The Florida House of Representatives on Wednesday morning passed the congressional redistricting map presented to them by Gov. Ron DeSantis, which could give Republicans up to four new congressional districts. DeSantis’s legal team argues that federal law overrides state Fair District Amendments regarding minority representation. Democrats allege illegal partisan gerrymandering designed to aid 2026 midterm goals. The Florida Supreme Court will likely decide the constitutionality of this race-neutral approach.
Florida & Beyond, and All Opinions
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Clay Jones on Kash Patel’s frat boy acts, Conversations in Democracy, noon to 1 p.m. at Pine Lakes Golf Club Clubhouse, 10 of Blaise Pascal’s Pensées if Trump were tweeting them.
MRNA Vaccine Misinformation Threatens Cancer Treatment Breakthroughs
Scientists are developing mRNA cancer vaccines to revolutionize tumor treatment through targeted immune system activation. This progress faces significant threats from the false turbo cancer narrative spreading across social media platforms. Such misinformation erodes public trust and influences critical patient decisions regarding therapy. Transparent communication and clinical engagement are necessary to ensure these medical innovations reach their full potential for saving lives globally.
As Florida Measles Cases Reach 134, DeSantis Again Orders Legislature to Loosen Vaccine Mandates
As the number of confirmed measles cases in Florida increases, so does Gov. Ron DeSantis’ passion to pass legislation to make it easier for parents to turn down the required vaccines for public school students. Florida this year has seen 134 confirmed measles cases as of April 23, the fourth most in the nation, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, April 28, 2026
It’s school board day, with the 1 p.m. workshop and 6 p.m. meeting, the Flagler County Affordable Housing Committee, the Flagler Beach Library Writers’ Group meets, a few thoughts about Pascal.
Divisive Rhetoric Fuels Rising Political Violence
The shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner underscores a dangerous escalation in American political violence fueled by intense polarization, dehumanizing rhetoric, and widespread disinformation. These factors erode trust in democratic institutions.
Their Answer to Florida’s Housing Crisis: Smaller Lot Sizes and Granny Flats
Although there’s no “silver bullet” to cure Florida’s affordable housing crisis, an argument is gaining ground that smaller lot sizes can be a significant part of the solution, as might be allowances for accessory dwelling units, sometimes called granny flats or in-law units, or ADUs.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, April 27, 2026
The Bunnell City Commission meets, John Darkow’s take on artificial intelligence, that creepy half-marathon with robots in Beijing, when Gary Kasparov won and lost to Deep Blue.
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s Eye on Dark Matter
Everything in space – from the Earth and Sun to black holes – accounts for just 15% of all matter in the universe. The rest of the cosmos seems to be made of an invisible material astronomers call dark matter. With the release of its first images this month, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory has begun a 10-year mission to help unravel the mystery of dark matter. The observatory will continue the legacy of its namesake, a trailblazing astronomer who advanced our understanding of the other 85% of the universe.
Florida’s Bold Search For Terrorists Behind Every Bush
Environmentalists, religious groups, and even failing football programs could face state sanctions now that a new law giving Florida’s governor the authority to designate terrorist organizations is on the books. We can only conclude these organizations have been taken over by our enemies to sap our resolve.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, April 26, 2026
‘Line’ and ‘All In the Timing’ At City Rep Theatre, Dead Men Tell No Tales at the Palm Coast Community Center, deporting Afghan collaborators to Congo, David Ignatius on the Iran war.
Sorry, Tampa Bay, Mixed‑Use Districts Don’t Reverse the Dismal Economics Of Sports Venues
What do mixed-use projects around sports venues mean for host communities? Sports venues don’t generate a financial windfall for host cities. The overwhelming evidence regarding the limited economic benefits of stadiums has produced a strong consensus among economists that sports venues are not worthwhile public investments.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, April 25, 2026
‘Line’ and ‘All In the Timing’ At City Rep Theatre, Gamble Jam, Dead Men Tell No Tales…. Or Do They? Murder Mystery Dinner Show at the Palm Coast Community Center, “The Sound of Music” at Athens Theatre.
