Flagler Beach’s Holiday at the Beach Parade, Palm Coast’s Starlight Parade in Town Center, John’s Towing Celebrates 35 Years in Bunnell, ‘Annie,’ at Limelight Theatre, Holiday Sale to Benefit Area Homeless, Roger’s Version and AI.
Florida & Beyond, and All Opinions
UF Adopts Strict ‘Neutrality’ Policy Forbidding Leaders’ Social Commentary Under Threat of Firing
To prevent alleged “ideological takeover,” UF Interim President Donald Landry and trustees adopted a strict “institutional neutrality” policy Friday forbidding leaders from commenting on social or political issues under threat of firing. Landry argued leadership silence is actually required to protect open discourse. The board also unanimously reelected Mori Hosseini—a major Ron DeSantis donor—as chair, solidifying his influence just months after the state rejected the trustees’ previous pick for president. Landry indicated he may seek the permanent post.
How the Government, and ICE, Are Tracking Your Location
If you use a mobile phone with location services turned on, it is likely that data about where you live and work, where you shop for groceries, where you go to church and see your doctor, and where you traveled to over the holidays is up for sale. And U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is one of the customers.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, December 5, 2025
Incoming Palm Coast City Manager Michael McGlothlin on Free For All, Santa in Bunnel, the Florida Ethics Commission meets, First Friday Garden Walks at Washington Oaks Gardens State Park, First Friday in Flagler Beach, “Alice Doane’s Appeal.”
Nonprofits Serving Your Community Are Losing Funding
About one-third of U.S. nonprofit service providers experienced a disruption in their government funding in the first half of 2025. These organizations run food pantries, deliver job training and offer mental health services. They provide independent living assistance, disaster relief and emergency shelter, among other services.
Citing ‘Age of Darkness and Deceit,’ DeSantis Moves to Curb AI Growth and Data Centers
Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday proposed an artificial intelligence “bill of rights” to stymie unfettered AI growth, crack down on sexual AI chatbots, and restrict AI data centers in Florida. Hinted at for months, these legislative proposals come in sharp contrast to pro-tech push marking President Donald Trump’s second term in office. Trump — allied with technology titans like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg — toyed with an executive order to thwart state-level AI regulations earlier this month.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, December 4, 2025
Nexus Center Grand Opening Ribbon Cutting and Gala, Model Yacht Club Races, ‘Annie,’ at Limelight Theatre in St. Augustine, the similarities between a Trump cabinet meeting and an SS’s self-esteem.
Constitutional Alarms Over Labeling Dissent as Terrorism
A largely overlooked directive issued by the Trump administration marks a major shift in U.S. counterterrorism policy, one that threatens bedrock free speech rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights. National Security Presidential Memorandum/NSPM-7, issued on Sept. 25, 2025, is a presidential directive that for the first time appears to authorize preemptive law enforcement measures against Americans based not on whether they are planning to commit violence but for their political or ideological beliefs.
DeSantis Makes Dubious Claims About Florida Being ‘Forced’ To Redistrict
Democrats and voting rights advocates this week voiced vehement opposition to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ call to redistrict Florida’s congressional map in a special session next year, calling it an “illegal” gerrymander in violation of the Florida Constitution. Not surprisingly, DeSantis disagrees.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Ex-Firefighter James Melady is scheduled for docket sounding, so is Kristopher Henriqson, the Palm Coast Code Enforcement Board meets, Elio Vittorini and Robert Antelme on the human race, Lee Greenwood.
Stop Calling Homosexuality a Choice
Numerous studies have established that sex is not just male or female. Rather, it is a continuum that emerges from a person’s genetic makeup. Nonetheless, misconceptions persist that same-sex attraction is a choice that warrants condemnation or conversion, and leads to discrimination and persecution.
Defying Trump Threat of Court Martial, Senator Stands by Call for Military to Refuse Illegal Orders
Arizona Democratic U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly said Monday the threat of a court-martial for a video he and other senators released telling military members not to follow illegal orders is an effort to silence the president’s political opponents. Kelly, a retired Navy captain, was one of six Democratic lawmakers with backgrounds in the military or intelligence agencies who appeared in the video that was posted on social media in mid-November. President Donald Trump alleged the lawmakers had committed “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!”
