined editorial-page readership estimated at nearly 14 people. For his part, CNN’s Jim Acosta courageously confronts White House press secretary Sarah Sanders over this issue, despite the very real risk that he will have to feature himself prominently in his report on this harrowing incident.
In business news, Apple becomes the first publicly traded U.S. company to be worth $1 trillion, thanks to its shrewd business model of constantly coming out with costly new products that require costly chargers that are completely different from all the costly Apple chargers you already have, and sometimes spontaneously mutate overnight in such a way as to require even newer and costlier Apple chargers.
Speaking of electricity, in …

SEPTEMBER

… Washington is atingle with a level of excitement that can only result from a clash of two high-voltage personalities: Chuck Grassley and Dianne Feinstein, the chairman and ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, both having served in the Senate since shortly before the Big Bang. The committee holds two hearings on the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, the second devoted to explosive allegations contained in a letter that was delivered back in July to Feinstein, who, what with one thing and another, failed to mention ituntil September. The nation watches, riveted, as committee members hear more than seven hours of emotional testimony by Kavanaugh and his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, at the end of which the nation has learned the following facts:
1. The senators have no idea what, if anything, actually happened.
2. Nor do they care.
3. The truth is utterly irrelevant to them.
4. They all decided long ago how they were going to vote, based entirely on political calculations.
5. Given exactly the same testimony but different political circumstances, every single senator would passionately espouse the position diametrically opposite the one he or she is passionately espousing now.
6. Brett Kavanaugh really likes beer.

In other political news, the New York Times publishes an anonymous op-ed allegedly written by a “senior administration official” who is harshly critical of President Trump. Despite intense pressure, the Times refuses to reveal the author’s identity, although linguistics experts see a possible clue in the fact that the column twice refers to Trump as “my husband.”
Meanwhile the president addresses the United Nations General Assembly, declaring that his administration “has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.” The audience reacts with laughter, which the president’s advisers assure him is how world leaders traditionally show respect. Fox News confirms this.
In sports, Tiger Woods wins the PGA Tour Championship, his first tour win since 2013. The Maryland National Guard is called out to defend Baltimore from the advancing army of jubilant Eagles fans.
Speaking of wins, in …

OCTOBER

… the Senate approves the Kavanaugh nomination by a vote of 50 to 48, with Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski voting “present” and Chuck Schumer voting “extra cheese.”
The New York Times, in a major investigative story, asserts that Donald Trump amassed much of his fortune through “dubious tax schemes,” including a $723 million deduction in 1993 for what was described in Trump’s federal tax return as “croissants.” Trump denounces the Times story as FAKE NEWS, asserting that the deduction “was actually for a range of pastries.” Fox News confirms this.
In other executive action, the president hosts Kanye West in the Oval Office, where the rapper/producer/entrepreneur engages in a freewheeling, wide-ranging exchange of views with himself, then inadvertently launches a nuclear strike against Portugal before returning to his home dimension. The president also finds time in his schedule to initiate a Twitter beef with Stormy Daniels by referring to her in a tweet as “Horseface.” Daniels responds with a tweet mocking the “Tiny” size of the president’s legacy. This exchange dominates several news cycles but, incredibly, does not prove to be the low point of the month.
Tension mounts when explosive devices are mailed to high-profile Trump critics, including Barack Obama and the Clintons. After an intensive nationwide manhunt, federal authorities arrest a man who has been living and driving around in a van plastered with images clearly broadcasting the message, “I AM A DANGEROUSLY CRAZY PERSON,” but since he was doing this in South Florida nobody noticed.
An already bad month gets exponentially worse when a gunman shouting anti-Semitic epithets opens fire in a Pittsburgh synagogue. It is an atrocity so horrific, and so shocking, that nearly three minutes pass before people start using it as a club to bludgeon those with whom they disagree politically.
In sports, the nation rejoices as, for the ninth consecutive year, some team other than the New York Yankees wins the World Series. Atlanta is evacuated when troops are unable to halt the relentless advance of jubilant Eagles fans.
Speaking of looming menaces, in …

NOVEMBER

… the nation braces for what political analysts agree will be the most important midterm elections since the dawn of time. Voters prepare for the big day by binge-watching Netflix, because regular TV has turned into a gushing sewer of political attack ads apparently created by and for dimwitted 4-year-olds.
President Trump hits the campaign trail to warn voters that if Democrats are elected there will be nobody to protect the nation from a deadly caravan of alleged Hondurans moving relentlessly toward the U.S. border at approximately the speed of a senior golf foursome. This caravan, according to the president, contains gang members, diseases, diseased gang members, Middle Easterners, spies and diseased Middle Eastern spy gang members carrying what Trump claims — and Fox News confirms — is “a 200-foot-long atomic switchblade.” U.S. troops head for the border, having been ordered there by the president, but only after he was informed by military advisers that the Rio Grande is too shallow for aircraft carriers.
For their part, the Democrats appeal to voters with a three-pronged message:
Prong One: The Democrats are the party of fairness, diversity and inclusion.
Prong Two: Anybody who disagrees with the Democrats about anything is Hitler.
Prong Three: But more racist.
The election goes smoothly, except of course in Florida, which should seriously consider outsourcing all of its government functions to a competent organization, such as Montana. As usual the most confused county in Florida is Broward — often called “the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency of counties” — which to this day is not 100 percent certain how it voted in Dewey vs. Truman.
Nationwide, however, it is clear the voters have given the Democrats control of the House while leaving the Republicans in control of the Senate, thereby guaranteeing that for the next two years Congress will accomplish nothing, which may well be what the voters intended.
The election goes smoothly, except of course in Florida, which should seriously consider outsourcing all of its government functions to a competent organization, such as Montana.
The day after the election Jeff Sessions resigns as attorney general upon learning that his office has been relocated, in what the White House describes as a “security measure,” to the men’s restroom of a Kwik Mart in Frederick, Md.
Meanwhile the ongoing saga that is “The Jim Acosta Story, Starring Jim Acosta as Jim Acosta” takes a thrilling turn when Jim gets into a dramatic struggle with a White House intern over a microphone. The Trump administration, always looking for ways to make a stupid situation even stupider, suspends Jim’s press pass and releases a videothat somebody apparently doctored to make it appear more violent by splicing in the shower scene from “Psycho.”
Speaking of violence: The president, addressing the question of whether Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman had knowledge of the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in a Saudi consulate by agents of the Saudi government, releases a statement, which he apparently typed with his own thumbs, stating, “maybe he did and maybe he didn’t!” So that settles THAT.
Abroad, intelligence satellite photographs reveal that 16 construction projects in North Korea — which the North Korean government claims are going to be Chipotle restaurants — in fact are missile bases. North Korea insists that these will be used “only for delivery orders.”
In business news, Amazon, after a much-publicized nationwide search, announces that it will locate new headquarters in Arlington, Va., and New York City, in return for tax breaks, infrastructure improvements, four seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and replacement of the Statue of Liberty with a 340-foot-tall statue of Jeffrey Bezos naked.
As Thanksgiving approaches, two turkeys — named Peas and Carrots — are summoned to the White House, where the president, in keeping with a lighthearted Washington tradition, appoints them to high-level posts in the Justice Department. Two days later he fires Peas over what insiders describe as “policy differences.” Within minutes Peas is hired as a political analyst by MSNBC.
Meanwhile the American people observe the Thanksgiving holiday by reflecting on their many blessings, then assaulting each other over consumer electronic devices that are imperceptibly better than the ones they already have. While this is happening the federal government releases a report warning that climate change will have a catastrophic impact on the nation’s future, but because of all the sweet Black Friday deals nobody notices.
The month concludes on a positive note as NASA’s $850 million InSight space-probe lander, after a six-month interplanetary journey covering 301 million miles, touches down on the surface of Mars. It was supposed to go to Venus, but NASA used navigational data provided by United Airlines.
Speaking of mistakes, in …

DECEMBER

… President Trump heads to Argentina for the Group of 20 summit, which consists of the G-7 nations plus Russia, China, India, Argentina, Australia, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, South Korea, South Africa, Indonesia, Microsoft, the Corleone family, Gryffindor and LeBron James. Trump meets with Chinese President Xi Jinping in an effort to end the escalating trade war, which is caused by China deliberately making cheap products that Americans want to buy. The two leaders reach an agreement under which Trump will hold off on imposing $200 billion in new tariffs on Chinese goods, in return for which China will purchase a new Chevy Volt, nearly doubling that vehicle’s annual worldwide sales. In response, the Dow Jones industrial average soars, only to plunge again when financial analysts learn that China declined the premium-floor-mat option.
On the ever-changing personnel front, Trump announces that his nominee to replace Jeff Sessions as attorney general is “an excellent lawyer, I forget his name at the moment, but he’s terrific, believe me.” Fox News confirms this. To replace Nikki Haley as U.N. ambassador the president chooses Heather Nauert, but only after his advisers are able to convince him that Katniss Everdeen is a fictional character. Replacing John Kelly as White House chief of staff is Wayne Newton.
Meanwhile in a devastating blow to the U.S. humor industry, Michael Avenatti announces that he will not run for president. His departure narrows the potential Democratic field to pretty much every Democratic politician ever, including Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, Bernie Sanders, Joe Biden, somebody called “Beto” and the late Hubert Humphrey, all of whom believe Trump will be vulnerable in 2020, as confidently predicted by the many expert political observers who also confidently predicted Hillary Clinton’s presidency.
The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency attempts to broadcast a text warning, but because of what an agency spokesperson says is “human error,” the message actually sent to all of the state’s residents reads HAPPY NEW YEAR.
Fueling this confidence are reliable rumors swirling around Washington that special counsel Robert Mueller is about to do some major thing that, while not specified in the rumors, will definitely mean the downfall of Trump and THIS TIME IT IS REALLY HAPPENING, PEOPLE. In anticipation of this event, CNN unveils a special panelist desk that is the length of a regulation basketball court, providing the capability to have an unprecedented 170 panelists sitting side-by-side expressing outrage simultaneously, and bringing CNN one step closer to the day when it has more panelists than actual viewers.
All this happens as congressional Democrats prepare to take control of the House of Representatives, where they plan to implement an ambitious agenda focused on the No. 1 concern of the American people, which of course is …
The 2016 elections!
Meanwhile tension continues to build along the U.S.-Mexico border as American troops, originally deployed to protect the United States from the Honduran Death Caravan of Doom, are ordered to turn around and attempt to stop the vast horde of jubilant Eagles fans surging southward from what is left of San Diego.
In a disturbing display of U.S. vulnerability to cyberattacks, Russian hackers briefly gain control of NOEL666, the supercomputer that churns out the hundreds of virtually identical Hallmark ChannelChristmas movies, and cause it to broadcast a movie titled “You Better Watch Out,” in which the male and female lead actors, instead of falling in love and getting married, become psychotic from eating tainted fruitcake and savagely murder their entire village with sharpened candy canes.

In a more positive story, NASA’s interplanetary InSight lander proves to be a technological success and an inspiration to all Americans, distracting us from our petty political squabbles and uniting us in admiration of the stunning pictures it transmits back to Earth from the Martian surface, including a remarkably clear image of what a NASA spokesperson says “appears to be a large mound of uncounted ballots from Broward County, Florida.”
The month ends on a troubling note when one of North Korea’s newly constructed Chipotle restaurants launches a ballistic missile carrying what military analysts say is a three-ton tactical beef burrito, which travels 4,600 miles before splashing into the Pacific Ocean just off the coast of Oahu, producing a tidal wave containing potentially dangerous levels of tomatillo chile salsa. The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency attempts to broadcast a text warning, but because of what an agency spokesperson says is “human error,” the message actually sent to all of the state’s residents reads HAPPY NEW YEAR.
Here’s hoping that the wish expressed by this erroneous HEMA message comes true. We would truly love for 2019 to be a happy year. Or at least a better year than 2018 was. It has to be better, right? How could it possibly be worse?
Please, put down the Tide Pod.
Dave Barry is a Pulitzer Prize-winning humor columnist and author.

10 WHO MAKE A DIFFERENCE: Called a ‘national treasure,’ David Nolan helped shine a light on city’s black history. (SAR)

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From St. Augustine Record re: our heroic local historian of St. Augustine Movement civil rights and African-American history, DAVID NOLAN:



10 WHO MAKE A DIFFERENCE: Called a ‘national treasure,’ David Nolan helped shine a light on city’s black history

St. Augustine historian David Nolan. [PETER WILLOTT/THE RECORD]

By Margo C. Pope / Record correspondent
Posted Dec 30, 2018 at 9:24 PM
Updated Dec 30, 2018 at 9:24 PM

In the not-so-distant past, a significant part of the St. Augustine’s history was hidden away, its black history.

That started to change in the late 1970s, when the Historic St. Augustine Preservation Board secured a federal CETA (Comprehensive Employment Training Act) grant to develop a survey of buildings in the city more than 50 years old.

