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Guest Columns

An Uncomfortable Question: Are Your Death Papers in Order?

May 29, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

In the wake of Rebekah McCloud learning of the death of a friend of 30 years, her friend’s family called a number of times to ask if she knew where she kept her “papers”–life insurance policies, will, deed to the house, bank-account information, etc., which made McCloud think about her own papers. They were not in the order they should be in.

On the Road to Marriage Equality, Florida Slams Against the Worst of Homophobia

May 22, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

Florida is nearing what could be a major step forward on marriage equality. But with awmakers like Charles Van Zant, we have some ugly reminders that the ignorance, prejudice and downright stupidity that plagued us in a dark past, are still alive and unwell today, writes Daniel Tilson.

Florida’s Deepest Pockets: The Best Legislature Money Can Buy

May 20, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

From blocking debate on equal pay for equal work for women, to a head-in-the-sand approach to protecting our environment, the list of issues ignored by this legislature is as long as it is indefensible, argues Mark Ferrulo.

Charlie Crist on Ending the Cuba Embargo: Not Flip-Flopping, But Facing Reality

May 19, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Crist wants to lift the 53-year-old U.S. trade embargo on Cuba. He hasn’t flipped soft on the Cuban government, which he calls “oppressive,” “totalitarian,” and “wrong.” He just says that the embargo hasn’t worked and that it’s insanity to keep doing the same thing and expecting a different result, argues Stephen L. Goldstein.

Sheriff Manfre on Medical Marijuana: “I Am Receptive to the Arguments Favoring the Amendment’s Passage”

May 9, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

“For me,” Flagler County Sheriff Jim Manfre writes, “it comes down to whether medical marijuana has a medically beneficial effect and if it could help my Mom or any of our loved ones from the debilitating side effects of radiation treatments or the other diseases it claims to affect.”

Voucher Scams: Floridians Should Be Fighting the Privatization of Public Schools

May 6, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 30 Comments

We’re decades into a war waged by shadowy business interests and religious groups, working through “cooperative” legislators and governors to gradually undermine most of the state’s public schools and ultimately privatize them, argues Daniel Tilson.

“Growing Up Fisher” Is Perpetuating Stereotypes About Blind People

April 28, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

The cast of Growing Up Fisher, led by J. K. Simmons and Jenna Elfman. stereotype blindness

“It’s hard for me not to cringe,” writes Kathi Wolfe, a legally blind writer, when the main character on Growing Up Fisher “does things that most blind people in real life would rarely, if ever, do. He hits cars in crosswalks with his white cane, checks his guide dog into a restaurant cloakroom, chops down trees with a chainsaw, and takes his clients’ cars for rides.”

Progress Florida Launches Executive Accountability Project as Culture of Secrecy Pervades Scott Administration

April 23, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The culture of self-serving deal-making that grips many of our state capitals has operated essentially in secret, relying on tactics to avoid Government in the Sunshine laws and a lack of public attention. The Executive Accountability Project will focus on providing the public a never-before-seen look at the inner workings of how their elected officials are conducting “the people’s” business behind closed doors.

Corruption Theorem: Money as Speech and the Supreme Court’s Death Blow to Democracy

April 7, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

We’ve come a long way from the days of Lawton Chiles, who won his election for governor despite limiting contributions to $10 a pop. There is no longer any bidding limit on the vast auction block American politics has become since, writes Martin Dyckman.

The Problem With “Step Up for Students,” Florida’s Voucher Jockey

March 24, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Step Up For Children CEO Doug Tuthill is shameless about the way his organization–the administrative agent for Florida’s school voucher program–spends lavishly on political races, which may explain why a Senate proposal to vastly expand the voucher program this year foundered.

After the Attack: A Pit Bull Owner Speaks In Defense of Second Chance Rescue

March 18, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 32 Comments

In the wake of a pit bull’s–or a pit bull mix’s–attack on two young children at Second Hand Rescue last week, a dog owner who took possession of a pit bull that had been rescued and rehabilitated by Second Hand Rescue writes in defense of the Bunnell animal shelter.

If It’s Economic Growth You Want, Raising the Minimum Wage Crushes Wall Street Bonuses Every Time

March 15, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

If the $26.7 billion Wall Streeters pulled in on their bonuses last year had instead gone to minimum wage workers, our economy would be expected to grow by about $32.3 billion — more than triple the $10.4 billion boost expected from the Wall Street bonuses.