Trump’s Vote by Mail Ban: ‘A Solution Looking for a Problem’
Former federal judge John E. Jones III argues that the recent executive order regarding mail-in voting is unconstitutional. Article 1, Section 4 of the Constitution grants states authority over election procedures. The order relies on false premises of widespread fraud and inaccurate voter rolls. Twenty-three states are currently suing to block this federal overreach. Jones asserts that the mandate will likely fail judicial scrutiny.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, April 24, 2026
‘Line’ and ‘All In the Timing’ At City Rep Theatre, the Scenic A1A Pride Committee meets, Dead Men Tell No Tales…. Or Do They? Murder Mystery Dinner Show, at Palm Coast Community Center, bulldozing Walden Pond.
War on DEI’s Aim: Normalizing White Nationalism
The current backlash against diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives represent a dangerous normalization of authoritarian politics. By recasting equity as a threat to national order, political leaders use administrative measures to erase historical analysis of systemic racism. This process mirrors Hannah Arendt’s warnings regarding the banality of evil. Societies must recognize these erosions of rights to prevent cruelty from becoming a routine function of governance.
DeSantis Signs Bill Banning Local Governments from Implementing Diversity and Fairness Policies
Soon Florida cities and counties will be banned from funding or promoting diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs and enacting net zero policies that cut down on greenhouse gases. SB 1134 prohibits municipalities from funding or passing a resolution in support of programs deemed diverse or inclusive. It also bars cities and counties from having a DEI office or an inclusion officer and gives the governor the power to remove local officials who violate the law.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, April 23, 2026
The Flagler Beach City Commission meets, FPCHS Starlets Spring Dance at the Fitz, model yacht club races in Town Center, the dangerous, authoritarian slide of the Supreme Court’s “shadow docket.”
King Trump Meets King Pyrrhus
President Donald Trump has claimed victory in the war in Iran even before the conflict is over. But despite killing the country’s leader and seriously degrading its military, there is an argument being made that the Islamic Republic has emerged all the stronger for having simply survived. Indeed, a phrase that has repeatedly cropped up as the U.S. has sunk more and more military hardware and credibility into Operation Epic Fury is “Pyrrhic victory.”
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Developer’s public meeting on western expansion, 6 p.m. at Palm Coast Community Center, the River to Sea Transportation Planning Organization meets, Conversations in Democracy, three arches to remind us that the triumphal kind are usually the ugliest, least necessary, and nowhere near the majesty of the real thing.
Why US Military Is Stuck Using $1 Million Missiles Against Iran’s $20,000 Drones
It may sound hard to believe, but the almost trillion-dollar U.S. military is struggling to fight cheap drones in its war with Iran. Iran has built a simple drone, the Shahed, with a motorcycle-type engine, loaded it with explosives and successfully targeted its neighbors’ cities and power plants.
DeSantis’s AI Bill of Rights Faces Steep Opposition From Republican Leaders as Special Session Nears
Gov. DeSantis seeks to pass his AI Bill of Rights during the Florida special session starting next week but faces significant resistance from House Speaker Danny Perez and federal Republican leaders who prefer almost nonexistent national standards. The proposed legislation restricts companion chatbots for minors and mandates parental consent in schools. High fines await non-compliant companies despite the growing national Republican trend toward deregulation of artificial intelligence.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, April 21, 2026
The Palm Coast City Council meets, Echoes of Earth: Flutes in Concert, a performance by the Daytona State College music program students, Community Preparedness Workshop, Chicago’s message to ICE.
Why Plastic Recycling Is Failing Catastrophically
Despite individual efforts, plastic recycling systems are failing globally, with rates as low as 9% in the U.S. and 15% in Europe. This failure stems from systemic issues including high production costs for recycled materials, technological limitations, and unrecyclable product designs. Addressing this crisis requires a collective shift away from individual responsibility toward a circular economy focused on reduction, reuse, and better eco-design.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, April 20, 2026
The Flagler County Commission meets, the East Flagler Mosquito Control District Board meets, reading Red Smith in a one-armed hash house, calming down with the Persian Santur.