David Nolan, now 72, a writer by profession with a lifelong passion for history and an appreciation of the 1960s civil rights movement from his college days, was among a group of residents hired to conduct the survey.

“It was the perfect job for me,” he said in a recent interview. “For two years (1977 and 1978), I got to study buildings within the city limits over 50 years old. I learned a lot from Dr. Bill Adams, the Preservation Board’s executive director, and Bob Steinbach, the board’s archaeologist.

“Dr. Adams gave me ‘Historic Preservation 101’ and Bob taught me about archaeology.”

The outcome of the project was documentation of 2,500 buildings in St. Augustine. It constitutes the city’s Master Site File, the “bible of the city’s records of it historic buildings.

Nolan’s personal takeaway was to help preserve and protect the city’s African-American history over 450 years. That commitment is one of the reasons he has been selected for The Record’s 10 Who Make a Difference for 2018.

Nolan’s survey work led him through Lincolnville, St. Augustine’s historically African-American neighborhood, south of downtown. On his walks to document buildings from street level, he met Postman Henry Twine, later the city’s vice mayor and City Commissioner; Lorenzo Laws, who was selling insurance, and Doug Carn, a St. Augustine native and internationally known jazz musician. Lincolnville came alive for Nolan through those new friends, and those alliances began his quest to spread the word.

DAVID NOLAN

How long have you been in our community?: 41 years.

Family information: Wife, Dr. Darien Andreu, longtime English professor at Flagler College. Daughter, Sudie Nolan-Cassimatis, Atlanta; Son, Hamilton Nolan, New York

Occupation, community involvement: Historian and author – lifelong!

Glenn Hastings crossed paths with Nolan frequently while he served as executive director of St. Johns County’s Tourist Development Council and the Visitor and Convention Bureau (1996-2016). “He was a resource when we brought travel writers from throughout the country to St. Johns County for familiarization tours,” he said. “David would join them and talk to them about African-American history, giving them the backstory,” he said. “Other times, he talked to them about the overall history.”

“David was the one who opened up Lincolnville (to visitors),” Hastings said. “He did this when he originated his train tours of Lincolnville.” Today, tour trains regularly take visitors into Lincolnville.

Nolan championed the civil rights movement’s history in St. Augustine, especially of the 1960s. He advocated for civil rights sites to have historic markers. Some sites were marked in the 1990s through an educator’s initiative after hearing his advocacy for greater visibility.

Nolan’s call to save the civil rights sites reached an apex when the Monson Motor Lodge was demolished in the early 2000s. “The Monson was the only place in Florida where Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested (June 1964),” he said. “The motel in Memphis, where Dr. King was assassinated, is now a national civil rights museum. We lost our chance to have that with the demolition of the Monson.”

The next year, “the Ponce de Leon Motor Lodge, another major civil rights landmark, was demolished, as well as the Twine Street home of Hank Thomas, one of the original Freedom Riders,” he continued. “It looked as if civil rights landmarks were being gleefully demolished one by one — instead of getting the preservation they deserved.”

Nolan persisted. “We were often told that these places were of ‘no historic significance.’ So, we thought if we put historic markers on important civil rights sites it might slow down the bulldozers.”

ACCORD Inc.’s results


After the ACCORD Freedom Trail was completed, the demolitions did stop, Nolan said, suggesting a connection between the two.

Gwendolyn Duncan is president emeritus of ACCORD Inc., which stands for the “Anniversary to Commemorate the Civil Rights Demonstrations Inc.” ACCORD operates the state’s only civil rights museum in the former dental office of Dr. Robert Hayling, known as the “Father of the Civil Rights Movement in St. Augustine.” The museum is located at 79 Bridge St.

Duncan met Nolan more than 20 years ago through Kat Twine, one of the city’s 1960s civil rights freedom fighters. “She once told me that David knew more about black people than black people knew about themselves,” Duncan said.

Through ACCORD, Northrup Grumman provided funding for 30 markers on some of the city’s civil rights sites. “David did all the research; writing all the narratives for the ‘ACCORD Freedom Trail presented by the Northrop Grumman Corporation,’” Duncan said. “David Nolan is a national treasure. He also gives of his time, talents, and finances to help in our preservation efforts.”

Duncan said students have come from the United States Military Academy as well as England, Germany, and more recently Iran, to visit the museum to learn more about St. Augustine’s role in the movement.

The Freedom Trail has been written about in publications in Europe, Australia and Asia, Nolan said.

Citizen advocates


Nolan believes in the power of citizen community initiatives. Some of his examples are:

• The Junior Service League of St. Augustine restoration of the Lightkeepers’ House on Anastasia Island and the St. Augustine Light Station: “The JSL was the right group in the right place at the right time in the 1980s. In those days, ‘Victorian Garbage’ was a popular expression in St. Augustine,” Nolan explained. “I remember people arguing that we ought to tear down ugly Victorian buildings and put up fake colonial ones in their place. This seemed, to them, the proper definition of ‘historic preservation.’ The JSL took an outstanding Victorian building that had been reduced to four walls and charred beams and porches and returned it to a beloved landmark of the community, by years and years of hard work. After that success, “you heard less and less about ‘Victorian Garbage’ — to the long-term benefit of the Ancient City.”

• Fort Mose Historical Society: “Leading civil rights activists recognized the importance of black history here; Dr. Robert Hayling, Henry Twine and others worked for years to get recognition for Fort Mose. They recognized that it was part of a long, long struggle to improve the condition of black people on these shores,” Nolan said.

Fort Mose is a National Historic Landmark with a museum built and opened to the public (“though still very minimal compared to our other forts”): “Dedicated volunteers like Lorenzo Laws, Michael Bryant, Thomas Jackson, Errol Jones, Otis Mason, Charles Ellis, Hank and Viola White, Ruth Motley and others have been truly astounding and inspirational,” Nolan said. “I will also always be grateful to the late Jack Williams for preserving the property before the state took any interest in it (‘and then was rather shabbily treated when they did...’).”

• ACCORD Inc.’s opening of the civil rights museum: “They have also gathered and preserved rich documentation (for which the researchers of the future will sing their praises) of St. Augustine’s great encounter with modern history,” Nolan said. “I cannot give enough praise to Gwendolyn Duncan and other ACCORD activists (including the late Carrie Johnson and Shirley Williams Collins) for years of dedicated work.”

• “St. Augustinians both old and new have played important roles in promoting appreciation of our past,” Nolan said. “Mrs. Barbara Vickers led the seven-year effort to place the artistic monument in the Plaza to the Foot Soldiers of the civil rights movement, A native of St. Augustine, now 95 years old, she is an inspiration!”

“Among newer residents, Dr. Dorothy Israel, 94, retired college professor from New York, was the major force in producing the first brochure on our African-American history (and she has more recently produced a brochure on Lincolnville, which is one of the few things you can get on our rich Black heritage at our Visitors Center).”


Nolan has loved history to the point that in 1958, he “demanded” his mother, Virginia Tappin Nolan, take him to the centennial commemoration of the birth of President Theodore Roosevelt. Many Roosevelt descendants attended. “It was one of my first favorite historic buildings,” he said of Sagamore Hill on Oyster Bay, New York.

As an adult, he said he used to “drag” his children to to the Barre (Massachusetts) Historical Society headquarters, the former home of his great-grandfather, Judge John L. Smith (1859-1957). As a youth, Nolan visited Judge Smith with his family.

His mentors

Nolan’s mentors begin with his father, the late Joseph Nolan, a former New York Times writer and United Press International correspondent, a leader of the modern corporate public relations movement and a college professor. “Dad will always be my original model for hard work and diligence and honesty — and writing and speaking. I learned by observing a master!”

High school teacher Henry Addis (in Bayside, New York) inspired him so much that he tracked him down years ago. “I was glad to have the chance, almost half a century later to let him know that,” Nolan said. “After he died, his daughter wrote a letter to me that was so nice that it is one of the things I will risk my life to save from a fire, should the need ever arise!”

At the University of Virginia, the legendary Paul Gaston (about to turn 91 now), was his mentor. “He managed in lectures to bring history alive and modeled, through his own participation in civil rights activities, the good citizenship that we should hope from all historians.”

Nolan hopes that his legacy will be that helped save history; “all the important parts of our past and not just those that immediately contribute to a tourist economy. I hope that over the years, through books. tours and lectures I have made a contribution to the understanding of that.”

“I have told my wife and children that, when the time comes, I’d like to have my ashes scattered around all of our historic buildings. Then sometime in the future when someone proposes to demolish one of them, they can say: “You can’t tear that down. David Nolan is buried there.” Let’s throw a monkey wrench in the works!”

Push to rename Senate office building for McCain fizzles: 'We are left with a monument to bigotry'. (Washington Times)

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At age 17.5, as a freshman and sophomore at Georgetown University, my first government office was working Sen. Ted Kennedy's mailroom and main office in the Old Senate Office Building a/k/a "Old SOB," named for the late Georgia segregationist Democratic Senator Richard Russell.

I am okay with renaming that building for Senator John S. McCain, a genuine American hero.

In the spirit of bipartisanship and compromise, Senators could even call it the Russell-McCain building or McCain-Russell Building.

I am not happy with Senate Democratic Leader Charles Ellis Schumer playing tease, saying he was about to introduce a resolution renaming the building, then failing to follow through on his promise.  That's unSenatorial -- making a promise to introduce legislation, failing to do it, and never explaining why.  Pitiful.  This reflects why the Democratic Party is now in the minority in the United States Senate, the organization that Gladstone called "the world's greatest deliberative body."

As Will Rogers said, "I don't belong to any organized political party.  I'm a Democrat."







Push to rename Senate office building for McCain fizzles: 'We are left with a monument to bigotry'


By Stephen Dinan and Gabriella Muñoz - The Washington Times - Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Richard Russell survived another scare.
The segregationist Democrat’s name continues to adorn the Senate’s oldest office building, despite promises by top senators that this would be the year they finally erased it and replaced it with the name of their newly departed colleague Sen. John McCain.
“Nothing will overcome the loss of Senator McCain, but so that generations remember him I will be introducing a resolution to rename the Russell building after him,” Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, said on Twitter just after McCain’s office announced his death.
Four months later, the resolution was never introduced.
Mr. Schumer’s spokesman clammed up when asked what happened.
Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican floor leader, had seemed cool to the renaming idea, instead promising a bipartisan committee to look at other good ways to honor their departed colleague.
His office said it is still in touch with McCain’s family and some senators but isn’t ready to announce anything.
McCain, who often confounded colleagues in life, continues to do so in death as senators search for an acceptable honor.
They named the annual defense policy bill after him just before his death. But that’s almost a pedestrian honor at this point, with plenty of lawmakers liked by their colleagues getting similar treatment on legislation that was dear to them.
Sens. Chris Coons, Delaware Democrat, and Thom Tillis, North Carolina Republican, have suggested enhancing an existing bipartisan human-rights caucus in the Senate, turning it into a commission and naming it after McCain.
“Meaning, elevate it by giving it more resources, some staff, and a broader charter to be the convening place for conversation and action about human rights in the Senate,” Mr. Coons said.
A similar commission in the House is named after former Rep. Tom Lantos, a California Democrat who was the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress.
But the McCain commission legislation has not advanced out of committee.
Sen. Jeff Flake, an Arizona Republican who served with McCain and who had backed Mr. Schumer’s idea to rename the Russell Building, said it was his own fellow Republicans who scuttled that plan.
“We need a lot more support if we were going to do it,” he said.
McCain does have some memorials.
The Navy announced in July, a month before his death, that the John McCain guided-missile destroyer, already named after his father and grandfather, both admirals, would henceforth also be the senator’s namesake.
The Phoenix City Council last year voted to rename one of the terminals of Sky Harbor International Airport after McCain.
And Google Maps jumped the gun on names in the wake of McCain’s death, following Mr. Schumer’s idea and changing the name of the Russell Office Building to the McCain Building in the online maps app. Google said map information is crowd-sourced and blamed an overzealous McCain fan — or Russell opponent.
Matt Bennett, co-founder of Third Way, a think tank, has been eager to ditch the Russell name for some time and had hoped McCain would be the one to do it.
He said that hope fizzled out “like almost every other good, worthy idea in Trump’s Washington.”
“Rather than rename the building for an American hero and Senate titan, we are left with a monument to bigotry and civil rights obstructionism. It’s appalling, but it’s not surprising,” he said. “A human rights commission sounds like it might be a good idea. But John McCain deserves something big and chiseled in granite.”

Copyright © 2018 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

‘Exhibit A’: How McKinsey Got Entangled in a Bribery Case The consultancy’s report became key evidence in a battle over the extradition of a powerful Ukrainian oligarch charged in a scheme to help Boeing. (NY Times)

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Three-time Pulitzer Prize winning New York Times reporter Walter Bogdanich's latest article on McKinsey consulting company's blurred ethical lines and lawbreaking.  

