Ron DeSantis
Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2023 3:47 pm
Yale admitted someone who referred to Anthony Ray as Sir Mixes-a-Lot? ![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
In theory, it might seem easy for colleges and universities in Florida to recruit top-tier academic talent. After all, the Sunshine State has warm weather, nice beaches, low taxes and a big, diverse population. The recruiting process practically takes care of itself.
But in practice, it’s not quite that simple. As many scholars have no doubt noticed, Ron DeSantis, Florida’s ambitious Republican governor, has already denounced college majors he disagrees with, suggesting publicly that if he disapproves of your undergraduate field of study, you should simply relocate to some other state. DeSantis has similarly waged a strange campaign against “woke” ideas in higher education, ended on-campus diversity programs, and targeted tenure.
As The Tampa Bay Times reported, the state’s Republican administration was warned that such tactics would push some professors to take positions in other states, while discouraging other top professors from considering Florida schools. The local newspaper’s research suggests the warnings had merit and “some signs of an exodus are apparent.”
The Tampa Bay Times reviewed records showing an upward tick in staff departures at some of Florida’s largest universities. And, as the Board of Governors discovered this spring, doubts about the state’s academic workplace are spreading fast. Matthew Lata, a music professor at Florida State University, told board members that candidates were turning down positions in his college “because of the perceived anti-higher education atmosphere in the state.”
To be sure, some of the evidence of a so-called brain drain is anecdotal, but it’s nevertheless difficult to dismiss out of hand. At the University of South Florida, for example, the Times pointed to a candidate for a position in the philosophy department who “took a job at a lower-ranked school in another state, pointing to Florida’s political climate.”
Walmart Jackie Kennedy.
You have to earn the right to be ignorant in Florida.It's really nice that the pubs want to save our kids from evil story readers while they're doing everything they can to arm every crazy in the country with weapons of mass killings so much that guns are for the first time in US history the number 1 killer of kids. I really don't think conservatives understand what Christianity means.
Moar scary Casey DeSantis.Casey DeSantis takes center stage, and yikes
Oh STFU Casey.Tiredretiredlawyer wrote: ↑Wed Jul 12, 2023 11:51 am https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/7 ... -and-yikes
Moar scary Casey DeSantis.Casey DeSantis takes center stage, and yikes
Much more snarky fun at the link: https://politizoom.com/rumpelsantis-sno ... da-crisis/RumpelSantis Snoozes His Way Through Another Florida Crisis
The redundancy would be cloying if the sheer tone deaf stupidity of it wasn’t so hilarious. The Runt Rasputin of Florida, the GOP Sultan of Somnolence, is trying to sleep walk his way through yet another Florida crisis while he runs around the country like Indiana Jones, desperately searching for a clue.
Here’s the 411. Farmers Insurance today became the 4th major insurance company to announce they are saying goom-bye to the state of Florida, leaving some 100,000 Florida residents sans home insurance coverage. DeathSantis’s automatic response? WOKE Farmers is about to become the Bud Light on insurance companies.
Wait, wait, WHAT?! What does that sh*t even mean? All Farmers did was to announce they were pulling out of Florida. Nowhere in the statement did they give him sh*t about his Don’t Say Gay law, hammer DeSantis for turning Florida schools into the 1937 Berlin school system, or his lame habit of rewarding people who had spent four months walking from El Salvador to Texas with a private jet ride to the luxury island of Martha’s Vineyard. In fact Farmers went out of its way to ensure all and sundry that this was purely a business decision.
Let me make this as simple as I can, so that even someone like DeSantis, with an anaesthesia needle permanently implanted in his arm get get it through the drug induced sleep. Not every single adverse thing that happens to either you personally, or the state of Florida is a direct reflection on your Cro-Magnon ideology and policies!
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'Woke' really has simply become the catch all for 'people who hurt our feelings'raison de arizona wrote: ↑Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:32 pm WOKE Farmers is about to become the Bud Light on insurance companies.
The funniest part of this story is not in the satirical article, but the actual news report. DeSantis said that the insurers are going to come back after the current hurricane season. Yeah, that's a cargo cult belief that the markets will magically provide somehow...raison de arizona wrote: ↑Thu Jul 13, 2023 2:32 pmRumpelSantis Snoozes His Way Through Another Florida Crisis
Farmers Insurance today became the 4th major insurance company to announce they are saying goom-bye to the state of Florida, leaving some 100,000 Florida residents sans home insurance coverage.
To prove DeSantis is full of poppycock, one needs look no further than what happened after hurricane Andrew. Some national carriers left and never came back. Allstate is the one I am most familiar with as I was doing consulting for them. The claims closing mandate was R&R (remove and replace) -- no nickle and diming policy holders -- and then left the market.
Rising seas, fires, and outdated government policies threaten a repeat of the subprime mortgage meltdown
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A basic problem will remain: The climate risks that are inherent in places like California's Sierra Nevada foothills and coastal Florida are not being reflected in housing prices and insurance rates. Flaws in the market and largely invisible government subsidies are keeping costs artificially low and contributing to those regions' attractiveness to buyers. In 2021, researchers found that houses in flood zones around the United States are overvalued by $44 billion; a year later, the actuarial firm Milliman put that number at $520 billion. The real figure is likely somewhere in between, but it's undeniably huge—and neither of those studies included homes exposed to potential fire, heat, or drought.
Climate change's impact on the housing market is in many ways an economics issue; it involves supply and demand, market signals, subsidies, and incentives. At its heart, however, this is a deeply human problem, one propelled less by giant, impersonal forces than by our individual efforts to create a good life for ourselves and to forge a connection to place and a sense of home.
Those powerful desires for belonging drive us—but only so far. When the possibility of disaster grows too great, or when weather-related nuisances become a regular thing, people eventually leave. Real estate experts say that if that were to occur at a large scale and many homeowners abandoned their mortgages, the United States could experience a housing crisis that rivals the 2008 market meltdown and lands squarely in the laps of US taxpayers, hurting low-income people in particular.
I jumped out of bed, ran into the office and looked up our voter registrations in the Lee County site and, sure enough, no mail-in ballot request. I immediately updated them (again). Thanks to DuhSantis, the request now has to be renewed after every general election. Boy, that's gonna sting when a bunch of people realize they missed the deadline to enroll and are going to have to stand in line to vote.Hundreds of thousands of vote-by-mail requests erased from Florida’s system
Most everything has an expiration date, but one thing you may not have expected to expire was your vote-by-mail ballot.
NBC2 has learned hundreds of thousands of vote-by-mail requests have been wiped out of the system in every county in the state.
This means most of us right now will not receive a ballot in the upcoming March primary.
Lee County would like to have about 250,000 vote-by-mail requests in its system, but currently only has 23,000.