Sheriff Jim Manfre: How To Restore Common Sense to Stand Your Ground

March 13, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

The public’s valid concern over the vigilante-style actions of certain people who have watched too many Western movies should be dealt with through legislative action, argues Sheriff Jim Manfre, starting with a definition of self-defense that doesn;t leave its determination in the perpetrator’s hands.

Marco Rubio Flirts With Immigration Reform Then Capitulates to the Lunatic Fringe

March 11, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

Marco Rubio's star has dimmed. (Glyn Lowe)

Rubio placed a dismal seventh at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in a straw poll of likely GOP presidential hopefuls, where his kind of immigration talk doesn’t sit well with the GOP fringe, political or lunatic, writes Andrew Skerritt.

Politicians’ Pot Dilemma: Whether To Inhale Florida’s Medical Marijuana Joint

February 25, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Pols' pot question. (Arbri Shameti)

The elevation of medical marijuana to a theological level is not unique to Florida. Many legislators from Georgia to Kentucky to Iowa have invoked conversations with God as they came to embrace medical pot.

Memo to Florida Legislature: Quit Bashing Public-Employee Pensions

February 20, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 18 Comments

A determined cohort of elected officials in our Legislature is trying to turn working and retired people against each other, to better the odds of a dangerous bill becoming destructive law. If ever there were a legislative wolf disguised in sheep’s clothing of “fiscal responsibility,” this would be that perpetually hungry beast, argues Daniel Tilson.

Neither Marx Nor Hannity: Pope Francis’s Cool Embrace of Simplicity

February 15, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Even for a pope as refreshingly humble and open-minded as Francis, it’s too much to expect that he will remake the worldwide Catholic Church into one big hippie commune, argues Cary McMullen. Those on the political left may eventually be just as disappointed in him as those on the political right.

Stand Your Ground: Florida is Not My Castle. And It’s Not Yours, Either.

February 11, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 34 Comments

The right to stand one’s ground against aggression in one’s home is unquestioned, but, argues Julie Delegal, in public, spaces must be shared, peacefully. The castle doctrine cannot be extended to cover the entire state, as Florida’s Stand Your Ground law does.

Arrested For Felony Child Abuse and Pot Possession: The Mother’s Account

February 5, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 47 Comments

An image contributed and marked by Sophia Zhudro, showing where her vehicle was parked when she was arrested on Jan. 24 for marijuana possession and child abuse.

Sophia Zhudro is the 30-year-old resident of Palm Coast’s B-Section who was arrested on Jan. 24 for marijuana possession as she was parked with her 15-month-old on the side of a residential street in her neighborhood. She tells her side of the story, taking issue with the way the incident was related by police.

Magpul Gun Company Mutes Its Connection To Sandy Hook, and Media Comply

February 1, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 23 Comments

During the gun-safety debate in the Colorado Legislature, Magpul threatened to take its 200 jobs and flee Colorado if gun-safety laws were put in place. (Joe Cereghino)

After rushing to every microphone in Colorado during a battle against gun control, Magpul had nothing to say to reporters about its connection to the Newtown shooting, even when photos of its magazines, used by the shooter, were released in December.

Martin Luther King’s Nightmare: The Inequality Behind Forbes’ Richest 400

January 19, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

The net worth of just 400 billionaires is on par with the collective wealth of our more than 14 million African- American households. Both groups possess some $2 trillion, about three percent of our national net worth, an economic injustice Martin Luther King would have decried, argues Bob Lord.

The Slow-Motion Lynching Of President Barack Obama

January 10, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 56 Comments

If this country will lynch a brilliant, civil, kind, humble, compassionate, moderate, articulate, black intellectual we’re lucky enough to have in the White House, argues Frank Schaeffer, we’ll lynch anyone. What chance does an anonymous black man pulled over in a traffic stop have of fair treatment when the former editor of the Harvard Law Review is being lynched?

Florida Hospital Flagler CEO: State Must Extend Medicaid to Working Poor

January 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

The Florida Legislature still has the opportunity this year to draw down $51 billion in federal dollars already sent to Washington to help pay the cost of health insurance for those who cannot afford it, argues Floridfa Hospital Flagler CEO Ken Mattison.

Solar Panel Users as Freeloaders: ALEC Network’s State Lobbyists Attack Homeowner and Business Subsidies

December 28, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

According to the American Legislative Exchange Council, a conservative network better known as ALEC, our solar panels make us “free riders.” What? Yes, according to ALEC, an organization that specializes in getting the right-wing agenda written into state laws, people like me who invest in energy-efficiency and shrinking our carbon footprints ought to be penalized, writes Isaiah J. Poole.