This article involves a McKinsey document assisting with bribery in India of persons who could be helpful to Boeing's vendor obtaining titanium, needed to make airplanes.

Locally, Mr. Bogdanich is most noted as the reporter who sends into rages our louche local lawman, St. Johns County Sheriff DAVID SHOAR, who legally changed his name from "HOAR" in 1994.

St. Johns County Sheriff SHOAR/HOAR refused to sit down with Mr. Bogdanich for an interview on the Michelle O'Connell case and SJSO corruption, 2013-2018.  Wonder why?

From The New York Times for December 31, 2018, latest in a Pulitzer-worthy series on McKinsey:






Dmitry Firtash, a Ukrainian billionaire, was indicted in the United States on charges of directing $18.5 million in bribes to Indian officials on Boeing’s behalf.CreditCreditJames Hill for The New York Times


VIENNA — Boeing was in a tight spot. Just as it was preparing to roll out its innovative 787 Dreamliner — the plane that was supposed to lead the aircraft manufacturer into the future — a shortage of strong but lightweight titanium parts threatened production.
With titanium prices rising and delivery dates looming, Boeing knew it needed help, so in 2006 it did what many companies do when faced with vexing problems: It turned to McKinsey & Company, the consulting firm with the golden pedigree, purveyor of “best practices” advice to businesses and governments around the world.
Boeing asked McKinsey to evaluate a proposal, potentially worth $500 million annually, to mine titanium in India through a foreign partnership financed by an influential Ukrainian oligarch.
McKinsey says it advised Boeing of the risks of working with the oligarch and recommended “character due diligence.” Attached to its evaluation was a single PowerPoint slide in which McKinsey described what it said was the potential partner’s strategy for winning mining permits. It included bribing Indian officials.


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The partner’s plan, McKinsey noted, was to “respect traditional bureaucratic process including use of bribes.” McKinsey also wrote that the partner had identified eight “key Indian officials” — named in the PowerPoint slide — whose influence was needed for the deal to go through. Nowhere in the slide did McKinsey advise that such a scheme would be illegal or unwise.
McKinsey declined to provide The New York Times with its full report or any evidence that it had objected to the paying of bribes. But the consultancy denied recommending “bribery or other illegal acts.” For his part, the Ukrainian oligarch, Dmitry V. Firtash, denies that he paid or recommended bribes, or had any dealings with McKinsey or knowledge of the document.
The story of McKinsey’s role in the episode has remained hidden from public view for 12 years. Even today the firm’s ultimate recommendation and how its client, Boeing, responded remain something of a mystery, cloaked in the secrecy of grand jury proceedings. But McKinsey’s reference to illegal acts has thrust the firm into a tangled international battle over the extradition of Mr. Firtash, who has been charged in the United States with bribing Indian officials in anticipation of getting titanium for Boeing.
Should he be brought to trial, McKinsey, and the document it produced, stand to play a major role in the outcome — a well of potential embarrassment that underscores the risks that McKinsey and other American consulting firms face as they, and clients like Boeing, do business in countries where ethical standards and practices diverge from those at home.
McKinsey initially refused to confirm that the report even existed. But after learning that The Times had obtained a copy, the firm issued a statement acknowledging that McKinsey employees had indeed written it. Neither McKinsey nor Boeing agreed to an interview.


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This account is based on an examination of public and confidential records, as well as interviews in the United States and Europe.
When Boeing went looking for titanium in 2006, it tentatively agreed to buy the metal through a company controlled by Mr. Firtash, who had made billions of dollars brokering gas sales to Ukraine from Russia and former Soviet republics.
The deal did not end well.
The mining venture never materialized, but Mr. Firtash was indicted on charges of directing $18.5 million in bribes to Indian officials for mining permits.
Mr. Firtash was a big catch for the Americans, who saw him as close to the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, capable of leading a wavering Ukraine away from a Western economic alliance and into the Kremlin’s camp. In Vienna, where Mr. Firtash was arrested and remains free on a $174 million cash bond, an extradition judge accused American officials of using the prosecution in service of its geopolitical interests.
Neither McKinsey nor Boeing was charged in the case, and Boeing has not been accused of paying bribes. But several employees of the two companies are believed to have testified before a grand jury. Boeing continued to pursue the venture even after being advised that its partner’s plans included paying bribes, records show.
In a recent interview in Vienna, Mr. Firtash said that neither he nor any of his representatives had any connection to the McKinsey document.


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“We never worked with McKinsey,” he said. He said he had been unfairly singled out by prosecutors because of false media reports tying him to Mr. Putin, and an unconsummated business deal with Paul Manafort, the former Trump campaign chairman recently convicted of tax violations related to his work in Ukraine.


Boeing had counted on having a supply of lightweight titanium parts for the Dreamliner.CreditTravis Dove/Bloomberg


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Boeing had counted on having a supply of lightweight titanium parts for the Dreamliner.CreditTravis Dove/Bloomberg
For Boeing, the early 2000s were a time to roll the dice. As its chief competitor, the European consortium Airbus, moved toward bigger planes, Boeing countered with a design that promised better fuel efficiency and easier maintenance: the 787 Dreamliner, a lighter, more durable aircraft with a higher percentage of titanium and composite materials.
As orders flooded in, Boeing executives knew well what was at stake. In an article about the Dreamliner, The M.I.T. Technology Review quoted a manager saying, “If we get it wrong, it’s the end.”
Then Boeing hit a crosswind: an industrywide shortage of fasteners — the seemingly mundane items like nuts, bolts, rivets and washers that literally hold planes together. Thousands were needed for each aircraft, and for the lighter Dreamliner, they had to contain more titanium.
Desperate for new supplies, Boeing latched onto a promising lead. A group of six international businessmen with plentiful financing had offered to mine and process five million to 12 million pounds of the metal annually, much of it for sale to Boeing. The group, Bothli Trade A.G., had already signed a memorandum of understanding for a joint mining venture with the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.
Environmental concerns arose, and when a land survey was conducted on the proposed mining site, residents “reacted violently,” according to government records.
But Boeing faced a more basic question: Should it even be doing business with this group — largely little-known figures from India, Sri Lanka and Hungary? The exception was the leader and leading financier, Mr. Firtash, who had expertise as the owner of titanium processing plants in Ukraine.
This was the business plan that McKinsey was brought in to assess, the plan that its report described as including the paying of bribes.


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Ultimately, the deal fell apart. Boeing found other sources of titanium and McKinsey continued to advise the company on the supply chain. But McKinsey’s report on India would remain buried until it came to light years later in a legal storm.


Vasily Anisimov, a Russian billionaire with ties to President Vladimir Putin, posted Mr. Firtash’s $174 million cash bond.CreditSasha Mordovets/Getty Images


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Vasily Anisimov, a Russian billionaire with ties to President Vladimir Putin, posted Mr. Firtash’s $174 million cash bond.CreditSasha Mordovets/Getty Images
In June 2013, a federal grand jury in Chicago secretly indicted Mr. Firtash and five others, including an Indian official, on bribery charges. Still, it would be nine months before Mr. Firtash was taken into custody, where he remained for a little more than a week until a Russian billionaire, Vasily Anisimov, posted his $174 million bond. Mr. Anisimov is an associate of Mr. Putin’s friend Arkady Rotenberg.
So began a highly unusual four-year tug of war between two allies — the United States and Austria. Extradition requests between the United States and other Western nations are almost never rejected, said Lanny J. Davis, one of Mr. Firtash’s lawyers and a former special counsel to President Bill Clinton.
This extradition case would play out differently.
In August 2014, five months after Mr. Firtash’s arrest, a document unexpectedly arrived via email and Federal Express at the Austrian Ministry of Justice in Vienna. It would raise profound questions about the direction of the case.
To American prosecutors, it was known simply as “Exhibit A.” A single PowerPoint slide, written in 2006 and attached to a much longer evaluation of the India mining venture, it laid out the alleged bribery scheme.
The slide stated that Mr. Firtash’s group, Bothli Trade, “has identified key Indian officials and has crafted a strategy to gain their influences.” That strategy included investing in infrastructure and jobs and respecting the traditional use of bribes. Those key officials were named, along with their positions. A footnote attributed this information to Bothli’s business plan and interviews with unidentified individuals.




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Portions of “Exhibit A,” the document that lays out the alleged bribery scheme.


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Portions of “Exhibit A,” the document that lays out the alleged bribery scheme.
Exhibit A couldn’t have come at a better time for the prosecutors. Their extradition case appeared to be falling short, dependent largely on unidentified witnesses, records that purportedly showed bribe money disguised as legitimate business transactions and meetings between Boeing officials and members of Mr. Firtash’s group. The Austrian judge wasn’t buying it.


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If American officials wanted to try Mr. Firtash in Chicago, the judge said, more evidence of criminal conduct was needed, including the names of cooperating witnesses and what they were expected to say. The Americans refused, saying that to identify them would put their lives at risk, since Mr. Firtash was “associated with an upper-echelon member of the Russian mafia, Semion Mogilevich.” Mr. Firtash adamantly denies having had any business relationship with Mr. Mogilevich.
That was when prosecutors discovered Exhibit A in Boeing’s files. Rarely does someone put in writing the need for bribes. Yet now, more than a year after the indictment, prosecutors had a document that they called “very clear proof” that Mr. Firtash’s enterprise had advised Boeing “of the plan to bribe Indian public officials, which was already underway.”
The Austrian judge, Christoph Bauer, had more questions.
Why, he wondered, had prosecutors waited so long after the indictment to arrest Mr. Firtash? He was not hiding, the judge said, adding that American officials should have known that Mr. Firtash had visited France, Germany and Switzerland and made a very public appearance when he ceremoniously opened the London Stock Exchange one day in October 2013.
And then there was the curious timing of the Americans’ pursuit of Mr. Firtash, which the judge suspected was linked to his influence in Ukrainian politics, especially his help in electing the president, Viktor F. Yanukovych, in 2010.
Three years later, Mr. Yanukovych was wavering over whether to sign an economic agreement with the European Union or to align with Russia. He also faced re-election.
As soon as it became clear that Mr. Yanukovych, under pressure from Russia, was reconsidering signing the European Union agreement, the judge pointed out, an American delegation traveled to Kiev to bring him in line.
Facing the prospect that Mr. Firtash might sway Mr. Yanukovych and use his connections to help him remain in power, the United States asked Austria to arrest the oligarch, the judge said.


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Indeed, documents show that in the fall of 2013, Austrian authorities had received an “urgent message” from American prosecutors: Mr. Firtash was expected in Vienna on Nov. 4. Arrest him.
Then, a few days before the planned arrest, the documents show, came another urgent message: “As part of a larger strategy, U.S. authorities have determined we need to pass up this opportunity.” No arrest. No explanation of the larger strategy.
According to Judge Bauer, though, that was when Mr. Yanukovych appeared to be rejecting Russia. But when the president turned back toward Russia five months later, the Americans renewed the request and Mr. Firtash was taken into custody.
Mr. Yanukovych was ousted in February 2014 amid violent protests. He now lives in Russia.
To the surprise of American officials, the judge denied extradition on the grounds that the request was politically motivated, whether or not Mr. Firtash was “sufficiently suspected” of breaking the law.
The United States appealed, and last year a higher Austrian court overturned Judge Bauer’s ruling. That decision is now under final review.
But, Mr. Firtash’s lawyers point out, the Americans did not share a vital piece of information with the Austrian courts: After the prosecutors spent months insisting that Exhibit A proved that the oligarch had recommended bribes, it emerged in the United States that the document had in fact been written by consultants from McKinsey.
In response to questions from The Times, Dan Webb, one of Mr. Firtash’s lawyers and a former United States attorney in Chicago, said his client had nothing to do “with the creation or presentation of the PowerPoint slide proposing bribery and used by U.S. prosecutors to support extradition of Firtash.” He accused prosecutors of falsely telling Austrian officials that the slide constituted “clear proof” that Mr. Firtash was behind the bribery scheme, adding that “U.S. prosecutors never withdrew their false statement.”


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The United States attorney’s office in Chicago did not respond to messages seeking comment.
While McKinsey declined to provide its full report to The Times, it said it contained a section “noting unique risks that an association with Firtash would pose.” The firm said it was cooperating with the Justice Department and was not the focus of the investigation.
For its part, Boeing said in a statement that it had cooperated with the Justice Department and was “not accused of any wrongdoing.”



Bridget Hickey contributed reporting, and Susan Beachy contributed research.
A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: How a PowerPoint Slide Tangled McKinsey in a U.S. Bribery Case.

DR. KATHLEEN DEAGAN: 10 WHO MAKE A DIFFERENCE: For nearly 50 years, Kathleen Deagan has helped unearth, reveal city’s heritage (SAR)

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Great article by Margo Pope, a retired St. Augustine Record editor, the President of the St. Augustine Historical Society, on Dr. Kathleen Deagan, Ph.D., the indefatigable archaeologist who has worked for five decades documenting St. Augustine's rich Spanish colonial history.   Salud!








