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Commentary

France 3, Honduras 0: Slogging back to Honor

June 15, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

French national football has been a comedy of errors and disgrace since the team got clobbered in South Africa four years ago, and self-imploded with acrimony and racist issues. A much calmer, gentler team heads to Brazil, with higher hopes.

England 1, Italy 2: Balotelli Time

June 14, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

The undisciplined, unpredictable, mercurial, fascinating, intimidating, captivating Mario Balotelli is the kind of player who can turn football games into electrifying experiences. He leads Italy in a classic match-up between European powers.

Don’t Bother Me. I’m at the World Cup.

June 14, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 25 Comments

The World Cup is as close as it comes to a religious experience for many of us–despite the sport’s corruption, match fixing scandals and ubiquitous racism among fans, in Europe especially. But it’s not for nothing that they call i the Beautiful Game. Try it. You might be reborn.

Costa Rica 3, Uruguay 1: Magnificent Upset

June 14, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The despicable Luis Suarez, the Liverpool striker, one of the greatest players and most repulsive human beings in world football, will lead Uruguay to what may be yet another impressive run in international competition, again on Brazilian ground.

Colombia 3, Greece 0: Juan Valdez Beats Zeus

June 14, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Colombia can be among the surprises of the tournament, and they’re playing in a group that favors it: anyone in Group C can win it, anyone can advance.

Chile 3, Australia 1: The Mapuche Gods Have It

June 13, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

So, while Iraq falls apart and the United States considers a summer air campaign there, it’s time for the day’s third match, a free-wheeling affair between lowly but beer-swilling Australia and tightly disciplined Chile, whose spoiler capabilities should not be underestimated.

Spain 1, Netherlands 5: Rematch, Beauty and Dethroning

June 13, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

This is the treat of the day: a rematch between the 2010 World Cup finalists, a game Spain won 1-0 at the end of a violent and too often ugly game. Spain these days feels like Rodney Dangerfield in Brazil: it’s getting no respect despite its crushing record in the past eight years.

Brazil 3, Croatia 1: An Undeserved Gift To the Host Nation | World Cup 2014

June 12, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

brazil croatia flags world cup

As an opening match Brazil-Croatia didn’t lack entertainment or tension, two of the absolute requisites of any football game, but it lacked skill and spontaneity, it absolutely lacked poetry and justice.

George Will’s Sex Assault Chauvinism

June 10, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

george will compassion columnist sexual assault

The oft-reported number of sex assault in college is likely too inflated, but when columnist George Will insisted that women who say they have been raped assume a “coveted status” on campus, it was as nasty a remark as Steve Robinson imagines has ever made it past Will’s editors. A counterpoint.

Bright Spot in Florida’s Budget:
A Forward-Looking Agenda on Alzheimer’s

June 9, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Alzheimer’s is the most costly disease to Medicare and Medicaid — and for a state like Florida with high ratios of older residents, this spells an impending crisis for state budgets. Gov. Rick Scott signed a record-sized state budget that included record-sized wins for the Alzheimer’s community.

In Memory of D-Day:
Walking Omaha Beach

June 6, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

'Les Braves,' on Omaha Beach, a monument installed there in 2004 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the D-Day landing. Click on the image for larger view. (© FlaglerLive)

Let me tell you about a very lucky trip I had a chance to take with my wife and child about a year ago, to Omaha Beach in Normandy. I’d been wanting to go there for 30 years. I consider it part of my transformation, as an immigrant, into an American, like traveling the 50 states and being a Yankee fan.

With Marco Rubio’s Walmart Mentality, Republicans ‘Discover’ How to End the Poverty They Created

June 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 24 Comments

Germaine Richier, 'The Claw Creature' (1952).

The Tea Party GOP has declared Lyndon Johnson’s “War on Poverty” a failure. And with the 2014 elections looming, Rubio-Republicans are trying to remake themselves as sympathetic and empathetic, instead of apathetic, to the plight of the poor and the middle class, writes Stephen L. Goldstein.