AI-Generated Text Is Overwhelming Institutions and AI Detectors
Newspapers are being inundated by AI-generated letters to the editor, as are academic journals. Lawmakers are inundated with AI-generated constituent comments. Courts around the world are flooded with AI-generated filings, particularly by people representing themselves. AI conferences are flooded with AI-generated research papers. Social media is flooded with AI posts. In music, open source software, education, investigative journalism and hiring, it’s the same story.
Can Green Card Holders Be Deported for Committing a Crime? Supreme Court Hears Arguments Wednesday.
The Supreme Court will determine if immigration officials need clear evidence of a crime to treat returning green card holders as seeking admission. Muk Choi Lau challenged his removal after being paroled due to pending charges. The 2nd Circuit ruled in his favor. Now the justices must decide if the government can rely on later convictions or must prove crimes at the border.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, April 19, 2026
The Gallery of Local Art’s Bloom and Sip English Tea Party, remembering Jon Netts, “Sunday Morning Coming Down,” “The Sound of Music” at Athens Theatre, “Godspell,” Limelight Theatre.
How Spain Is Legalizing Undocumented Migrants and Powering Its Economy
With an upcoming amnesty for an estimated half a million undocumented workers, Spain is charting its own course on immigration policy, while also reinforcing its dependence on migrants to fuel economic growth.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, April 18, 2026
Job fair for prospective teachers at the GSB, Chess Meet-Up At the Flagler Beach Public Library, “The Sound of Music” at Athens Theatre, a maga version of the Beatitudes, a few words from Camus.
How Péter Magyar Liberated Hungary of Trump’s Clone
Hungarian voters have overwhelmingly rejected the 16-year rule of authoritarian strongman Viktor Orbán, which will allow the new government to roll back some of the illiberal measures introduced Orbán governments over the years. One of Magyar’s key election promises was to restore press freedom, and reform state-run media, which, under Orbán, had become a powerful tool for distributing disinformation.
DeSantis Claims There’ll Be a Special Session on Property Taxes. Just Don’t Ask Him When.
Gov. Ron DeSantis has previously indicated that he’s holding back on offering his own proposal to reduce taxes on homestead properties until the moment is “ripe” — and it doesn’t appear that’ll be anytime soon.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, April 17, 2026
The Flagler County Cultural Council meets, “Godspell” at Limelight Theatre in St. Augustine, confusing Fox News and the Washington Times with The Onion.
Cheap One-Way Attack Drones Are Upending Major Powers’ Military Supremacy
One-way attack drones represent a new era of precise mass by combining inexpensive manufacturing with sophisticated guidance systems. The weapons allow mid-tier powers like Iran to strike targets accurately at a fraction of cruise missile costs. Modern militaries must now invest in drone technology and defensive netting to survive this rapidly evolving technological landscape.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, April 16, 2026
Clay Jones on Trump’s surrender, the Marineland Town Commission meets, Story Time with Miss Kim at Flagler Beach Public Library, why the average Flagler County fourth grader writes better English than the president.
At Least One in Three 1 in 3 Households Struggle to Pay Energy Bills
Americans’ concerns about being able to afford electricity and home heating fuel are elevated since the beginning of the Iran war. But newly released nationwide data shows that even before the war began, these concerns were widespread, long-standing and getting worse faster than the data can reflect.
DeSantis Suggests Redistricting Special Session May Be Delayed
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis insisted Tuesday that a special session on congressional redistricting will take place, although maybe not beginning Monday as originally scheduled. The idea that the Legislature might delay or possibly opt not go through with congressional redistricting has picked up steam over the past week.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, April 15, 2026
The Flagler County Tourist Development Council meets, the Palm Coast Planning and Land Development Board meets, Henriqson trial day 3, Eternal Darkness in Lebanon and the faces and lives obliterated by Israel’s war crimes.