In Defense of Net Neutrality: How To Keep Biggest Internet Providers From Running Amok

December 17, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Without net neutrality, the Web would look a lot like cable, with the most popular content available only on certain tiers or with certain providers: Imagine AT&T as the exclusive home of Netflix and Comcast as the sole source of YouTube.

Nelson Mandela, 1918-2013
Forgive, But Don’t Forget

December 5, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Nelson Mandela, one of the towering figures of the 20th century and the liberator of South Africa from apartheid, died today–Dec. 5–at 8:50 p.m. in Johannesburg. He was 95. Here are exts from his own pen, which speak more eloquently than obituaries about his vision for a world of equality, human rights and dignity unobscured by illusions.

Don’t Slash Government Spending. Increase It.

December 1, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

One of the biggest common misunderstandings is that governments are like households, which need to tighten their spending when times are tough. Actually, governments and households work in opposite ways. Governments can and should spend more when times are tough.

Obama’s Free Press Problem: Why Reporters in the U.S. Now Need Protection

November 29, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

obama free press repression reporters

The Obama administration has made the most concerted effort since the Nixon years to intimidate officials from talking to a reporter. Paul Steiger, Paul Steiger recipient of this year’s the Burton Benjamin Memorial award from the Committee to Protect Journalists, argues for a response.

Why Florida Should Embrace Common Core: A Conservative Perspective

November 26, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

“I believe in Common Core State Standards, believed in them decades before they existed, and desperately want them for my grandchildren, their children and the future of this great nation,” writes Nancy Smith, the conservative editor of Sunshine State News. “If I’d been an educator, I might have invented them.”

The Trouble With Veterans Day

November 11, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 27 Comments

It’s hard to see how, if a war is unjust, it can be heroic to wage it. So it’s flat-out preposterous to claim that everyone who has ever been in the U.S. military is a hero, argues Arnold Oliver, a Vietnam veteran who finds it troubling that Veterans Day has devolved into a hyper-nationalistic worship service of militarism.

A Modest Crime-Prevention Proposal: If You Want to Raise a Child, First, Get a License

November 4, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

Jim McClellan has an idea that will reduce all types of crime and violence without explicitly infringing on the Constitution in the process. What I propose are some tough new restrictions on people in this country who want to have and rear kids.

Marco Rubio’s Slimy Flip-Flop Against Judge William Thomas

October 30, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

Sen. Marco Rubio is blocking President Barack Obama’s nomination of Miami-Dade County Circuit Court Judge William Thomas to a seat on the federal bench for the Southern District of Florida, even though Rubio himself recommended Thomas to Obama previously.

Disabled But Employed, Or Employable: What Businesses Can Do To Break Down Barriers

October 17, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Stewart Marchman Act’s Enrichment Program’s 150 participants in Palm Coast and Daytona Beach are a reminder that Americans with disabilities are an underutilized reservoir of ambition, talent and skill ready to make great contributions in the workplace, writes Chet Bell.

Forget Common Core: Here’s a Citizenship Test to Determine Who Can Survive In Florida

October 16, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Florida citizenship will be granted to all who live through the experience, don’t kill anyone else while doing it and swear to never, ever try to ride a manatee under any circumstances, writes Jim McLellan.

When Pets Are the Overlooked Victims of Domestic-Violence Cases

October 14, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

One of the common features of domestic violence is isolation; often the very circumstances that enable such violence to reach a point where a woman needs shelter are the same that mean there is nowhere for her pets to go.

A Republican Abandons Rick Scott: Paula Dockery and Florida’s Fraying GOP

September 28, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Democrats now look like a party united compared to the Republicans, Cary McMullen argues, as Paula Docker, one of Florida’s increasingly endangered moderate Republicans, announces her desertion of Gov. Rick Scott’s campaign for re-election.

Should Jacksonville’s Nathan Bedford Forrest High Be Named for KKK’s Grand Wizard?

September 24, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

Never apologize for what? Secession? Slavery? How about white supremacy and the KKK? The fight to rename Jacksonville’s Nathan Bedford Forrest High School raises the question, argues Julie Delegal.

The Trouble With American Exceptionalism

September 21, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Do we have moral authority as a nation, asks Cary McMullen. Do we have the humility Obama spoke of, namely that we are acting not in self-interest but in the interest of justice? Are we exceptional not just in our history but in our standing among nations as an exemplar of righteous ideals?

