In the suburbs of Fort Worth, Texas, on Jan. 31, a Democratic candidate named Taylor Rehmet won a special election for a state Senate district by 14 points. It was the same district Donald Trump won by 17 points in 2024 — a 31 point swing, the largest over-performance in a competitive special election since Trump took office a year ago. That result has energized Democrats around the country about the possibility of a major blue wave in the midterm congressional election this November — but could that wave trickle down to the Sunshine State, where in recent years the GOP has emerged as a juggernaut?
Florida & Beyond, and All Opinions
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, February 8, 2026
Clay Jones on the detention of Liam Conejo Ramos, “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change,” At Limelight Theatre, crude old men from Peter Attia to John Updike, Tina Brown interviews Philip Roth.
Bad Bunny Is NFL’s Hail Mary Into Latin America
Donald Trump, it is fair to assume, will be switching channels during this year’s Super Bowl halftime show. Puerto Rican reggaeton star Bad Bunny and recently announced pregame addition Green Day – didn’t appeal. Bad Bunny performs primarily in Spanish and has been critical of immigration enforcement. But for the NFL hierarchy, this was likely a business decision, not a political one. The league has its eyes on expansion into Latin America; Bad Bunny, they hope, will be a ratings-winning means to an end.
Saturday in Byblos:
Sophocles’s ‘Ajax’ and the Savagery of Honor
Sophocles’ Ajax remains a visceral critique of the destructive power of pride and the vanity of hollow honor. By contrasting Ajax’s murderous fury with the profound empathy of Ulysses, the play explores the transition from fanatical violence to civil justice. It serves as a timely reminder that true nobility lies not in vengeance, but in recognizing our shared human frailty.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, February 7, 2026
Creekside Music and Arts Festival, Debbie Boone: A Song for You, at the Fitz, the Friends of the Library host a book sale, AAUW hosts Dr. Michael Butler with a lecture on “A Lesson From Reconstruction,” a Scott Fitzgerald Story on “The Smilers,” Stevie Wonder.
Retiring the Penny: Winners and Losers
The penny’s days are numbered. The U.S. Mint pressed the last 1-cent coin on Nov. 12, 2025, following a directive from the White House. While pennies will remain legal tender, old ones will gradually be taken out of circulation. The impact of this change will reach beyond coin jars. Its ripples will be felt as small, cash-reliant Main Street merchants face another test of adaptability in a system that increasingly favors scale, technology and plastic. It will also be felt by people who rely on cash – often people without bank accounts who have the least room to absorb even tiny shifts in price.
Voters Challenge Governor’s Authority Over Special Redistricting Session
Two South Florida voters want the state Supreme Court to determine if Gov. Ron DeSantis had the authority to call for mid-decade congressional redistricting and delay candidate qualifying. The petition asks the court to determine if the governor’s Jan. 7 proclamation for a special legislative session the week of April 20 to redraw congressional districts encroached on the power of the Legislature as it proclaimed that 2026 is “a year in which the Legislature will apportion the state.”
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, February 6, 2026
The School Board’s Janie Ruddy is on Free For All, First Friday in Flagler Beach, ‘I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change,’ At Limelight Theatre, The Library of America’s forthcoming titles.
ICE’s Warrantless House Raids Violate a Basic Constitutional Right
As Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, agents continued to use aggressive and sometimes violent methods to make arrests in its mass deportation campaign, including breaking down doors in Minneapolis homes, a bombshell report from the Associated Press on Jan. 21 said that an internal ICE memo – acquired via a whistleblower – asserted that immigration officers could enter a home without a judge’s warrant. That policy, the report said, constituted “a sharp reversal of longstanding guidance meant to respect constitutional limits on government searches.”
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, February 5, 2026
The Flagler County Republican Executive Committee hosts a forum for Republican candidates only, Model Yacht Club at the Central Park pond, Mme de Sévigné’s 400th birthday.
Denaturalization in the Trump Era: It Can Happen Here
It is recognised in US law that the government may not take away a naturalized person’s citizenship except in cases of fraud or error on a naturalization application. The Supreme Court has clearly established that unless citizenship was unlawfully procured, denaturalization is unconstitutional. However, a memo issued by the Department of Justice (DoJ) in June attempts to broaden the grounds for denaturalization, potentially putting over 24.5 million naturalized US citizens at risk.
