Peps Art Walk near JT’s Seafood Shack, ‘Hysteria,’ At Palm Coast’s City Repertory Theatre, Cabbage, Potato and Bacon Festival in Hastings, how Britain, France and the United States set the template for a century of war in the Middle East.
Florida & Beyond, and All Opinions
From Reagan’s Shining City on a Hill to Trump’s Apocalyptic Christian Nationalism
While Reagan and Trump – two of the most media-savvy Republican presidents – used religion to advance their political visions, their messages and missions are starkly different. Trump’s religious vision is rooted in white Christian nationalism, the belief that the white Christians who founded America hoped to spread Protestant beliefs and ideals. According to white Christian nationalists, the founders also wanted to limit the influence of non-Christian immigrants and enslaved Africans.
Supreme Court Appears Likely to Side With Trump on Some Presidential Immunity
Some of the court’s conservative justices expressed concern about the prospect that, if former presidents do not have immunity, federal criminal laws could be used to target political opponents. However, the justices left open the prospect that Trump’s trial in Washington, D.C., could still go forward because the charges against him rest on his private, rather than his official, conduct.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, April 26, 2024
‘Hysteria,’ At Palm Coast’s City Repertory Theatre, ‘First Date,’ at St. Augustine’s Limelight Theatre, The Blue 24 Forum, Lord Dewar of the Whiskey Dewar’s returns from Central Africa with imperious tales of wife-buying.
Could a Video Game Developer Win the Nobel Prize for Literature?
How do we account for other language-based forms of expression? If performed works such as theatre or songwriting can be considered literature, where is the limit? And why aren’t video games considered a form of expression?
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, April 25, 2024
Drug Court, Beautification committee, the Flagler Beach City Commission meets, understanding the Social Security Trust Fund and its perpetual near-insolvency over the years.
Journalism in Crisis
In journalism school, students learn their craft while engaging with critical questions about their roles and responsibilities. They are often taught by previous or current journalists, whose work experiences prepare them to help students tackle reporting challenges. Crises ask journalism educators, students and practitioners to grapple with sharing stories about what the future could hold. What will journalists’ jobs look like in five years? Or 25 years?
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, April 24, 2024
The Atlantic Chapter of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State hosts its open discussion, the navel-gazing at the New York Times, Russell Baker on objectivity.
Antarctica’s Sea Ice Hits Another Low
Even just a decade ago, sea ice reliably rebuilt itself each winter. But something has changed in how the Southern Ocean works and the area covered by sea ice has decreased dramatically.
Biden, in Florida, Highlights Abortion and Hopes the State Is Not Out of Reach
In a conference call with reporters, the communications director for the Biden campaign, shrugged off suggestions that former President Donald Trump “has the state in the bag.” National Democrats are seizing on abortion restrictions imposed in states such as Florida, where the Republican-controlled Legislature and Gov. Ron DeSantis approved a ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. The six-week restriction is set to go into effect May 1.