10 WHO MAKE A DIFFERENCE: For nearly 50 years, Kathleen Deagan has helped unearth, reveal city’s heritage



Archeologist Dr. Kathy Deagan stands in a trench on the grounds of the Youth Archaeological Park in St. Augustine. [PETER WILLOTT/THE RECORD]

By Margo C. Pope / Record correspondent
Posted at 2:01 AM
Kathleen Deagan’s nearly half century of digging up St. Augustine’s history almost didn’t happen.

“Really, it was the inspiration of a great teacher,” Deagan said in a recent interview.

The teacher was Charles H. Fairbanks, Ph.D., then chair of the University of Florida department of anthropology and a leader in the field of historical archaeology.

“Archaeology just captured me,” she said. “I didn’t even imagine I would be an archaeologist or, if it was even possible to be one. Girls just didn’t do things like that for one and there were no real jobs in the profession then other than in education.”

The federal antiquities act in 1966 demanded a need for more archaeologists because of the requirements imposed on excavating, collecting and reporting on ancient sites and their artifacts.

Deagan, now 70, had changed majors several times before making her final decision on a major. She started out in education, then switched to social work and then tried journalism. “I kept sneaking in Fairbanks’ courses in anthropology and archaeology and I ended up with more credits there than in any of my majors.”

Fairbanks told her that she had to either major in anthropology or she would have to spend another semester in school finishing up another major.

She earned her bachelor’s degree in anthropology in 1970 and then went to California with friends where she worked at other jobs. Nine months later, she came back to UF and began her doctoral program in anthropology and graduated with a Ph.D. in 1974. Her first job was at FSU as an assistant professor and began leading field schools in St. Augustine for future archaeologists. Her first field school here was in the Spanish Quarter at the Avero House, formerly known as the Old Spanish Inn and part of the Historic St. Augustine Preservation Board programs. She met Bob Steinbach, the board’s archeologist who gave her insights on the history. She joined UF’s faculty in 1982 as an associate curator at the Florida State Museum in anthropology.

KATHLEEN DEAGAN

How long have you been in our community?: Part-time, working, since 1972. Full-time since 2015.

Family information: Husband of 22 years was Dr. Larry Harris, wildlife ecologist at the University of Florida (passed in 2010). Four stepchildren and 6 grandchildren.

Education: BA in anthropology, 1970; PhD in anthropology in 1974, both degrees earned at University of Florida.

Occupation: Archaeology professor and researcher (Florida State University,1974-1982; University of Florida, 1982-2010). Currently: Emerita Curator emerita, Florida Museum of Natural History, UF; emerita professor, UF.

Civic and Community Involvement: Mission Museum Planning Advisory Group, Catholic Diocese of St. Augustine, 2018; Trustee, Flagler College, 2017-present; Board of Directors, University of Florida Historic St. Augustine Inc., 2008-present; St. Augustine Archaeological Association Board of Directors, 2016-present; Board of Directors, Historic St. Augustine Research Institute at Flagler College, 2006-present; St. Augustine Historical Society, Board of Trustees, 2009-2012, president 2013; Advisory panel, Florida Park Service, Ft. Mose Museum, 2007-2009; Florida Historical Commission, 2002-2004; Florida Humanities Council, Chairperson, 2002-2004; National Register Advisory Panel, 2000-2003.

Awards and honors include: Florida Trust for Historic Preservation Award’s Outstanding Performance in Archaeology, 2018; St. Augustine Historical Society’s Herschel Shepard Award - Extraordinary contributions to the preservation of St. Augustine’s historical legacy (inaugural recipient, 2017); Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2016; Florida Department of State, Bob Williams Award (Recognition of a public employee for service so exceptional that it changed the course of historic preservation in Florida, 2009); recipient of the Order of La Florida, City of St. Augustine, 2008.


Much of Deagan’s career was and has been intertwined with Florida’s longtime preservation architect Herschel Shepard and Florida’s leading historian of Spanish Florida exploration and settlement, the late Michael Gannon, Ph.D. Deagan was a student of Gannon’s in his Florida history course in the 1960s. She said he embodies Florida history and “I can’t emphasize that enough. Both Herschel and Mike have been lifelong inspirations. Not just for their wonderful scholarship but because of their generous, kind characters.”

Gannon died in 2016.

Shepard’s recent collaboration with Deagan was on the historic Tovar House, owned by the St. Augustine Historical Society. “When you talk about what she has one done for St. Augustine, she has given St. Augustine stature in archaeology because she served on so many national boards and written so much with her books,” Shepard said.

He noted, too, the significance of her work finding the actual site where St. Augustine was founded in 1565 by the Spanish, backing up its claim as the first permanent settlement of European origin in what are today’s United States.

Historian Susan Parker, Ph.D., is a longtime friend and colleague of Deagan.

“As soon as Kathleen Deagan arrived to do research in St. Augustine, she changed the way St. Augustine saw its past,” Parker said. “She brought families and lesser- known members of society of centuries past to our attention. Her influence reaches far beyond St. Augustine through her publications and her many students.”

When first digging in St. Augustine on Spanish Street, the materials found gave her insight into the inner marriages between the Spanish soldiers and Native Indian women. “I fell in love with St. Augustine for the story,” Deagan said.


Today, she continues to work in St. Augustine, most recently on sites at the Fountain of Youth and at the adjacent Mission Nombre de Dios. The two properties form the original town and 1565 landing site.

Her work in St. Augustine covers so much time and so many locations that when asked about her work, she notes that it includes “dozens of sites under the city’s streets.”

She still approaches each site she digs with strict preparation asking herself, “Are we going to mess this up? I think about the worst possible things that could happen and then make sure they don’t.”

Deagan said she is motivated to continue to tell the city’s story because of the response by the community. “The people are passionate about the same things I am, so committed here to history and heritage.”

Her legacy, she said, is to ensure that St. Augustine’s story is told accurately and its history is preserved for future generations.

Alachua County ends prison labor contract

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From Gainesville Sun:





County ends prison labor contract



A state DOC spokeswoman said prisoners are often glad to work outside of state institutions, because it shaves time from their sentences and gives them a chance to be outdoors.
Alachua County has agreed to sever its contracts that allow the use of prison labor.
Come Dec. 31, the county’s Public Works department will no longer use inmates to perform manual labor such as picking up litter, filling potholes, mixing concrete and mowing lawns.
The decision came at the tail end of a county commission meeting Tuesday after several people approached the board asking for the Inmate Work Program to end.
One former inmate called the program “slave labor,” and many others after him expressed concern over crews not being paid.
Commissioner Ken Cornell said the county’s current $496,294 contract with the state’s Department of Corrections allowed for the program to be discontinued at any time.
About 35 inmates make up the six labor crews that go out each day. The groups work a little more than seven hours, with two 15-minute breaks.
Each inmate in a DOC institution is assigned a job. Those who have a lower security risk and shorter sentences can be assigned to an outside work camp. According to a report presented to the county by Public Works, inmates they select also have a history of good behavior and are screened beforehand.
Inmates who work outside prison can earn up to 10 days off their sentence per month, capping at 15 percent of their total time.
The report, presented in May, also states the county would have to spend more than $857,000 to replace the labor crews with full-time employees.
Public Works director Ramon Gavarrete said the department will need to look for new ways to pick up trash and litter now that the crews will no longer be an option. He said the inmates learn valuable skills while on the labor force that could lead to jobs later in life.
“We have people who work with us for some time and actually get to learn skills, like how to install a pipe,” Gavarrete said. “Those are the things that are going to get impacted by not having labor force.”
Michelle Glady, spokeswoman for the state’s Department of Corrections, said she isn’t sure how Alachua County’s decision will affect her department. More local DOC representatives from the Gainesville Work Camp on Northeast 55th Boulevard, said they weren’t allowed to speak to reporters.
Glady said the inmates’ ability to work outdoors, beyond prison walls, is a privilege. The work, she said, like most inmate jobs, is unpaid.
While she said she couldn’t speak for every inmate, she said many are excited for the opportunity to work outside.
Commissioner Robert Hutchinson said the decision is a way to get the ball rolling in terms of addressing how prisoners are treated.
“We wanted to send a strong signal,” Hutchinson said. “I view it as a way to get the conversation started with the Department of Corrections and the judicial system in general about how prison labor is handled.”
The decision only ends inmate labor used by the county.
City of Gainesville officials have been debating the issue, as well, and currently plan to end their use of prison labor by Oct. 1, 2019.

Right whale watchers rejoice as calf seen off Jacksonville coast. (SAR)

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Delightful news.  To protect endangered right whales and other cetaceans, we need to ban seismic drilling, ban offshore oil drilling, and adopt the St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore Study, with options to create America's newest national park surrounding our Nation's Oldest City.   Yes we can!








Right whale watchers rejoice as calf seen off Jacksonville coast




These two adult female right whales were spotted traveling together 20 miles southeast of Tybee Island, Georgia, on Dec. 12. Right whale #2503, nicknamed Boomerang, bottom right, is 23 years old and last calved in 2014. Her companion, #3808, Magnet, is 10 years old and has no known calving history. [Sea to Shore Alliance/Contributed]

By Dinah Voyles Pulver
St. Augustine Record
Posted Dec 29, 2018 at 7:38 PM
Updated Dec 29, 2018 at 7:40 PM

A critically endangered right whale calf was spotted off Jacksonville on Friday — the first calf of the species seen in nearly two years, giving local whale watchers high hopes for the coming weeks.

The critically endangered right whales typically have migrated to the waters off the Florida and Georgia coasts from Canada and Maine each winter for a calving season. But last year, no right whales were seen off the Atlantic coast of Florida and no right whale calves were spotted anywhere along the entire United States Atlantic seaboard. Only five calves were counted the previous year.

Friday’s sighting was great news for whale enthusiasts and researchers.

The calf was seen with its mother swimming northward in the Atlantic near the mouth of the St. Johns River. The pair of whales were spotted by observers with Coastwise Consulting, who were watching for protected species aboard the dredge Bayport, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

“I’m excited and looking forward to seeing the new mom and her calf in the Volusia/Flagler area real soon,” said Frank Gromling, a member of the Marineland Right Whale Project and owner of the Ocean Art Gallery in Ormond Beach.

“The real key is that this mother-calf pair is a strong indication that this year is going to be a more active calving season for us and l look forward to seeing bunches of new moms and calves,” said Gromling.

The mother whale, Catalog No. 2791, was one of five individually identified females seen off the Georgia coast in December.

Whale watchers in Flagler County already were excited about whales after a couple of humpback whales were reported offshore this week. But it was the presence of female right whales off the Georgia coast that was the greater cause for celebration.

“To have five out of the six first whales seen down here possibly being pregnant females, that’s very hopeful,” said Julie Albert, coordinator of the right whale sighting hotline for the Marine Resources Council.


Two of the right whales were spotted southeast of Tybee Island, Georgia in mid-December. The whales, which can be up to 50 feet long and weigh up to 70 tons, can be individually identified by white patchy areas on their heads.

Considering the high number of right whale deaths in 2017 — 15 in all — last year’s lack of calves left experts and whale advocates even more gravely concerned about the future of the species. The estimated population of right whales in the North Atlantic has plummeted from around 500 in 2010 to only 411. Of those, only about 71 are believed to be females capable of giving birth to calves.

Gromling is among the local residents concerned about last winter’s dearth of calves.

“We can’t couple that with the high death rate,” he said. “It’s a major detriment to the potential survival of the species.”

Scientists and whale researchers are working on several fronts to try to protect the whales, including the development of more whale-friendly fishing gear, since commercial fishing gear and vessel strikes are among the leading causes of death.

Researchers estimate more than 80 percent of the right whale population has been entangled in fishing gear at some point in their lives. Gear can wrap around the animal’s mouth, get entangled in the baleen plates they use to filter microscopic marine life from sea water, and trailing gear creates a drag that consumes too much of the whale’s energy, endangering their lives and making it less likely they’ll have calves.

In November, a group of experts, including scientists at Duke University and the New England Aquarium’s Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean life, published a new study detailing how video simulations could illustrate how right whales become entangled in fishing lines.


“We don’t have a lot of observations, in fact we have almost have none of how whales get entangled in ropes,” stated Tim Werner, a senior scientist at the Aquarium. “If we can see how they get entangled, it would help us prevent it. The technology in computers has evolved to a state where we can model these things.”

Using a digital model of a whale, the group recreated rope configurations found on entangled whales.

“If you can re-create the way the rope wraps around the animal in the model, you can figure out how to change the gear to reduce the risk of entanglement all together,” Werner stated.

Whale advocates have been particularly concerned about the federal decision in November to allow seismic airgun testing for oil exploration in an area between Cape Canaveral and Cape May, New Jersey. A group of non-profit advocacy groups sued the federal government in December in an effort to stop the seismic blasting.