Bill Requiring New Florida Voters to Prove U.S. Citizenship Advances
A bill to impose heightened requirements for first-time voters, including mandating presentation of documents such as a U.S. passport or birth certificate — received its first hearing in this year’s legislative session, and was approved by a party-line vote in the Senate Ethics and Elections Committee on Wednesday. Critics warned the bill would backfire and block voter registrations of eligible U.S. citizens.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Joint workshop of local governments to discuss lifeguards, beach protection, fireworks and other topics, free tax preparation services, reflections on the Florida/Ronald Reagan Turnpike.
Beware Those Protein Powders and Shakes’ High Lead Content
Powder and ready-to-drink protein sales have exploded, reaching over US$32 billion globally from 2024 to 2025. Increasingly, consumers are using these protein sources daily. A new study by Consumer Reports, published on Oct. 14, 2025, claims that some such protein products contain dangerously high levels of lead, as well as other heavy metals such as cadmium and arsenic. At high levels, these substances have serious, well-documented health risks.
Florida Lawmakers Move to Arm College Staffers Under ‘Guardian’ Program
A Florida House committee unanimously approved a bill to expand the “school guardian” program to state colleges and universities. Inspired by a 2025 shooting at Florida State University, the proposal allows campus presidents to designate trained employees to carry firearms. While supporters emphasize enhanced response times, critics warn that arming civilians could confuse law enforcement during active shooter scenarios.
Defying DeSantis’s ‘Terrorist’ Designation, CAIR Florida Officials Drop In for Muslim Day at State Capitol
Officials from the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) Florida came to Tallahassee Monday to speak with lawmakers about pending legislation during the annual “Muslim Day” at the Capitol, but found conditions far different than in the past. In an absurd posting, Florida Attorney James Uthmeier asked law enforcement to be “on heightened alert for any possible security threats.” At least seven members of the Florida Capitol Police stood sentry in the rotunda of the Capitol as the press conference took place — as noted by one lawmaker who spoke.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, February 3, 2026
The Flagler Woman’s Club hosts Candidates’ Night for the Flagler Beach election, the Palm Coast City Council meets, Charlie Hebdo and The Economist’s take on American ICE-bound streets.
The Long-Lasting Negative Effects on Children Who Are Detained or Watch Their Parents Deported
When Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained Liam Conejo Ramos, a 5-year-old boy who is an asylum seeker, in Minneapolis on Jan. 20, 2026, the photos quickly became a flash point in the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement activity. Exposure to severe immigration enforcement experiences during childhood carries long-term, significant consequences: These children are twice as likely to suffer from anxiety in young adulthood.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, February 2, 2026
Ex-paramedic James Melady is sentenced, the Beverly Beach town commission meet, free tax preparation services in Flagler County, Gail Wadsworth’s birthday, Al Green’s change.
I’m an Ex-FBI Agent. Here’s How Federal Agents Are Undermining Law Enforcement Principles
The killing of Good and Pretti raises legal, tactical and policy questions regarding law enforcement practices by federal agents. These cases illustrate how some federal agents are engaging with the public in a way that undermines established principles of policing and constitutional law.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, February 1, 2026
The cold-weather shelter opens yet again, ‘I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change,’ At Limelight Theatre, reflections on that lucky old sun, plus Ray Charles and Black Elks speaks on the cold.
The Consequences of Repeated Government Lying
In fast-moving crises, early official statements often become the scaffolding on which public judgment is built. Sometimes those statements turn out to be accurate. But sometimes they do not. When the public repeatedly experiences the same sequence – confident claims, partial disclosures, shifting explanations, delayed evidence, lies – the damage can outlast any single incident.
Saturday in Byblos:
Mme de Sévigné at 400
The 400th anniversary of Mme de Sévigné’s birth is a chance to revisit the enduring vitality of her 17th-century correspondence. While modern communication devolves into emojis and AI-generated snippets, Sévigné’s letters remain vivid psychological studies and prose poems, her voice a warm, essential guide to living, loving, and aging.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, January 31, 2026
The shelter opens again tonight as temperatures fall into the low 20s with wind chills in the teens, Kava Kula Palm Coast Grand Opening, the Doomsday Clock is closer to midnight than ever, Sartre on the choice for life.
ICE Is a Paramilitary Force. That Makes Curbing It Difficult.
There is no question that ICE fits the definition of a paramilitary police force. It is a police force under the control of the federal government, through the Department of Homeland Security, and it is heavily militarized, having adopted the weaponry, organization, operational patterns and cultural markers of the regular military. The United States is nearly alone among established democracies in creating a new paramilitary police force in recent decades.