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, December 2, 2025
The Palm Coast City Council meets this evening, the Bunnell Planning board meets, Flagler Beach United Methodist Church Food Pantry holds evening hours, Nixon, Kissinger, Trump, Cambodia and Venezuela.
Israel’s Continuing Provocations of War in Lebanon
Since the truce was announced on Nov. 27, 2024, there have been more than 10,000 Israeli air and ground violations inside Lebanese territory, according to the latest report from UNIFIL, the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Lebanon. And in the run-up to the ceasefire’s first anniversary, a spate of Israeli strikes over its northern border saw the assassination of Hezbollah’s top military commander and a deadly attack on a Palestinian refugee camp.
4-Day School Weeks Winning Popularity But Fail Data Test
Four-day school weeks come down to staff recruitment and retention, fewer discipline problems and improved attendance, while they also help stretch tight school budgets. But the promised benefits have not shown up in the data as longer school days can harm academic performance. Such concerns might not matter as four-day school weeks become more popular nationwide.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, December 1, 2025
The Palm Coast Charter Review Committee meets, the Beverly Beach Town Commission meets, the Flagler County Commission meets, Holiday Plant Class Series at UF/IFAS Extension Flagler County at the county fairgrounds, Peter Taylor’s “Allegiance.”
Orwell’s Pro-Labor Opposition to Totalitarianism
George Orwell’s dystopian novels “Animal Farm” and “1984” have remained popular in the U.S. ever since their initial publication in the 1940s. What’s less well known is that in the years before the publication of “Animal Farm” and “1984,” Orwell’s writing often focused primarily on other themes including work, poverty, anti-imperialism and democratic socialism. In fact, Orwell remained a committed democratic socialist until his death in 1950.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, November 30, 2025
Palm Coast Farmers’ Market at European Village, Irving Berlin’s Holiday Inn, at Athens Theatre, books that try to predict the future, Philip Roth’s “Plot Against America,” the Knights of Liberty vigilantes.
Republicans’ Nick Fuentes Problem
Fuentes is a 27-year-old livestreamer with openly antisemitic views. He has called Adolf Hitler both “awesome” and “right.” But he has become impossible for the Republican Party to banish, despite repeated attempts by some party leaders. This dynamic reveals how fringe ideologies operate differently today compared to the mid-20th century, when institutional gatekeepers – political parties, law enforcement, the media – could more effectively contain extremist movements.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, November 29, 2025
Tree-lighting ceremony in Palm Coast’s Central Park, Rotary’s Fantasy Lights Festival, Irving Berlin’s Holiday Inn, artificial intelligence in a 1940 tank, Richard Powers, Don DeLillo.
Tesla’s $1 Trillion Bet on Elon Musk
$1 trillion is an absurd amount of money – even for someone who is already the richest person in the world. So how do we make sense of it? Tesla’s chair of the board Robyn Denholm warned shareholders that Musk might walk away from the company if they didn’t approve the unprecedented pay package. Shareholder confidence was no doubt buoyed by the recent rise in Tesla’s stock, with one investor describing Musk as “key” to the entire enterprise.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, November 28, 2025
Irving Berlin’s Holiday Inn, at Athens Theatre, finishing up with Henry James’s “Traveling Companions” and its calvary through museums as Traveling Willburys go to the end of the line. ,
Floridians’ Anxiety Linked to Social Media Use
A study finds roughly 1 in 5 Floridians are struggling with moderate to severe anxiety, which is consistent with national statistics. Anxiety was lowest among those who use social media primarily to stay connected with family and friends. But it rose significantly among those who use social media to stay up to date with current trends and pop culture or to learn about health, fitness and beauty trends.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, November 27, 2025
Are you kidding? Nothing’s going on today! Happy Thanksgiving. Packers and Lions at 1 p.m., Cowboys and Chiefs at 4:30, Bengals and Ravens at 8:20, and right now, a little traveling companionship with Henry James.
How the Plymouth Pilgrims Took Over Thanksgiving
Nine in 10 Americans gather around a table to share food on Thanksgiving. Popular interpretations of Thanksgiving also have also pulled us apart. The emphasis on the Pilgrims’ 1620 landing and 1621 feast erased a great deal of religious history and narrowed conceptions of who belongs in America – at times excluding groups such as Native Americans, Catholics and Jews.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Not much happening today as the country shuts down for Thanksgiving. A look at Kingsport, Tennessee, and the old Kingsport Press, which used to bound and print some of the country’s leading authors’ works.