Filed in South Carolina, the lawsuit alleges the National Marine Fisheries Service violated the Marine Mammal Protection Act, the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act by authorizing the testing. The incidental harassment authorization allows five companies to harm or harass marine mammals during airgun blasting activities.

Groups signed on to the suit include Oceana, Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, Surfrider Foundation, Southern Environmental Law Center, Earth Justice, and the Coastal Conservation League.

While the ocean resources industry contends the method for exploring for additional oil and gas deposits is safe, ocean advocacy groups believe the seismic blasting is extremely dangerous to right whales, marine mammals, turtles and other sea life.

“We’re going to fight this, so we want to make sure the government reverses these unlawful actions,” said Diane Hoskins, campaign director for the ocean advocacy group Oceana. “This could be the stressor that takes this species to extinction.”

“Dolphins and whales rely on sound in order to find mates, communicate, avoid predators and really every vital life function,” she said. The blasts from the seismic testing would interfere with those life functions, she said, and increases the likelihood a calf could be separated from its mother.

The groups point out that almost every governor along the East Coast has voiced opposition to offshore drilling, as well as the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council and numerous fishing groups such as the Southeastern Fisheries Association and the International Game Fish Association.

Oceana launched an interactive “We’re Watching” map to track possible seismic vessels off the Atlantic coast at Oceana.org/SeismicWatch.

The humpback whale sightings have been fun, Albert said. “On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day we were getting calls on humpbacks, which is great,” she said. “Nobody is going to complain about seeing humpbacks.”

Anyone who sees a right whale or a humpback should report the sighting to the whale hotline, Albert said. That number is 888-979-4253 (888-97-WHALE).

The perfect New Year’s resolution for 2019 was written 154 years ago. (WaPo)

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An amazing performance of President Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address is portrayed at the end of Steven Spielberg's movie, Lincoln.

Here's an epic, simple, understated editorial from The Washington Post:


The perfect New Year’s resolution for 2019 was written 154 years ago


Visitors stand at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on Dec. 22. (Zach Gibson/Bloomberg News)

ARE YOU still looking for a resolution to keep in the new year, something more meaningful than visiting the gym regularly or avoiding saturated fats? Here’s a suggestion. Take a trip down to the Lincoln Memorial, if you’re in the Washington area. At last report it was still open to the public, though with limited government support, thanks to the shutdown. There, inscribed on a wall, is the perfect New Year’s resolution for Americans and people from other countries who still admire this nation despite all its conflicts and contradictions. The words come at the end of the speech Abraham Lincoln delivered during his second inauguration.
The sentence is so familiar to us — “With malice toward none,” it begins — as to have become almost meaningless to some. But reading the whole address in the presence of the statue of Lincoln, especially at night or on a gray day, with visitors from home and abroad quietly, respectfully taking it all in, gives it a sort of mystic power. Lincoln begins with thoughts on the tragedy of the war soon to end, then quickly gets to the root of it — to what split the country and set Americans to killing one another: “One-eighth of the whole population were colored slaves. . . . These slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All knew that this interest was somehow the cause of the war.”
And then it gets biblical, more prophetic than political, suggesting the need for a people to reflect not on their grievances and desires but on their own shortcomings and their duty to the greater good and the fellow humans they have wronged. “Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away,” Lincoln said. “Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said ‘the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.’ ”
Yes, the speech was about our national sin of slavery, but it was also about the malign power of “interest” — demagogic political interests, financial interests, shortsighted self-interest on the part of many individual Americans who have lost sight of the common good and of the need for simple justice and equality in society. Just a short walk from the somber, seated Lincoln stands another memorial, dedicated to Americans who did serve the greater good — the statuary tribute to those who fought and died in the Korean War. It portrays 19 service members slogging along in the rain, and there is a startling realism to it. “Tensely they scan, listening for danger; some are gesturing, hollering, warning one another,” the late Charles Krauthammer wrote in 1995. They are, he noted, a reminder that there “are battles worth fighting; they should be chosen with great care and fought with great purpose, but there are purposes worth fighting for.”
Resolved for this new year, in words spoken nearly 154 years ago: “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds . . . and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.”




It's 2019. What's next? Democracy is on the march here

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The late William F. Buckley, Jr. once rather snidely quoted UN Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson's shopworn cliche: "Ladies and gentlemen, we have the future before us."

We do, indeed.


It's 2019.  


What's next?


1. St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore:    we need Congressional action  on a National Park Service study amendment, requiring a local advisory committee, local hearings and options on a wonderful idea, proposed nearly in 80 years ago, by Mayor Walter Fraser and our then-Representative and U.S. Senators.  St. Augustine survived two (2) hurricanes in eleven (11) months.  Federal funds and Park Service status will help us resist offshore oil drilling and better survive storms. (Some State funds should be committed to help keep the Castillo and Fort Matanzas open when there's government shutdown, as the State of Arizona did in December 2018.) Some 130,000 acres of current government land can help form a barrier against flooding amid global ocean level rise.  

2. We need a moratorium on big developments, with flood-prone land marked off-limits as "adaptation areas." Who owns developments?  Foreign investors.  Who are they? We need data on corporate ownership. We need lobbyist registration. We must end the demolition derby, end clearcutting and halt wetland destruction.     Ever since we won several First Amendment and public interest victories, (including Bridge of Lions Rainbow flags and cancellation of the $1.8 million luxury no-bid mosquito control helicopter), citizens no longer fear local governments.  People are winning victories. Corruption and bigotry are in retreat. Democracy is on the march.

3. Investigations of St. Johns County Sheriff David Shoar.  Florida's new Governor, Ron DeSantis, should immediately exercise his powers under Florida's Constitution Article IV, Section 7, by temporarily removing Sheriff Shoar. Sheriff Shoar must NOT contaminate or limit the investigation.  Why did Shoar get to choose an undisclosed forensic auditor on nearly $700,000 embezzled by his own Finance Director?  For five (5) years of embezzlement, where was Sheriff Shoar?  Leading a campaign of hateful harassment against FDLE Special Agent Rusty Ray Rodgers -- efforts to get Mr. Rodgers fired and criminal prosecuted, while recruiting a lawyer to file a meritless lawsuit.  We paid for it, subsidizing Shoar's unhinged attacks on the O'Connell family, and his falsehoods and misleading website on the O'Connell case. 

4. Justice for Michelle O'Connell:  Deputy Jeremy Banks deserves "clear-eyed justice," as Mayor Nancy Shaver wrote in a 2013 Record letter, recommending people ask for a federal criminal investigation.   Two (2) respected jurists found probable cause that Deputy Jeremy Banks committed homicide on September 2, 2010.   (County Court Judge Charles Jay Tinlin in 2011, ordering a search warrant;  United States District Court Judge Brian J. Davis on March 30, 2018, Good Friday/Passover, dismissing Banks' lawsuit against FDLE Special Agent Rusty Ray Rodgers.  That retaliatory SLAPP lawsuit was procured by Sheriff Shoar. Query: who paid for Banks' lawyer,  and with whose funds?).  

5. St. Johns County needs dogged investigative reporting and meaningful government reform. Without a business plan, Sheriff Shoar demands a $15 million training and communications center and no-bid land purchase.  (Come speak out January 15th). Sheriff Shoar lied to County Commissioners about a "$2 million check" from the FBI to help pay for the center; there was NO "check." Enough. Let's put a County Charter on the ballot in 2020, including remedies for corruption, discrimination, misfeasance, malfeasance. nonfeasance, waste, fraud, and abuse.  We need more checks and balances, like an independent Inspector General and Ombuds to resolve citizen and employee concerns in all local governments.  Now.

As James Madison wrote, "If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary." 

We need more reality-based candidates and officeholders in Madison's spirit.  Enough meanness, flummery, dupery and nincompoopery in our local government offices.

Happy New Year.


With kindest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Ed Slavin
904-377-4998

DeSantis named 'Biggest Suck-up to Trump' of 2018 for ad 'building the wall' with kid's toys. (MSNBC/Orlando Sentinel)

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Quo vobis videtor?

Florida's next Governor is in the tank for TRUMP, kookoo for TRUMP, slavishly, self-abasingly, laughing-all-the-way-to-the-Flori-DUH Governor's mansion for DONALD JOHN TRUMP.

What a louche lugubrious goober.

Shame, shame, we know his shame.

RONALD DION DeSANTIS.





DeSantis named 'Biggest Suck-up to Trump' of 2018 for ad 'building the wall' with kid's toys

Governor-elect Ron DeSantis received an unwelcome end-of-year award from MSNBC’s Chris Matthews’ panel, who named him the “Biggest Suck-up to Trump” of 2018 – though he’s noticeably toned down the overt Trump mentions since winning in November.
DeSantis, who beat out Sean Hannity and the 18 House Republicans who nominated President Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, won Matthews’ award for his GOP primary ad from July in which he repeats Trump slogans and quotes while playing and reading with his children.
“Build the wall,” DeSantis says as his daughter stacks play blocks.
“And then Mr. Trump said, “You’re Fired!” DeSantis says as he reads from Trump’s The Art of the Deal to his son, as the words “Pit bull Trump defender” are shown on screen. “I love that part.”
“Big league, so good!” DeSantis says to his baby in the crib, wearing a “Make America Great Again” shirt.
The ad, which has been seen over 450,000 times on YouTube, led to puzzled reactions from observers as DeSantis battled state agriculture commissioner Adam Putnam for the Republican nomination for governor.
DeSantis told Fox News the ad was meant to be funny and and introduced voters to his family, according to WESH Channel 2.
“For people that are getting upset about it, it just shows they have no sense of humor,” he told Fox News. "And they just totally don't get what we were trying to convey.”
The message, however joking, of total Trump loyalty was in line with his campaign receiving a huge boost from the endorsement of DeSantis by “the big man himself,” which completely upended a primary expected to be a walk for Putnam.
DeSantis, behind in the polls to Democrat Andrew Gillum for most of the general election campaign, ended up winning that race by a slim 32,000-vote margin, though it was a bigger victory than Gov. Rick Scott’s 10,000-vote win over U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson.
The governor-elect has gained mostly good reviews for his decisions since the recount, in which he mostly stayed quiet as officials worked to confirm his lead over Gillum.
While naming prominent Republicans such as former House Speaker Richard Corcoran to key posts such as education commissioner, DeSantis also named Democratic state Rep. Jared Moskowitz as head of the Division of Emergency Management and Democrat Jim Zingale as head of the Department of Revenue.
His choice for Secretary of State, Republican Seminole County elections chief Mike Ertel, has also been notably critical of Trump’s false claim that “millions” voted illegally in the 2016 election and has gained praise from both sides of the aisle.
The biggest controversy during the transition is DeSantis’s claim that Amendment 4, which grants voting rights to former felons, needs to go before the Legislature before it takes effect, despite language stating it takes effect Jan. 8.
slemongello@orlandosentinel.com, 407-418-5920, @stevelemongello, facebook/stevelemongello

Dr. DOROTHY ISRAEL, Ph.D.: 10 Who Make A Difference: New city meant new opportunities for Dorothy Israel

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Last installment in St. Augustine Record's annual "10 Who Make A Difference," about Dr. Dorothy Israel.  Cool Lady. Great profile by Margo Pope.  We miss her writing in the Record and wish they would hire her back on a regular basis.




New city meant new opportunities for Dorothy Israel


New city meant new opportunities for Dorothy Israel
Dr. Dorothy Israel stands in St. Cyprian’s Episcopal Church in St. Augustine. [PETER WILLOTT/THE RECORD]

By Margo C. Pope / Record correspondent
Posted Jan 1, 2019 at 9:14 PM
When Dorothy Headley Israel, better known as “Deeh,” told New York friends and colleagues, she was moving to St. Augustine after retiring from Stony Brook University of New York, they were surprised.

“They thought it was a big joke that I was coming to this small, unknown town,” said the Harlem native. “They thought I would be soon coming back.”

That was 1994. Israel, 94, is well-known today through St. Cyprian’s Episcopal Church, civic organizations, her writing for pleasure and for purpose, mentoring youth, and working for equality. And, she keeps in touch by phone with longtime friends and family across the country.

Weather permitting, she takes two-mile beach walks daily from the beach condo that she and her husband Rudolph bought upon retirement. St. Augustine was his hometown. He died in 2006.

“I got here and found a beautiful city full of horse-drawn carriages that travel along the Matanzas River and it reminded me of cities in Europe,” she said. “And then to be able to walk on the beach every day, it was paradise. I’m glad I came. This is my first home now.”

Rudy liked the beach, too. “He would fish every day,” she said. “When we had visitors, they could have fresh fish for breakfast.”