Sunshine Lows: Cities and Counties Do a Lousy Job of Sharing Information With Citizens

June 3, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

When the First Amendment Foundation publicized its transparency scorecard last month, it found that on average, cities and counties in Florida had lots of room for improvement in sharing the workings of government with the governed.

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.

Maya Angelou, On the Pulse of Mourning

May 28, 2014 | Pierre Tristam | 6 Comments

Starting with ‘I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,’ Maya Angelou’s seven-part autobiography redefined the art of memoir writing while giving voice to a form of literary jazz and blues that trace the liberation and triumphs of a black woman in a culture that, as a result, bears her mark.

Europe’s Tea Party Moment

May 27, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Voting for the European Parliament in 24 European countries this weekend resulted in near-shocking gains for far-right, neo-Nazi and nativist parties that seek the disbanding of the European Union. The populist surge is part of the same wave of fear and resentment that gave rise to America’s tea parties a few years ago.

Hiding Behind Barricades of Indifference as Income Disparities Corrode the Social Contract

May 25, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 53 Comments

Income inequalities are distorting the fiber of American society, but the issue has been treated more of a spectator sport than as a problem to be tackled. (Bert Kaufmann)

The very rich, who are already less and less in touch with the lives of ordinary Americans, will further barricade themselves to avoid having to witness the decline of a country that is no longer about ensuring a decent standard of living for the greatest number of people.

Double-Killing in Ormond Beach:
Not Murder-Suicide, But Mercy and Heroism

May 23, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 29 Comments

Umberto Boccioni's 'State of Mind: Those Who Stay,' study (1911).

Shortly after midnight today John Poucher, 89, shot his wife Barbara, 86, who was suffering from Alzheimer’s, then shot himself. The killings will be logged inaccurately as a murder-suicide. The crime is that we live in a society still too barbaric to give assisted suicide and mercy killing its due.

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.

PERT: Why Flagler Students Are Forced to Take the Stupidest Test You’ve Never Heard Of

May 14, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 19 Comments

Why are a slew of high achievers at Matanzas High School and FPC who have already succeeded in various courses having to take the so-called Post Secondary Educational Readiness Test on top of all other tests? How many unnecessary, time-consuming tests are we going to continue to subject our students to?

Reflecting on Saturday’s Fatal Wreck on A1A: Untold Stories of Lost Lives

May 13, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

Journalists have long used accidents as a convenient device to study how lives can suddenly and terribly intertwine. “It’s been a long time since I had to ponder those questions professionally,” writes Steve Robinson, “but old habits are hard to break.”

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.

Turned Down for a Job Outside the Classroom, a Teacher Rediscovers Her Mission

May 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

It’s a sad notion that administrators, school boards, human resources offices and so-called reformists have unfortunately inculcated in teachers over the years, this idea that if you want to be successful or be taken seriously, or make any sort of impact, that you must stop teaching to do so.

How Donald Sterling’s Apologists Give Private Bigotries a Pass

May 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 19 Comments

If racism and intolerance are learned, it is the Donald Trumps of the world who are the teachers. Our country can only move beyond its present ugly divisions when people who have attained power and influence actively work to promote tolerance. Doing nothing is no longer acceptable.

“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.

Florida State University’s Rape Problem: Football First, Morals Later

April 19, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

The Jameis Winston revelations are one more reminder of just how far universities and their apologists are willing to go to protect the multibillion-dollar enterprise that we call “college sports.” What is the cost to the women at Florida State—and the parents who send them there–who surely can have no illusions about what will happen if they dare to cry rape?

Palm Coast Voters Lose Again: The City Of Low Turnout Gets a Spoiled Election

April 11, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 17 Comments

Palm Coast's 2014 elections may have been spoiled before they began. (Keith Bacongco)

Even if Palm Coast and Supervisor of Elections Weeks work out their differences, as it now looks like they have, voters have already lost as this months-long manufactured controversy will become election campaign fodder for candidates who don’t have anything more substantial to offer.

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.