Florida House Battles Senate to Dismantle Post Parkland Gun Laws
Florida House Republicans are pushing HB 6029 to repeal the state’s 2018 risk-protection order law, which allows for temporary firearm confiscation from dangerous individuals. Despite the House’s repeated attempts to roll back Parkland-era restrictions, Senate President Ben Albritton remains a staunch opponent of the repeal, citing the law’s effectiveness in preventing mass violence. With over 19,000 orders issued since its inception, the law faces intense Second Amendment scrutiny but currently lacks a Senate sponsor.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, January 30, 2026
The Jane Gentile-Youd Memorial at the Palm Coast Community Center, Branson Illusionist REZA at Fitzgerald Performing Arts Center, Donald O’Brien talks Charter Review Committee on Free For All Friday, Bruce Springsteen sings Minnesota.
The Gun Lobby Against the White House
When various figures in the Trump regime suggested that CBP agents had been justified in shooting Alex Pretti because he was carrying a holstered weapon, they provoked outrage from gun rights activists. And, significantly, many of these people are usually on the same page as the White House about pretty much anything.
Florida Board of Governors Moves to Freeze H-1B Visas at Public Universities, Stifling Expertise
The Florida Board of Governors has preliminarily approved a one-year freeze on new H-1B visa hiring for public universities, effective through January 2027. Prompted by Governor Ron DeSantis and President Donald Trump, the move responds to a new $100,000 federal application fee and concerns over “cheap labor.” While university officials intend to study program costs, critics and faculty representatives argue the pause undermines meritocracy and threatens the state’s ability to recruit top-tier global expertise.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, January 29, 2026
The cold-weather shelter opens again, joint workshop between the County Commission and Palm Coast Council on animal sheltering and animal control options, Pamela Hemphill refuses a pardon, and what heroic acts are made of, even when we are no heroes.
Florida Lawmakers Advance Measure to Circumvent Minimum Wage for ‘Trainees’
A Florida House subcommittee approved a bill allowing trainees, interns, and work-study participants to waive their rights to the state’s $15 minimum wage in favor of the lower federal floor. Republican supporters argue the current wage limits entry-level opportunities, while Democrats contend the measure exploits workers to enrich corporations. The proposal includes time limits on these lower-pay training periods.
Filming ICE Is Legal. Here’s How to Minimize Risk.
The hard truth for anyone filming law enforcement today is that the same technologies that can hold the state accountable can also make ordinary people more visible to the state. Recording is often protected speech. But recording, and especially sharing, creates data that can be searched, linked, purchased and reused. Video can challenge power. It can also attract it.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Wednesday, January 28, 2026
The cold-weather shelter is open tonight, with night temperatures in the 20s, the Flagler County Commission talks about suing Flagler Beach, Fitnan O’Toole on the normalization of outrage.
They’re Polarized, But Americans Share Deep Existential Anxieties
While political polarization has many potential causes, existential anxiety– humanity’s inherent confrontation with mortality, moral responsibility and search for meaning–has received less attention. Higher levels of existential anxiety are associated with indicators of poor mental health, such as symptoms of depression or among those who have experienced a life-threatening event. It is also associated with aggression.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Tuesday, January 27, 2026
The School Board holds its pair of workshop and evening meeting, the Flagler County Affordable Housing Committee meets, Weekly Chess Club for Teens, Evan Shinners’s WTF Bach podcast and the killing of classical music.
Minnesota Is Raising Unprecedented Constitutional Issues
A federal judge heard arguments on Jan. 26, 2026, as the state of Minnesota sought a temporary restraining order to stop the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement operation in the state. The administration has sent some 3,000 immigration agents to Minnesota, and attorneys for the state have argued, in part, that it amounts to an unconstitutional occupation, on 10th Amendment grounds.
Florida Senate Committee Advances Bills to Clarify Felon Voting Eligibility
A bill that would require the state of Florida to develop and maintain a centralized database to provide individuals with felony convictions the information to determine whether they are eligible to have their voting rights restored moved through its first committee stop on Monday.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Monday, January 26, 2026
The Cold-Weather Shelter opens tonight, Temple Beth Shalom Blessing of the Pets, the Bunnell City Commission, Du Souhait’s 1612 short story about a man who jus can’t stop getting cuckolded even after death.