Israel got to know St. Augustine like a native because the couple connected with his friends and family and she got to hear the stories of growing up, the fun they had, and the dark days for people of color. “His mother used to hide he and his sister under the bed at night,” she said, when trouble was brewing outside their home. She learned of the racial divide, of segregation, of Butler Beach that black entrepreneur Frank Butler developed for blacks, near Crescent Beach, stories of Fort Mose, the 18th century first free black settlement in what are today’s United States, and the heated 1964 civil rights demonstrations that brought Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the city. “It was such a traumatic place, even Dr. King said he would not come back,” she said.

Segregation was in the North, too

DOROTHY HEADLEY “DEEH” ISRAEL

How long have you been in our community?: 25 years, since 1994.

Family information: Husband, Rudolph “Rudy” Israel, a St. Augustine native (passed in 2006).

Occupation: Professor Emerita, School of Social Work, Stony Brook University of New York.

Civic activities: Fort Mose Historical Society, St. Cyprian’s Episcopal Church, Wildflower Clinic (formerly Good Samaritan Health Center), AAUW, Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center, Foot Soldiers Remembrance Project.

Education: Bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Social Work, Atlanta University; Ph.D. in Counseling, Union Institute and University, Ohio.

Honors and awards: EWLI International Women’s Day honoree. St. Johns County Cultural Council ROWITA (Recognition of Outstanding Women in the Arts) Award, 2009. St. Cyprian Episcopal Church, Outdoor Chapel in The Commons was dedicated in honor of Dr. Israel, 2013. Lincolnville Museum & Cultural Center, Living Legend, 2018.

She felt segregation’s impact growing up in Harlem, in college and in her career in social welfare work and mental health services.

A vivid memory stands out for her at Bloomstein’s Department Store in the middle of Harlem. “They did not hire blacks, but blacks shopped there. I went into the store and saw I hat I wanted to buy. I went to try it on and I was told I could not put it on my head. If you were black, you could not try anything on before you bought it.” A local minister, and later Congressman, Adam Clayton Powell led picketing against that store. Israel said they changed their policy barring blacks from trying things on.

On the train from Harlem in the 1940s and bound for Atlanta University in Georgia, she went to the dining car for dinner. She was seated at a table with glass stemware on a white tablecloth. Then, the waiter pulled a curtain around her section, so the white passengers could not see that a black woman was eating in the same dining car.

She said people in the South don’t think of discrimination in the North. “The North had it, but they just didn’t have the signs (posted),” she said.

Israel is philosophical about those incidents today: “I did not let them impact me or cripple me. There’s always been good white people that encouraged me and countered some of the negatives I experienced.”

She believes that, “When people don’t live together, they don’t know each other.”

While discrimination was a low point for her, the work she did in health and social services was fulfilling.


During a college internship, she learned the benefit of play therapy for children and art therapy for all ages in mental health treatments.

Another breakthrough came when she was hired by Brooklyn Psychiatric to lead their clinic in Bedford-Stuyvesant. Clinics were usually run by medical staff. But a policy change provided for a non-medical person to hold the director’s position. She was hired as director but said the staff quit except for a two people. The board, she said, hired new staff for her. “One of my greatest contributions was that I brought mental health services to that community,” she explained.

Israel’s college teaching career included teaching at Columbia University, New York University and Stony Brook University of New York. She holds the rank of Emerita Professor at Stony Brook’s School of Social Welfare.

New city, new opportunities

St. Augustine, her new hometown and nearby communities, gave her new opportunities. She and Rudy connected with a writers’ group after she read about the Hammock Adult Education Center in Flagler County’s writing course. Israel’s background was in counseling and social work, but she had stories to tell and wanted to write them. Rudy had been a copywriter in New York. They signed up. Both had a good time. Her husband, she said, “was a wonderful writer. They loved his writing, the way he described things was so vivid and interesting.”

Now, 18 years later, the nucleus of those writers gathers weekly to discuss writing, to write, and to critique each other’s work. But now, they meet in a member’s home. “We call ourselves the Sea Quills and publish an annual book of our work,” she said. The 2018 volume is Spindriff No. 12.

The Sea Quills are a sounding board for Israel who writes essays, short stories and gives speeches. “They (Sea Quills) have given me the impetus to write,” she said.


She has published a book on growing up in Harlem, “From Harlem to the Sea - A Life Well Lived,” so others will know what it was like. She was the driving force, said historian David Nolan, behind two recent tourism brochures about the city’s African-American history, and about Lincolnville.

In March, she will speak to AAUW, St. Augustine Branch, on “Revisiting History on the Black Experience.”

When she arrived in St. Augustine, she got involved with St. Cyprian’s Episcopal Church. She was instrumental in getting the Good Samaritan Health Clinic established on the church property. Later it moved to West Augustine and changed its name to Wildflower Clinic and expanded its services. She revels in its success.

What motivates her today is the need to get out the “the untold story of black history. That is my mission to do what I can through my writing and my work with the museum (Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center).”

She wants tour trains to go beyond Lincolnville’s fringe, so the historically black community once known as “Africa” will be more appreciated by the city at large and its visitors.

She is on the vision committee of the Fort Mose Historical Society to bring more attention to its history as the first free black town in what are today’s United States.

Commitment is ongoing


Mildred Williams has known Israel for 25 years. “She is a very busy person and that’s what keeps her going,” Williams said. “She brings people in with her writing. She loves organizing things. I would say she is a leader because she likes to get things done.”

They participate in reenactments at Fort Mose during the year. Both were in the Venetian Club, a leadership organization now dissolved. St. Cyprian, because of Israel, now operates a scholarship program.

Khiam’e Fields met Israel when she was a high school student in 2009. She received scholarships from the Venetian Club and then St. Cyprian’s. Israel is her mentor. After graduation from the University of Central Florida, Fields headed west. She is in graduate school in film directing at UCLA.

″‘Dock’ is like a second mother to me,” Fields explained. “She wants to know how I am doing and if she can help. She gives her opinion when I ask for it or when I need it.

“Dr. Israel is a one-of-a-kind person Just look at the history she’s been through and the things that she has done. She is so successful and yet so humble.”

IsraeI is committed to youth. “I tell young people to find something you are interested in,” Israel said. “If you have difficulty learning what your passion is, consult the St. Johns Cultural Council they know all about programs in the community. I like Compassionate St. Augustine, the Ecumenical Food Pantry, or Betty Griffin, Dining with Dignity or, the Interfaith Council.”

Marilyn Wiles, founder of the Enterprising Women Leadership Institute, admires her commitment. What stands out to her about Israel is her “compassion” to others and her “passion” for the community.


Israel’s commitment comes from her mentors. Her mother, Lillian Headley, immigrated from Barbados. She felt it was important to work for the betterment of her family’s new community.

When working on her doctorate in counseling at Union Institute and University, one of her professors, Jean Griffin, who encouraged her.

When asked what she wants her legacy to be, Israel paused before answering: “I tried to help others in the community.”

Given her broad community service, The St. Augustine Record’s 10 Who Make a Difference recognition, surprised her. “I’m pleased by this but there are other people more deserving for this honor,” she said. “I hope they are being honored or will be honored in the near future. I have several names I can give you.”

“I swear to tell the truth:” Lawmaker files bill that would make lying in Legislature a felony. (Florida Phoenix)

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Great idea. Need it here locally in St. Johns County, for County Commission and City Commissions of City of St. Augustine and St. Augustine Beach. Every time I testified before Congress, I was sworn in. Whether on mercury pollution, security clearances or government contractor issues. Sworn testimony is a sine qua non of the legislative process.

Locally, it starts with lying louche lawyer lapdogs for "developers," whom mayors and commission and board chairs permissively  allowed to make all sort of misstatements, NOT under oath, without adequate procedures for cross-examination by citizens or board members.

Then Commissioners and Board members blithely ignore requests to swear in other witnesses.

 This situation stinks.

Three cheers for State Senator Lauren Book of Plantation.  From Florida Phoenix:





“I swear to tell the truth:” Lawmaker files bill that would make lying in Legislature a felony
By Julie Hauserman -January 2, 2019
Florida Phoenix

It’s no secret that the Legislature is a place where lawmakers and lobbyists sometimes – shall we say – stretch the truth to make a point. A South Florida state senator has just filed legislation which would require people who give testimony in the Legislature to take an oath that they’ll tell the truth.

“Any person who addresses a standing or select committee, or a subcommittee thereof, shall first declare that he or she will speak truthfully by taking an oath or affirmation in substantially the following form: ‘Do you swear or affirm that the information you are about to share will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?’ The person’s answer must be noted in the record,” the “Truth in Government Act” reads, in part.

The penalty for lying would be a third-degree felony.

It doesn’t apply to legislators themselves, however. But a legislator (or legislative staffer) caught in a falsehood “is subject to discipline by the presiding officer of the applicable house of the Legislature for making a false statement that he or she does not believe to be true,” the draft bill says.

The legislation was filed by Sen. Lauren Book, a Democrat from Plantation who has been in the Legislature since 2016.

The 2019 Legislature formally convenes in March, but is holding committee meetings to discuss issues and proposed legislation in January and February. The “Truth in Government Act” gets its first public discussion on Monday, Jan. 7, in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

TAGS2019 legislative sessionFlorida LegislatureFlorida SenateLauren BookoathTruth in Government Act
Julie Hauserman
Julie Hauserman
Julie Hauserman has been writing about Florida for more than 30 years. She is a former Capitol bureau reporter for the St. Petersburg (Tampa Bay) Times, and reported for The Stuart News and the Tallahassee Democrat. She was a national commentator for National Public Radio’s Weekend Edition Sunday and The Splendid Table . She has won many awards, including two nominations for the Pulitzer Prize. Her work is featured in several Florida anthologies, including The Wild Heart of Florida , The Book of the Everglades , and Between Two Rivers . Her new book is Drawn to The Deep, a University Press of Florida biography of Florida cave diver and National Geographic explorer Wes Skiles.

CANCELLED -- Failed St. Augustine Mayor Candidate KRIS PHILLIPS' HATE RADIO WFOY LOSES LAURA INGRAHAM PROGRAM (Media Matters for America)

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Finis.





Laura Ingraham’s radio show has ended. The world will be a better place without it.

Unfortunately, Ingraham’s extremism will still be available on her new podcast

Blog ››› ››› GRACE BENNETT


Melissa Joskow / Media Matters

After 17 years of torturing Americans’ ears, Laura Ingraham’s radio show finally came to an end this December. The weekday show has long served as a safe space for the Fox News host and her guests to make cruel jokes, practice racism, demonize immigrants, and push wild conspiracy theories. The world will be better off without it.
Unfortunately, Ingraham’s cruelty and racism will still have a home on her Fox News show and her new podcast beginning next month. But for now, we can bid a happy farewell to a truly awful program by remembering some of its most repulsive moments.

Ingraham’s show bullied and slandered immigrants and refugees constantly

Ingraham fawned over Donald Trump’s bigoted rhetoric on immigration; she defended his calls for a ban on Muslims entering the United States, and even argued that the ban was “not broad enough,” claiming that she would “go farther” and be “even worse than Trump.”
She asserted that “Middle Eastern countries have got to be told… we’re cutting you off,” questioned why the U.S. should allow Muslim immigration ”knowing that we can't tell if an Islamic individual is going to be radicalized," and said the U.S. should only accept refugees “who we can verifiably say are Christians. … But all these other people, they've got to stay in the Middle East.”
She fearmongered about Muslim immigrants as “people who have dual loyalties … whether it's the Quran, or the Quranic way of thinking, versus the loyalties to the United States.”
Ingraham claimed that Trump’s assertion that Mexico is “sending rapists” is true, and stated that Mexicans “have come here to murder and rape our people.”
She parroted Trump in claiming that “nobody has a right to be here except the people who are born here,” and said the United States should shoot deported immigrants if they try to re-enter the country.
After the Trump administration adopted a policy of separating migrant children from their parents at the border, Ingraham compared child detention centers to “a public schoolyard,” and she called it “hilarious” that people were upset about children being held in cages -- after previously ridiculing peoples’ concern for immigrant families torn apart by deportation.
During a segment with far-right extremist and noted Adolf Hitler fan Pat Buchanan, the two comparedimmigration reform to appeasing Hitler.
Ingraham suggested that “we could do a lot to enforce our immigrations laws” by a partial repeal of the 14th amendment “to end birthright citizenship.”
In response to an activist claiming that 1,100 people were going to be deported that day, Ingraham wished, “If only.”
She compared pro-DACA protesters to “wild dogs.”
On 2016 World Refugee Day, Ingraham said “rural towns are now being flooded with these refugees” who are bringing a “litany of infectious diseases” to the U.S. She has also suggested that migrant children may spread drug “resistant forms of TB” to “public school kids across this country,” and she claimed the recent caravan of migrants was bringing “crime” and “disease.”
She complained that “Spanish-language media” are teaching undocumented immigrants “how to avoid deportation.”
She claimed that “Northern Virginia is a problem” because “we have mosques going up. We have a mass influx of illegal immigrants in Virginia. We have mass resettlement of Central America and Mexico in Northern Virginia.”
She hyped fears of terrorism about Muslim refugee women, asking: “What’s underneath that burqa, baby?”
Ingraham insisted that English “should be the national language of this country,” and asserted that immigrants should only be here if they’re “speaking our language.
She complained that “dual immersion classes in Spanish” being taught in U.S. schools make you “think you’re in a foreign country,” and she said that multilingual schools are "costing the good people -- Catholics, Christians -- that’s costing them opportunities and money."
She accused U.S. judges of "aiding and abetting" human traffickers and drug cartels by granting due process to immigrants.
She claimed that “illegal immigration” has led to a “transformation electorally” in American communities.