The Limits of the 1st Amendment on Campus
American colleges and universities are increasingly firing or punishing professors and other employees for what they say, whether it’s on social media or in the classroom. For decades, American colleges and universities have traditionally encouraged free speech and open debate as a core part of their academic mission. But the First Amendment only applies to the government – which includes public colleges and universities – and not private institutions or companies, including private colleges and universities.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Flagler Beach United Methodist Church Food Pantry, Keep the Holiday Lights On, a fond look back at City Repertory Theatre’s “Around the World in 80 Days,” and a full-length look at the miniseries.
The Trump Administration’s Craven ‘Peace Plan’ for Ukraine
The Trump administration on Nov. 20, 2025, formally presented Ukraine with a 28-point proposal to end the war, and President Donald Trump announced the country had until Thanksgiving to sign it. The Trump administration was accused by policy experts and some lawmakers of fashioning a plan to serve Russia’s interests, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio got enmeshed in an argument with U.S. senators over whether the U.S. or Russia had authored the document.
Bill Cotterell, an ‘Institution’ in Political Coverage and a Long-Time Columnist, Dies
Bill Cotterell, a reporter and columnist who covered Florida government and politics for more than four decades with a blend of doggedness and humor, died Monday as he tried to recover at a rehabilitation center from norovirus and a bleeding ulcer. Cotterell, 82, who for the past two years wrote a once-a-week column for The News Service of Florida that was distributed statewide, was a newshound. He could be curmudgeonly and sometimes wasn’t politically correct. But he also stood behind the First Amendment and tried to tell the truth about what was happening in government.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, November 24, 2025
The Bunnell City Commission meets at its new City Hall on Commerce Parkway, Donors Wanted to ‘Keep the Holiday Lights On’, a man’s message to ICE, Dostoevsky at 59, explaining the Cloudflare outage.
For All the DEI Bluster, White Americans Are Still Privileged
If discrimination against white Americans were widespread, you might expect large numbers to report being treated unfairly. But polling data shows otherwise. A 2025 Pew survey found that 70% of white Americans think Black people face “some” or “a lot” of discrimination in general, and roughly two-thirds say the same of Asian and Hispanic people. Meanwhile, only 45% of white Americans believe that white people in general experience that degree of discrimination.
How DeSantis Demolished Florida’s New College
New College of Florida is on its intellectual deathbed. Once an authority-challenging, free-thinking institution for students passionate about learning, a place where difference was celebrated and creativity encouraged. Now, it is becoming a third-rate jock school with over-paid administrators and under-achieving freshmen, a casualty of Ron DeSantis’ culture wars.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, November 23, 2025
Clay Jones returns, “Around the World in 80 Days” at City Rep Theatre, Gamble Jam, Patrick Chappatte reports on the American resistance.
The Future of Watchdog Journalism
At the University of Florida’s College of Journalism & Communications, part of my research involves unpacking the importance of decentralized networks of local outlets that cover stories from underrepresented areas of the country. Pablo Torre’s work as a clear example of the growing need for this kind of bottom-up, citizen journalism – particularly given media industry trends.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, November 22, 2025
‘Around the World in 80 Days’ at City Rep Theatre in Palm Coast, City Manager Dale Martin is the special guest at Coffee With Commissioner Scott Spradley, Peps Art Walk, the selected letters of John Updike.
Political Violence: When the 1st and 2nd Amendment Duel
The assassination in September 2025 of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has heightened attention on the relationship between political rhetoric and political violence. But while gun proliferation complicates the problem by making political violence much easier to carry out, suppressing political rhetoric, even through social norms rather than law, undermines the discussion, debate and constructive disagreement essential for a healthy democracy.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, November 21, 2025
Free For All Fridays with Host David Ayres talks Keep the Holidays Lights on with Flagler Cares, ‘Around the World in 80 Days’ at City Rep Theatre, Voltaire’s birthday and night thoughts.
Hormone Replacement Therapy and Menopause: Why the FDA Removed the Warning Label
For more than 20 years, hormone therapy for menopause has carried a warning label from the Food and Drug Administration describing the medication’s risk of serious harms – namely, cancer, cardiovascular disease and possibly dementia. No longer. On Nov. 10, 2025, the FDA announced that drugmakers should remove these “black box” safety warnings. Here’s how the decision will affect health care for people going through menopause or postmenopause.