From Jules Verne to Artemis II
NASA’s Artemis II mission marks a return to lunar exploration 50 years after the Apollo era. The moonshot mirrors Jules Verne’s 1865 novel by highlighting the political and economic complexities of spacefaring. Verne correctly anticipated nationalist competition and environmental consequences. Today’s mission reflects similar tensions between global unity and a race for power.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, April 14, 2026
The Palm Coast City Council meets in workshop, the school board meets, Tuesday Book Talk at the Flagler Beach Public Library, Trump thinks he’s God, the pope thinks he’s a bully, Florida to Russia.
Fuel Crisis Over? Not Even Close.
A temporary ceasefire in the Iran war offers slight relief for global oil markets but damaged infrastructure in neighboring nations ensures supply remains tight for months. Long-term security requires reducing reliance on imports through electrification and high prices for diesel and jet fuel will persist despite diplomatic progress.
Snubbing AP Course, Florida Will Create Its Own U.S. History Class for College Credit
Florida is creating its own alternative to Advanced Placement courses. The state still does not allow AP African American Studies to be taught in public schools. In response to critics who decried the move, DeSantis and DOE officials have pointed to other African-American history requirements throughout the state curriculum.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, April 13, 2026
The Kristopher Henriqson trail begins with jury selection, the Bunnell City Commission meets, when Ronald Reagan could order Israel to a ceasefire, and memories of April 13, 1975.
4 Ways the Iran War Weakened the United States
The war in Iran significantly diminished United States global standing across four distinct strategic areas. Moscow and Beijing profited from American military distraction by increasing regional influence and securing economic advantages. Trump’s unilateral actions alienated traditional NATO allies and abandoned stated national security priorities. China now assumes the role of global mediator. This conflict signals a potential end to the U.S.-led liberal international order.
Back to DeFuture! Ron DeSantis Is the Only Authentic Choice in 2028
Be cool, Ron: Fox will sober up, come to its senses, and realize only you can save this nation from the Red Chinese, the whiny Ukrainians, vaccines, the powerful Palestinian lobby, crazed sociology majors, climate change radicals, feminists, soft-on-illegal-immigrants sheriffs, and anything else threatening Americans’ precious bodily fluids.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, April 12, 2026
Get theatrical: “My Fair Lady,” at Daytona Playhouse, “Godspell,” Limelight Theatre, “The Sound of Music” at Athens Theatre, and when “normal people don’t know that everything is possible.”
Florida Universities’ Collaboration with ICE Is Making Students Less Safe
At least 15 Florida public universities have signed agreements to cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, authorizing campus police to perform certain federal immigration functions including questioning and arresting suspected undocumented students. Faculty members report an intensifying climate of anxiety and uncertainty across campuses and a damaged sense of belonging for international students while undermining the role of universities.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, April 11, 2026
The 18th annual Turtle Fest is all day today at Veterans Park in Flagler Beach, Second Saturday Plant Sale at Washington Oaks, Gamble Jam, “My Fair Lady,” at Daytona Playhouse, a few words from Brune Bettelheim on disbelief of and disassociation from horrors we experience.
Hey, Randy Fine: Muslims Like Me Don’t Threaten Our Way of Life. Your Bigotry Does.
You would think members of Congress, who swear an oath to support and defend the Constitution, would know that the right to freely practice religion is inalienable. Yet many, among them Randy Fine, who represents Flagler and other Florida counties, continue to attack the faith of millions of Muslim Americans, including their own constituents.
The Ceasefire May Have Made Iran Stronger
Iran negotiated from a 10-point plan focusing on sanctions relief and control over the Strait of Hormuz. Despite sustained military strikes, the regime demonstrated institutional resilience and economic leverage, highlighting the limits of military dominance. Tehran successfully converted intense pressure into durable political and financial gains.