Ingraham and her guests spread casual racism and bigotry

Ingraham complained that NFL players who kneeled in protest of police brutality were “bratty” and “using the excuse of Black Lives Matter” to “disrespect the country,” and she also claimed that “a lot of these guys are punks.”
She criticized former President Barack Obama’s response to the 2014 Ebola epidemic, claiming that his “core ties to the African continent” were putting public safety at risk. She also suggested Obama was purposely exposing American troops to the Ebola virus to “atone” for colonialism
Ingraham argued that affirmative action is "shafting people who are not of the appropriate color, or background, or ethnicity.” She hosted right-wing commentator Heather Mac Donald on the program, who similarly insistedthat affirmative action “brings in students to schools who are not qualified.”
Ingraham attacked “the toxic effect of Univision and Telemundo,” calling them “Hispanic-centric networks” that “revile the American experience.”
She had a habit of making offensive and extremely stupid comparisons, once comparing a school reciting the Pledge of Allegiance in Arabic to “skinheads” reciting it, and another time comparing the surveillance of mosques to police wearing body cameras.
She noted that she doesn’t “think of Jewish people as minorities because they’re so successful.”
She mocked MSNBC host Jose Diaz-Balart for translating for a Spanish-speaking guest.
She aired a war cry sound effect while complaining that Trump didn’t use a different ethnic slur when calling Sen. Elizabeth Warren [D-MA] “Pocahontas.”
After then-gubernatorial candidate Ron DeSantis (R-FL) warned Florida voters to not “monkey this up” by electing his Black Democratic opponent Andrew Gillum, Ingraham defended him while she played a songcalled “Shock the Monkey.” She also complained that “apparently if you’re white, you just can’t criticize an opponent at all.”
In “celebration” of the 50th anniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech, she usedthe sound of a gunshot to cut off a sound bite of civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis (D-GA), whose skull was infamously fractured by a state trooper while marching with King on "Bloody Sunday" in Selma, AL, in 1965.
She ranted that “shouting in Arabic” on a plane makes people “quite nervous, and for good reason.”
Ingraham’s occasional co-host Raymond Arroyo suggested that money spent on housing migrants should be used in the “inner city … teaching people how to be hygienic, how to be clean.” Ingraham agreed, saying “we're pouring money down a rathole because of an open border.”

Ingraham made wild, baseless claims and pushed conspiracy theories

After the October 2017 mass shooting at a Las Vegas music festival, she suggested that photos of the gunman’s room were staged and that he was in too “poor health” to have acted alone.
Before the 2016 election, Ingraham implied that Hillary Clinton may try to kill then-FBI Director James Comey if she won.
Ingraham pushed a discredited conspiracy theory that a Democratic National Committee staffer was murdered for leaking the hacked 2016 DNC emails.
After Christine Blasey Ford accused then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault, Ingraham argued that “George Soros is involved” because Ford’s “social media was scrubbed.” She also claimed -- without offering any evidence -- that Ford’s accusations were “a left-wing conspiracy.”

She routinely defended those accused of sexual assault and launched chauvinistic and sexist attacks against women

Ingraham viciously attacked Ford and suggested that her “former boyfriends” should be contacted in connection to her accusations against Brett Kavanaugh. She also defended Kavanaugh at length and attempted to make the story about how “precarious” and “unfair” it is to be a man today.
She accused anti-Kavanaugh protesters of being "hopped up on drugs," and said they would have physically assaulted Sen. Susan Collins [R-ME] if given the opportunity.
She cast doubt on credible accusations of child sexual abuse by then-Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, arguing that “just because The Washington Post has decided to take someone out, don't jump on the grave prematurely.”
She complained that Anita Hill, who accused Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment in 1991, is “still dining out” on a “false allegation.”
She suggested that teenage girls should dress modestly to avoid “date rape” and “misogynistic behavior.”
She insisted that “a very compelling case could be made that” the women’s movement for reproductive freedom “has set women back,” and she called Planned Parenthood employees “heinous, Hitlerian freaks.”
During the 2016 election campaign, she complained that Hillary Clinton “always wants to play the damsel in distress,” and argued that a Clinton-Warren ticket would turn off “every male voter in the United States.”
While discussing former First Lady Michelle Obama’s comments on food insecurity in America, Ingraham said that “one of [Obama’s] daughters apparently is not living in a food desert.” The show’s producer later playedQueen’s “Fat Bottomed Girls” during a segment about a fellow Fox pundit calling Michelle Obama fat.
She compared looking at former Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano to looking at “gruesome” pictures of Osama Bin Laden’s corpse.

The show was chronically vicious toward the LGBTQ community, especially transgender people

Ingraham has repeatedly attacked trans people's right to use transgender-inclusive restrooms. She claimedshe doesn’t let her daughter use transgender-inclusive bathrooms by herself and suggested that people should literally wear diapers rather than share restrooms with transgender people.
She claimed that giving hormone treatment to transgender children is “child abuse,” and lamented that schools are teaching that being transgender is “acceptable.”
She questioned whether the military is paying for transgender people to “cut their private parts to death.”
During an appearance on Ingraham’s show, Fox’s Tucker Carlson claimed that transgender equality is just a “solution in search of a problem.”
Ingraham attacked nondiscrimination protections for transgender people, and also claimed that nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people are a “victory against religious liberty” that “Karl Marx would be very happy” to see.
She expressed concern that opponents of same-sex marriage would face discrimination
She likened same-sex marriage to state-validated incest.

Heading into Congress, Michael Waltz urges bipartisan deal on shutdown. (Daytona Beach News Journal)

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I met Congressman-elect Waltz last month at St. Johns County Commission and spoke with him about the proposed St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore. Looking forward to his bipartisan approach to legislation to benefit the people of St. Johns County.


Heading into Congress, Michael Waltz urges bipartisan deal on shutdown.
(Daytona Beach News Journal)









When Michael Waltz raises his right hand and takes the oath of office as Florida’s 6th District congressman Thursday, he enters into Day 13 of a standoff.
The partial federal government shutdown pits President Trump against Democratic leaders assuming power in the 116th Congress. Both the House and Senate late last year approved a stopgap spending bill that Trump refused to sign, as he seeks more money for a wall along the southern U.S. border with Mexico.
Waltz, a Republican, will be in the minority, but he fully intends to work toward one of his campaign planks, finding solutions supported by both sides.
“On the shutdown, we’re going to have to reach a bipartisan agreement,” Waltz said in a telephone interview Wednesday. “I think there’s a compromise to be had there.”
Waltz said he’s looking forward to seeing what proposals Democrats roll out, while also buttressing Trump’s position.
“I appreciate and support the president’s view. We have to have border security. ... I don’t think we can truly reform the legal side of immigration until we reform the border security,” Waltz said.
Trump has offered varying descriptions of what he wants to see but has always returned to the wall he promised in his campaign.
Reacting to an interview given by outgoing Chief of Staff John Kelly, the president tweeted this week: “An all concrete Wall was NEVER ABANDONED, as has been reported by the media. Some areas will be all concrete but the experts at Border Patrol prefer a Wall that is see through (thereby making it possible to see what is happening on both sides). Makes sense to me!”
Waltz said a wall alone won’t do the job, noting instances where smugglers have tunneled from one country to the other, creating a pipeline of people and drugs. He prefers “a holistic system including barriers,” and said the security piece needs to be in place before other aspects of immigration reform can be tackled.
“Even if we came to an agreement on the legal side today, whether that’s visas, or a pathway to citizenship for DACA recipients, we’re going to be in the same place if we don’t secure the border,” he said.
Waltz also said he intends to ask the House clerk to withhold his congressional pay as long as the shutdown continues.
A busy time
Since his election Nov. 6 over Democrat Nancy Soderberg, Waltz — a St. Augustine Beach resident — made the rounds in his district, which covers all of Volusia and Flagler counties, plus portions of St. Johns and Lake.
He’s hired as district director retired Army Brig. Gen. Ernest Audino, a Port Orange resident, and interviewed for staff both locally and in Washington, where because of the national blue wave, Democrats gained 39 House seats, making lots of Republican staff members free agents.

LATEST AUDIO

“Fortunately for me, unfortunately for the GOP, there’s a lot of staff talent out there,” Waltz said. “It’s a good problem for me to have.”
The congressman-elect said he’s met with many of the Republicans who helped him get elected as well well as some stakeholders such as Daytona Regional Chamber of Commerce executives to talk about the possibility of using economic opportunity zones to attract new investment. He met with a Stetson University water expert, media figures and local and county government officials including DeLand Mayor Bob Apgar and Volusia County Council Vice-Chair Deb Denys.
Back home, Waltz has already been targeted by a group of his election opponent’s supporters. The Indivisible group is planning a rally at his Port Orange office in support of a democracy reform package House Democrats are expected to introduce. These include changes to voting access, money in politics and anti-corruption measures, according to Becky Berman, a spokeswoman.
In Washington, Waltz has attended numerous House orientation events and training sessions and spent part of New Year’s Eve visiting wounded warriors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center with Ryan McCarthy, undersecretary of the Army.
He went on Fox News to talk about a murder charge filed against a Green Beret, Maj. Matthew Golsteyn, for the 2010 death of an Afghanistan man. Waltz, a who achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Army, spoke with Fox, the New York Times and PBS about what former military members bring to Congress.
And he delicately took issue with Trump’s announcement he was ordering a full and rapid withdrawal of 2,000 U.S. troops from Syria. “I’ve agreed with almost all of the President’s foreign policy decisions, but not this one,” Waltz wrote on Facebook on Dec. 21. “We can fight these wars in places like Kabul or places like Kansas City. We fight them over there so they don’t follow us home.”
Realistic goals
Waltz said he’s focused on providing district services, getting constituents help.
One of his interests, commercial space opportunities for southeast Volusia County, led him to bring together the National Space Foundation and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, and he’s also made contact with Burns Science and Technology Charter School in Edgewater.
He’s also studying transportation issues with an eye toward a reauthorization bill that’s due in 2020.
For his talk of bipartisanship, Waltz didn’t exclude the reality for a Republican freshman into a House controlled by Democrats. 
“We’re stepping into the minority. Legislating from the minority is incredibly difficult,” he said, adding he expects likely incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to keep a “tight grip” on floor activities.
He has requested to serve on committees he believes can act in a bipartisan way to set policy.
Pelosi and Republican Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy have begun making those committee assignments.
“I’ve put in for transportation, veterans affairs, armed services and science, space and technology,” Waltz said. “As a freshman, you get the last of the picks.”

DeSantis administration taking shape, but vacancies remain (Gainesville Sun/GateHouse)

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Here's Florida's next Governor, RONALD DION DeSANTIS, b. September 14, 1978, sitting in the White House with President DONALD JOHN TRUMP. Note: Gov.-elect DeSANTIS has his nose in the air, in a typically snooty posture. TRUMP has his arms folded across his chest, in a typically defensive posture. DeSANTIS was voted the biggest TRUMP suck-up of 2018 by CNBC panelists. 

May DeSANTIS learn that we don't want any TRUMP suck-ups in Florida government.

We need real leaders who solve real problems, rather than worshipping at the vile altar of racism, sexism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, environmental piggery, oligopolistic hegemony, waste, fraud, abuse, misfeasance, malfeasance, nonfeasance, flummery, dupery, nincompoopery, Trumpery and campaigns tinged with the eau d' Treason.

From the Gainesville Sun:





DeSantis administration taking shape, but vacancies remain



Florida Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis sits with President Donald Trump as the president listens to a question from a reporter during a meeting with newly elected governors in the Cabinet Room of the White House on Dec. 13. [Evan Vucci/The Associated Press/File]

By John Kennedy
GateHouse Capital Bureau

Posted Jan 2, 2019 at 11:59 AM
Updated Jan 2, 2019 at 11:11 PM

Health care and tourist agencies are among those with vacancies at the top as Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis readies for his Jan. 8 inauguration.

TALLAHASSEE — Days away from being sworn in, Republican Gov.-elect Ron DeSantis has filled a few key spots in his administration, but looks certain to begin his term still in the market for candidates to head agencies likely under the microscope this year.