FPL Customers Face $6.9 Billion Rate Increase in 4 Years as Regulators Approve Controversial ‘Settlement’
The Florida Public Service Commission approved a four-year settlement with Florida Power & Light Thursday for about $6.9 billion, which opponents claim is the largest rate hike in U.S. history. FPL says that in 2026, its “typical” 1,000-kWh residential customer bill in most of Florida will increase by $2.50 a month, or about 2%, from the existing $134.14 to $136.64. There would be additional increases in 2027, 2028 and 2029.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, November 20, 2025
Town of Marineland Commission Meeting, Model Yacht Club Races at the Pond, Scott DuPont at the Flagler County courthouse, Al Pacino at the Criminal Courts Building in Baltimore Bertrand Russell on human impulses.
About That Bill Gates Climate Memo
Shortly before COP30 talks begin in Brazil, tech billionaire and philanthropist Bill Gates has launched a “narrative grenade” into the discourse of climate politics by publishing a lengthy memo calling for a rethink of how the climate crisis is framed and addressed. Gates calls for a “strategic pivot” in climate strategy. That appears to have hit a nerve. Both social and traditional media were ablaze with erroneous assertions about Gates’ supposed reversal of opinion on climate change.
DeSantis Signs 19th Death Warrant of the Year, for 1987 Double-Murderer Frank Walls, 58
In what could be Florida’s record 19th execution this year, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday signed a death warrant for an inmate convicted in the 1987 murders of two people in a home in Okaloosa County. Frank Walls, 58, is scheduled to be executed Dec. 18 in the murders of Edward Alger and Ann Peterson. The warrant came as the state prepares to execute Richard Barry Randolph on Thursday and is slated to execute Mark Allen Geralds on Dec. 9.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, November 19, 2025
Leigha Mumby in court, Jean Stafford’s “The Echo and the Nemesis,” Flagler Tiger Bay’s monthly lunch, The Palm Coast Planning and Land Development Board meets, a 1969 Dick Cavett monologue.
Frank Rizzo, Philadelphia’s Toughest Cop Maga Harbinger
In August 2025, the city of Philadelphia agreed to return a statue of Frank Rizzo to the supporters that commissioned the memorial in 1992. The 2,000-pound bronze tribute to the former police commissioner-turned-mayor had stood in front of the city’s Municipal Services Building from 1998 until 2020, when then-mayor Jim Kenney ordered it removed days after protesters attempted to topple it during the protests that followed the murder of George Floyd.
Judge Rejects City’s Challenge to Controversial Home-Rule-Smothering Law Known as SB180
An administrative law judge Tuesday rejected Ocoee’s challenge to a decision by the Florida Department of Commerce that changes to a city comprehensive plan were “null and void” because of a controversial new state law. The law, passed during this spring’s legislative session, has drawn criticism from cities and counties throughout Florida and two constitutional challenges in Leon County circuit court.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, November 18, 2025
The Palm Coast City Council meets at 9 a.m. at City Hall. It is voting on a new city manager, groundbreaking for SMA Healthcare’s new facility on Justice Lane in Bunnell, Flagler Beach United Methodist Church Food Pantry, Elsa Morante on Mussolini, and ICE.
Climate Models Got These 5 Ominous Forecasts Right
Critiques of climate science, such as the report written for the Department of Energy by a panel in 2025, often point to this complexity to argue that these models are too uncertain to help us understand present-day warming or tell us anything useful about the future. But the history of climate science tells a different story.
Justice Charles Canady Resigning Florida Supreme Court Seat for UF Civics Post
The longest-serving current member of the Florida Supreme Court, Justice Charles Canady, is leaving the bench to join the University of Florida as director of the Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education. Canady — whose wife, state Rep. Jennifer Canady, is in line to become state House speaker in 2028 — announced his departure Monday, calling it a “great privilege to serve the people of Florida as a justice” for the past 17 years.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, November 17, 2025
Palm Coast Charter Review Committee meets, the Mosquito Control Board meets, the Flagler County Commission meets, Voltaire and Casanova meet and talk Trump, Christopher Weyant on a distant return to normal.





















