Altered Space: When the Mall
Is a Refuge From Virtual Reality

April 5, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

mall of america

With America’s slouch toward the virtual at the expense of the real and the human, it is entirely possible that we will become nostalgic for malls as lost relics of interpersonal relations, alongside the courthouse square, the barber shop and the neighborhood bar.

Farewell To Bookstores:
Why I Won’t Miss Books-A-Million

March 30, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 28 Comments

end of bookstores books a million

The closure of Books-A-Million is not as bad as it sounds: the chain bookstore was not living up to its billing as a cultural hub, and bookstores these days are becoming irrelevant thanks to Amazon, audio books and Google, which make the world’s libraries immediately accessible at a click.

Chris Christie’s Hormonal Problem

March 29, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 40 Comments

Would someone please call Chris Christie and tell him that if he thinks he could be President of the United States, he doesn’t have a prayer. By insinuating that the lane closings were the handiwork of a woman suffering from a romantic setback, Christie’s lawyers have ensured that he will be scorned by every woman who has had to endure the canard that women are ruled by their hormones and their feelings.

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.

Flagler Kills Together:
Bill O’Reilly’s Re-Assassination of JFK

March 14, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

killing kennedy o'reilly

Bill O’Reilly’s “Killing Kennedy,” this year’s choice for the annual Flagler Reads Together event, is not the usual O’Reilly polemic and provides in parts a fair summary of Kennedy’s presidency and the assassination, but it also has many flaws, writes Pierre Tristam.

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.

Palm Coast’s Red-Light Cameras: How the City Council Locked In a Fraud on Taxpayers Through 2019

March 7, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 62 Comments

palm coast red light cameras

Palm Coast’s red-light cameras siphon off more than $2.5 million out of the local economy every year, in the share that goes to the state and to ATS, the company that runs the scheme, yet the city council quietly approved the deal through 2019, long past the terms of every one of the council members and some of their successors.

Angel’s Diner in Palatka: Radiant Relay

March 4, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

The view from inside Angel's Diner in Palatka this morning, with the bridge over the St. Johns River in the distance. Click on the image for larger view. (© FlaglerLive)

Angel’s Diner in Palatka is reported to be the oldest diner in Florida, across the street from the stately Larimer Arts Center and a toast’s throw from the St. Johns River. It’s also proving to be the ideal relay on the way to a nuking.

Denying Service to Gays and Lesbians: Right of Conscience Vigilantism Meets Stand Your Ground

February 28, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 30 Comments

Bills in four states that would let businesses deny service to gays and lesbians on religious-freedom grounds are based on the same faulty justification of Stand Your Ground laws on self-defense grounds. In both cases, the 1st and 2nd Amendments are perverted into defenses of vigilantism rather than protection of rights.

A Matanzas High Teacher Reveals Her Evaluation Scores, and the Absurdity of Florida’s “VAM” Scam

February 26, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 48 Comments

The author in her class at Matanzas High School, with students who may or may not have factored in her "value-added model" scores that determine half her evaluation. Nahirny is not a fan of VAM scores. (© FlaglerLive)

What do my almighty “VAM” scores reveal about me, my students, the quality of my instruction or what goes on in my classroom? Absolutely nothing, writes JoAnn Nahirny, who deconstructs Florida’s new teacher-evaluation scores, hers among them, and shows why they have little basis in reality, though they may well define a teacher’s fate.

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.

Global Warning Olympics: Closing Ceremonies for Winter

February 23, 2014 | Pierre Tristam | 4 Comments

winter olympics global warming

Watching the Olympics requires too much of a suspension of disbelief to make the effort worth the time or the self-deception. There was an added and quite massive invention to these games: faking winter in a warming world, though in that regard we’re all self-deluded Russians.

When a Senator Turns Anti-Union Goon: A Labor Defeat Reverberates Across the South

February 22, 2014 | FlaglerLive | 27 Comments

In light of the failed vote to unionize a VW plant in Tennessee, why should we care about the travails of labor unions in our country? Because, with no one in Washington able to effectively represent workers nationwide, unions are the only ones left to fight for a living wage.

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.

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