Health care and tourist agencies are among those with vacancies at the top as DeSantis readies for his Jan. 8 inauguration. DeSantis ally, House Speaker Jose Oliva, R-Miami, has already said he wants to shrink state health care spending, and tourism could draw heightened scrutiny in an economy showing signs of slowing.

“It’s more important that he get it right than he do it quickly,” Senate budget chief Rob Bradley, R-Fleming Island, said of DeSantis’s effort at building a new administration. “I’m not concerned at all with the pace of the appointments.”

It takes most new Florida governors weeks into a term to flesh out administration posts and DeSantis has named bosses for about one-third of the roughly two dozen state agencies under his control.

Included is at least one prominent pick — former House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O’Lakes, who became state Education Commissioner after DeSantis’s selection of him recently was formalized by the state Board of Education.

Another notable pick coming just weeks after DeSantis’s narrow — and recounted — victory over Democrat Andrew Gillum was a new state elections official. Seminole County Elections Supervisor Michael Ertel was named last week Florida secretary of state.

DeSantis also has reached out some to Democrats, naming state Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Coral Springs, to head the Department of Emergency Management, and longtime legislative staffer Jim Zingale to lead the Revenue Department.

He’s also retained a few bosses who served under outgoing Gov. Rick Scott, with Barbara Palmer to continue serving as leader of the state’s Agency for Persons with Disabilities, Lottery Secretary Jim Poppell remaining and Visit Florida’s Ken Lawson staying on but in a new role as executive director of the Department of Economic Opportunity.

Lawson’s departure leaves a temporary void at Visit Florida, the tourism agency, which Scott had touted for its role in helping the state reach record tourist levels the past few years.

Tourist spending accounts for 13 percent of state sales tax collections — which, in turn, represents more than three-quarters of Florida’s general revenue. And any downturn in tourists would take dollars away from what the state has available for schools, health care and other government services.

While Lawson’s departure won’t immediately affect Visit Florida’s plans, there are some warning signs in sight for the agency, with a cooling economy possibly discouraging travelers from other states and a strong U.S. dollar poised to blunt the number of international tourists coming to Florida.

In December, Bradley’s Appropriations Committee was told by state economists in a report that “tourism-related revenue losses pose the greatest potential risk” to Florida’s bottom line.

Health and human services eat up 42 percent of the state’s $89 billion budget, by far the largest portion of spending. With HHS costs climbing faster than the rest of state spending, Oliva, the new House speaker, wants to take steps to rein it in.

In a routine request, DeSantis asked for and received resignation letters from all of Scott’s agency heads, effective by end-of-business on inauguration day. Among those departing are the state Surgeon General, Celeste Philip, who leads the Department of Health, and Justin Senior, secretary of the Agency for Health Care Administration, which oversees Medicaid, a big driver of rising health costs.

They’ve not yet been replaced.


Adding to the health care uncertainty is the future of the Affordable Care Act. Florida led the nation last year with 1.7 million people enrolled in Obamacare, which was ruled unconstitutional by a Texas federal judge in December.

Outgoing Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi was among the 19 Republican attorney generals and a governor who sued to have Obamacare thrown out. This week, the judge who invalidated the law said it could remain on the books while his ruling is appealed.

But with Florida expected to again lead the nation in enrollees even as the program is in limbo, health care appears set to become a central issue for the 2019 legislative session, which begins in March.

Oliva has said he wants to lift health care regulations to promote such alternatives as tele-medicine and direct primary care, reducing the role insurers play in guiding treatment.

Oliva, who was an early endorser of DeSantis, said he expects to have an ally in the incoming governor.

“If health care access and affordability is your main concern,” Oliva told House members in November, “use your power to lift the government-granted monopolies and market-restricting regulations which have led to widespread price-gouging on our citizens and placed an unsustainable burden on our state.”

Probable cause hearing scheduled Jan. 25 for Andrew Gillum ethics case. (Tallahassee Democrat)

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I wrote to Mayor Gillum and his lawyer, Barry Richard, this morning, requesting they request the Ethics Commission probable cause hearing be opened to the public. Here is the letter:


Dear Mayor Gillum and Mr. Richard:
1. I proudly supported Andrew Gillum for Governor. I live in St. Augustine, a majority-Democratic small city in a majority-Republican county.
2. May I suggest that Mayor Gillum kindly request-- through his learned counsel, Mr. Barry Richard -- the live video streaming of the Florida Ethics Commission probable cause hearing on January 25, 2019?
3. Under current Florida Ethics Commission practice and procedure, probable cause hearings are neither videotaped nor video live streamed. Why?
4. They are also NOT open to the public. Why? Cui bono? Compare Florida Constitution, Article I, Sec. 24, adopted by vote of 83% of 1992 voters.
5. As Thomas Jefferson said, "a public office is a public trust." As James Madison said, "A popular Government, without popular information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy; or, perhaps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance: And a people who mean to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives."
6. By copy of this e-mail, to Governor-elect DeSantis and our State Senator and State Representatives from St. Johns County, I request that ethics reform include opening probable cause hearings to the public and news media.
7. Bipartisan support for ethics reform is essential in the 2019 Florida legislature. Who among us would disagree?
Thank you.
With kindest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Ed Slavin
Box 3084
St. Augustine, Florida 32085-3084
904-377-4998
www.cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com
www.edslavin.com

Here's the Tallahassee Democrat hearing on the CLOSED January 25, 2019 Ethics Commission probable cause hearing:


Probable cause hearing scheduled Jan. 25 for Andrew Gillum ethics case




A state ethics investigation into former Mayor Andrew Gillum's trip to Costa Rica and accepting tickets to the Broadway hit musical "Hamilton"— both arranged by former friend and lobbyist Adam Corey — comes to a head next month.
The Florida Commission on Ethics will hold aprobable cause hearing Jan. 25 to decide on a recommendation from the state prosecutor assigned to the case, said Tallahassee businessman Erwin Jackson, who filed the complaint against Gillum. He informed the Tallahassee Democrat Monday after receiving a notice from the commission.
Barry Richard, Gillum's attorney, confirmed there is a hearing Jan. 25, "not because they found probable cause but to determine if there is probable cause." 
Gillum and his attorney will be at the hearing and will be given an opportunity to comment. Richard said he has received the recommendation but refused to comment on it.
"I'm not going to do anything until they make a probable cause determination," Richard said.
Once the Ethics Commission makes its determination, the decision and case material will become public.
The complaint centers around a May 2016 trip to Costa Rica arranged by Corey that included Gillum, his wife, and lawyer/lobbyist Sean Pittman, and a trip to New York City several months later when Corey arranged for Gillum a boat ride and tickets to see "Hamilton."
Who paid for those outings and whether they amount to a violation of state law is the focus of the Ethics Commission, which subpoenaed the records from Corey and his attorney, Chris Kise of Tallahassee.
Kise shared those records with the public in late October, two weeks before the general election. Many political analysts think the release of the documents, which link Gillum to three men later identified as undercover FBI agents, may have cost him the governor's race.
Under Florida law, public officials such as Gillum are required to report gifts valued over $100, though there are exceptions for certain gifts, including those given by family members. Gillum never disclosed any gifts from his trip to New York.

Officials are barred from accepting any gift given to influence a vote or other official action. They also can’t take gifts over $100 from a vendor doing business with their agency or a lobbyist who has come before their agency over the preceding year. The statutory definition for gifts include tickets to events and lodging.
Gillum released receipts and bank records showing he paid for his and his wife's airfare, food and beverage costs, and their share of the hotel accommodations in Costa Rica. 
“Mayor Gillum and his wife paid cash for their portion of the group lodging … and paid by credit card for other outings,” the campaign said. If pro-rated equally, their share should have been about $935 for the two of them.
During that trip, Corey sent a calendar invite to Gillum scheduling a May 16 introduction at the Edison between himself, Gillum and "Mike Miller," an undercover FBI agent posing as a developer from Atlanta.
Corey’s text messages show that he and Miller were planning out-of-town trips with Gillum at the same time city and county commissioners were considering expanding the Frenchtown/Southside Community Redevelopment Agency. 
It was something Miller wanted to see done. Expanding the CRA lines would help him potentially get millions of dollars in building grants and tax credits for a development he was floating on South Monroe Street.
On July 8, 2016, Miller texted Corey to discuss arrangements for trips with Gillum. They discussed the possibility of going to Las Vegas. After getting available dates from Gillum, they settled on a trip to New York City in mid-August.
Five days later, on July 13, 2016, city commissioners, Gillum included, voted unanimously to expand the boundaries of the CRA to the east side of South Monroe Street. Six days after that, on July 19, 2016, Miller again reached out to Corey.
The text messages also show that Gillum asked Corey for a hotel room for Aug. 11, 2016, his last night in the Big Apple. When Corey told Gillum that Miller and his “crew” had tickets for him to go see the musical “Hamilton,” the mayor responded by saying, “Awesome news.” Gillum, Corey and Miller also toured around the Statue of Liberty on a boat ride that included catering and cocktails.
Gillum and his attorney said Gillum got the “Hamilton” tickets from his brother, Marcus Gillum, who was along during the New York City trip. They also say the mayor stayed only one night at the downtown Millennium Hotel, and it was in his brother’s room.
“I don’t think there was a violation of anything,” Richard said.
Contact Schweers at jschweers@tallahassee.com. Follow him on Twitter @jeffschweers.
More coverage:

New bill would ban smoking on Florida beaches. (Orlando Weekly)

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I agree with California Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr., who vetoed similar Draconian legislation three years in a row, in 2016, 2017 and 2018.   Four-term California Governor Jerry Brown was elected California's youngest governor in the 1970s. He was elected California's oldest governor, just ending his fourth term now.  In between he was Mayor of Oakland (which Gertrude Stein once pronounced as having "no there there") and California State Attorney General.

Jerry Brown knows a bad bill and a silly shibboleth when he sees it.  He vetoed it thrice.

The no-tobacco on beaches bill is an idea whose time has not come.

On this issue, I also agree with ACLU, which opposes this bill in Florida.

Perhaps some restrictions on smoking in public are appropriate, as in picnic and play areas in state parks and beaches.

A tribute to illiberal liberal control freaky, the unconstitutionally overbroad legislation is not necessary.

If it were ever adopted, I fully expect that it would be disproportionately enforced against low-income and minority citizens, embroiling them in the misdemeanor criminal injustice system.

Tobacco is a legal product.

While its consumption in workplaces is banned by Florida's Constitution, its use on beaches is not established to be a public health hazard and is not a priority for legislation.

This legislation is an invitation to litigation, which the State of Florida would lose.

Having banned Gay marriage, lost in courts, and obliged to pay nearly $500,000 in attorney fees, the State of Flori-DUH would be wise to respect the United States Constitution and the Bill of Rights before adopting unjust laws.

File this dumb 'ole bill under the category of irrelevant, a tribute to our Florida Democratic legislators being ineffectual and insouciant to the real problems of our state.

From Orlando Weekly:



New bill would ban smoking on Florida beaches

Posted By  on Wed, Jan 2, 2019 at 2:04 pm

PHOTO VIA ADOBE IMAGES

A new bill aims at keeping Florida beaches from turning into ashtrays. 

Sarasota House Republican Joe Gruters wants to outlaw smoking on all public beaches through a newly introduced bill, SB218, which would fine first-time violators $25 or 10 hours of community service. 

If passed, the bill, which doesn't seem to include any language about vaping, would go into effect July 1. 

This isn't the first time someone has tried to snuff out smoking on the beach. In 2017, a law that was in place for five years and banned smoking in Sarasota County public parks and beaches was tossed by a judge who declared it unconstitutional on the grounds that local jurisdictions couldn't ban something that was legal on a state level. 

On top of that, civil rights leaders, predominantly the ACLU of Florida, argued that the law selectively targeted homeless people. 

Florida isn't alone in its pursuit of buttless sand. New Jersey recently banned smoking on its public beaches, a punishment that comes with a hefty $250 fine.  







Nonprofit staff and tour guides are keeping South Florida national parks clean. (Miami Herald)

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Here in St. Augustine, our Nation's Oldest European-founded city, the interiors of the Castillo de San Marcos and Fort Matanzas remain CLOSED by edict of President DONALD JOHN TRUMP.

The Castillo is our largest tourist attraction.

Its being closed damages our tourist economy here in our Nation's Oldest City.

Last year, I asked Governor RICHARD LYNN SCOTT and local government officials about procedures to help keep the Castillo and Fort Matanzas open, including a small amount of state funds, as elsewhere (preferably bed tax funds, paid by tourists).

No response.

Pitiful.

This article from the Miami Herald shows what happens when people work together for the common good:



Duration 2:53
Botanist, Roger Hammer gives a brief tour of a trail blocked by fallen trees and a saltwater marsh with damage done to a large Cowhorn Orchid knocked over by high winds from Hurricane Irma at Everglades National Park on Jan. 23, 2018. 
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