Again Flouting International Law, Israel Is Razing Lebanon’s Orchards and Wildlife
More than a year after a ceasefire nominally ended active fighting, much of southern Lebanon bears the ecological scars of war. Avocado orchards are gone and beehives destroyed. So, too, are the livelihoods they supported. Fields and forests have disappeared under Israel’s white phosphorus shelling. This destruction indicates a grave breach of international environmental law and raises the question of whether Israel committed war crimes in Lebanon by deliberately targeting natural resources and engaging in environmental warfare.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, January 25, 2025
The Stetson University Concert Choir in concert with the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, Palm Coast Farmers’ Market at European Village, Jules Verne on Greenland.
Stripping DEI from Health Care May Make Americans Sicker
As of Aug. 20, 2025, the National Institutes of Health has terminated over 5,100 grants totaling over US$4.4 billion in research funding. Likewise, the National Science Foundation, which seeks among other things to advance the nation’s health, has rescinded over 1,700 research grants totaling over $1 billion in funding. These terminations have disproportionately affected projects that study the experiences of marginalized groups and funding to scientists from social groups that are underrepresented in academia.
Saturday in Byblos:
Saul Bellow Goes Looking for Mr. Black
In “Looking for Mr. Green,” Saul Bellow crafts a “Heart of Darkness” in Depression-era Chicago. Classically educated George Grebe hunts for an elusive check recipient, navigating a Black neighborhood Bellow depicts as a “blighted” backdrop. The author’s sublime prose serves a supremacist lens, reducing human beings to transactional props for Grebe’s enlightenment.
Footage and Documents Contradict DHS Accounts of Violent Immigration Crackdown Incidents
Growing discrepancies between official Department of Homeland Security accounts and video evidence have sparked a crisis of accountability regarding federal immigration enforcement. While DHS frequently cites self-defense in use-of-force incidents, court records and bystander footage often suggest otherwise. Despite a federal judge’s recent ruling that characterized official testimony as “not credible,” legal doctrines like qualified immunity and the limitations of the Federal Tort Claims Act continue to make holding individual agents responsible nearly impossible.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, January 24, 2026
Gamble Jam at Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area, the Saturday Flagler Beach Farmers Market, a few words about the Song of Songs, Neil Postman’s Technopoly.
Just 1% of Coastal Waters Could Power a Third of the World’s Electricity
Just 1% of the world’s coastal waters could, in theory, generate enough offshore wind and solar power to provide a third of the world’s electricity by 2050. That’s the promise highlighted in a new study by a team of scientists in Singapore and China, who systematically mapped the global potential of renewables at sea. But turning that potential into reality is another story. Scaling up offshore renewables fast enough to seriously dent global emissions faces formidable technical, economic and political hurdles.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, January 23, 2026
Free For All Fridays welcomes Palm Coast City Manager Michael McGlothlin, Acoustic Jam Circle At The Community Center In The Hammock, remembering Andrei Amalrik and IF Stone’s tribute.
American Capitalism Is Being Remade by State Power
Recent moves by Washington, such as taking a 10% share of semiconductor maker Intel, point to a shift in that direction. For decades, Washington has supported free-market capitalism. Today, the government appears to be supporting a new direction – state-directed capitalism.
Florida House Advances Plan to Phase Out Non-School Property Taxes Despite Anguish Over Local Services
Florida House committees advanced two major property-tax proposals on Thursday, including a constitutional amendment to phase out non-school homestead taxes over ten years. While Republicans argue the move prevents local governments from treating residents like an “ATM,” Democrats and local officials warn of decimated public services. Meanwhile, the Senate has yet to release a companion plan, leaving the final form of a potential November ballot initiative in a holding pattern as leaders negotiate.
Controversial Education Bill Mandating Anti-Abortion Videos and Campus ICE Access Moves Forward
A Florida House subcommittee approved HB 1071, a huge education bill that mandates 6th-12th grade lessons on fetal development, including specific video-watching requirements. The legislation also prohibits spending on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives and requires school administrators to grant law enforcement, including ICE, full campus access. While proponents argue the bill focuses on merit and biological facts, critics raise concerns regarding medical accuracy, potential ICE presence on campuses, and the erosion of inclusive programming.
The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Thursday, January 22, 2026
The Flagler Beach City Commission meets and discusses annexation, Model Yacht Club Races at the Pond, rethinking Eugene O’Neill’s “Dreamy Kid” and the politics of cultural appropriation.




















