Where Fast Food Workers Make Twice the US Minimum Wage, and Have Benefits

September 18, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

Critics say a living wage of around $15 an hour would drive fast-food restaurants and other retail firms out of business — and millions of their employees out of work. Australia’s experience, where workers make $15 an hour, shows why that argument is bunk, argues Salvatore Babones.

High Times Ahead: The Political Side Effects of Tolerating Legal Pot

September 5, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

A nascent civil war is brewing between the social conservative and the libertarian wings of the Republican party, with legalized pot now another issue that could add to the divisions, and Attorney general Eric Holder’s decision not to prosecute marijuana possession in much of the nation lighting new fuses, argues Sanho Tree.

A Feral Cats Plea to Palm Coast: Time to Adopt Trap, Neuter and Return Rather than Kill

August 31, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 18 Comments

As Palm Coast continues to trap and kill feral cats, Jacksonville, Deland, Port Orange and Flagler Beach are among the growing list of cities and towns that have adopted trap, neuter and return programs. Cities are turning to the protocol not only because it is humane, but because it is cost effective.

No PALs Allowed: A Mom’s Struggle With Flagler Schools’ Latest Dress-Code Absurdities

August 30, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 99 Comments

Though her children could wear PAL jersey shirts on Spirit Fridays last year, Michelle Taylor was ordered to Bunnell Elementary School Friday morning to replace her two sons’ PAL shirts as the 1st and 2nd grade boys were pulled from class and made to sit in the office “as if they’d committed a crime,” Taylor says.

Not So Fast Missy: How a Protester Exposed an Undercover Cop

August 21, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

When the author first met her four years ago, she couldn’t have known that the small-framed woman with spiky brown hair and intense eyes was anything but a fellow activist showing up for a protest in Washington, D.C. She turned out to be an undercover cop ordered to secretly spy on peaceful protesters, violate their freedom of speech and assembly, and disregard their right to privacy.

Art For Shock’s Sake: The Business and Aesthetic of Rejection

August 14, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Peter Cerreta, the Palm Coast artist who had a work of his own rejected at the “Monsters of Bigotry” show at Hollingsworth Gallery, adds his perspective to the debate about art that belongs (or doesn’t) in galleries and museums, concluding that “not every piece that shocks for shock’s sake” does.

Eric Holder Takes on the “War on Drugs,” Mandatory Sentences and Epidemic Imprisonment Rates

August 12, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

Attorney general Eric Holder on Monday delivered a seminal speech outlining a plan to revamp federal drug policy and incarceration rates of non-violent and elderly offenders, and urging Congress to review mandatory sentencing in light of a “war on drugs” that has not worked. The full speech.

Commissioner Frank Meeker: Why I Voted to Buy the Old Hospital Despite Reservations

August 2, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 60 Comments

“Honestly, I can’t help but feel I’m being led, at times by the nose, to a conclusion to support the hospital purchase,” Meeker writes. “But fortunately for me, I don’t mind researching issues on my own.” In a broad-ranging discussion, he provides a point-by-point defense of his decision.

We’re the Most Educated Young Adults in American History, Yet Many of Us Can’t Find Work

July 31, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

What happens when we can’t find work and can’t pay our loans, asks Colleen Teubner. We invest about four years of our lives and up to hundreds of thousands of dollars in our education, and then spend the next decade trying to get out of ever-increasing debt.

Black Man 101: Déjà Jim Crow All Over Again For African-American Parents and Their Sons

July 18, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 36 Comments

We already teach our sons to be “agreeable” and “non-challenging” with police. Must we now teach our sons to conform to some modern form of “Jim Crow etiquette” and defer to all potential bigots who come their way? Terrance Heath writes that the answer is as heartbreaking to give as it is to receive.

Commissioner to Lobbyist: Milissa Holland Joins Powerful Southern Strategy Group

July 17, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

In a pair of candid interviews, former Flagler County Commissioner Milissa Holland traced her personal and professional trajectories that took her from representing taxpayers in government to representing the special-interest clients of the Southern Strategy Group, one of Florida’s–and the nation’s–most powerful lobbying firms.

The Undoing of Barack Obama

July 15, 2013 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

President Barack Obama is no longer on a roll. We have become a laughingstock in the international community, writes Donald Kaul, obstructionist House Republicans are treating the immigration bill as their favorite hostage, and many more landmines await.

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