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Commentary

Stop Yelling. Have a Point: Advice for School Board Meeting Disrupters from Someone Who’s Been There.

September 23, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 23 Comments

Randy Bertrand addressing the Flagler County School Board at a meeting last year.

In the wake of two turbulent school board meetings, Randall Bertrand was left wondering what all the sound and fury was about since many speakers’ loud and disruptive message was already made moot by school board votes or state policy.

Evidence Shows That, Yes, Masks Prevent Covid, and Surgical Masks Are the Way To Go

September 22, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

It's that simple: a surgical mask. Markus Winkler on Unsplash

The largest randomized controlled trial to date testing the effectiveness of mask-wearing provides gold-standard evidence that confirms previous research: Wearing masks, particularly surgical masks, prevents covid-19.

The Connection Between Containers and Your Missing Christmas Presents

September 21, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

It may not look like it, but containers are in short supply. (Jaxport)

An estimated 90 percent of the world’s goods are transported by sea, with 60 percent of that – including virtually all your imported fruits, gadgets and appliances – packed in large steel containers. Without the standardized container, the global supply chain that society depends upon – and that I study – would not exist.

New Treatments Staving Off the Worst of Covid

September 20, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

Hospital and other forms of care for covid patients has vastly improved survivability of the disease. (Harley K. Sarmiento/US Navy)

For hospitalized covid-19 patients, these new treatments, along with supportive care advances – such as placing some patients on their stomachs in a “prone position” – were helping bring down mortality rates before the Delta variant hit and are continuing to improve patient outcomes today.

Arbor Day Post-Mortem: One-Third of the World’s Tree Species Face Extinction

September 19, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

They look great here. But they're disappearing: Mahogany trees. (Lauren Gutierrez)

One in three of the world’s tree species are at risk of becoming extinct. More than 400 species have fewer than 50 individuals remaining in the wild, and 142 tree species are already extinct. Human activity is the overwhelming culprit, especially forest clearance for farming, logging for timber and the spread of invasive pests and diseases.

Democrats’ Tax-the-Rich Plan Isn’t Fixing the Slide from Progressive Taxation

September 18, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

It's not just for galas: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez has a whole clothing line. That particular sweatshirt costs $58.

The progressivity of the U.S. tax system has dramatically declined over the past seven decades. The upshot is that for most income levels the U.S. tax system now resembles a flat tax that becomes regressive at the very top end, meaning the super-rich pay proportionately less.

Half the World Is Waiting for Its 1st Covid Shot. You’re Getting Your 3rd. You’re OK With That?

September 17, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 18 Comments

vaccines third shot

Of the 5.76 billion doses of vaccine that have been administered globally, only 1.9% went to people in low-income countries. Meanwhile, many wealthy countries have begun offering COVID-19 boosters to fully vaccinated, healthy adults.

End the Offensive Discrimination Against Workers: Yes to Commercial Vehicles in Palm Coast Driveways

September 17, 2021 | Pierre Tristam | 131 Comments

commercial vehicles driveways

Palm Coast’s prohibition against small, van-size commercial vehicles in residential driveways is outdated and discriminatory, especially targeting blue-collar workers while refusing to recognize the vastly changing geography of work. This isn’t a majority vote issue. It’s a workers’ rights issue.

Facebook Has Known of Instagram’s Documented Harm to Teens for Years

September 16, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

instagram harm to girls

Facebook officials had internal research in March 2020 showing that Instagram – the social media platform most used by adolescents – is harmful to teen girls’ body image and well-being but swept those findings under the rug to continue conducting business as usual.

What the Expanded Child Tax Credit Means to Me

September 16, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

child tax credit expansion

The expanded child tax credit is on track to lift half of all kids living in poverty out of it. That will help them lead safer, happier lives well into adulthood. If we have the political will, we can make more smart economic choices like these to give all children a safe and secure childhood, writes the author.

Insurrection 2.0? Capitol Police Prepares for Lawbreakers’ Bacchanal.

September 15, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

They're back. (David Geitgey Sierralupe)

A rally in Washington, slated for Sept. 18, 2021, is being billed as an effort to support people who face criminal charges for their involvement in the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

When Forceful Vaccine Messaging Backfires

September 14, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

vaxx and relax

A fevered pitch in vaccine messaging may make the holdouts even more resistant. The direct, blunt messages to go get vaccinated that worked on three-quarters of Americans may not work for the remaining one-quarter. Some health communication techniques work more effectively than others depending on the audience.

Texas Unleashes Bounty Hunters on Women

September 14, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

texas ethics by Joep Bertrams, The Netherlands

A Texas law deputizes ordinary citizens to hunt down and sue anyone who helps a woman defy the ban (e.g. clinic staff, taxi drivers, someone who provided money for the procedure) with a minimum payoff of $10,000 if they’re successful.

Texas Rebirths Jim Crow Tactics in Vigilantism-Enabling Abortion Law

September 13, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

A marker in Kendleton, Texas, commemorates the Terry v. Adams case, in which the Supreme Court struck down a Texas Jim Crow law that disenfranchised Black voters. (Djmaschek/Wikipedia)

The new Texas law that bans most abortions uses a method employed by Texas and other states to enforce racist Jim Crow laws in the 19th and 20th centuries that aimed to disenfranchise African Americans.

After A Fraud: A Tax Accountant Explains What To Do If You’re a Victim of an Unscrupulous Tax Preparer

September 13, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

The sign in the window may not be the whole story. (© FlaglerLive)

Chris Kocher, a licensed CPA since 2003 and a long-time tax accountant in Bunnell, explains how to handle the fallout from revelations that numerous clients of Robert “Bob” Newsholme’s Flagler Tax Services may have been defrauded.

Why 7,000 Steps a Day Is the New 10,000 Steps a Day

September 12, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

walking 10,000 steps a day

Researchers found that those taking at least 7,000 steps a day had a 50 to 70% lower risk of dying during the study period compared with those taking fewer than 7,000 steps a day. Next time you see your daily step count is below 10,000 steps, do not get demotivated and remember you will get some health benefits from doing around 7,000 steps.

How Another President’s Vaccine Rollout Eradicated a Deadly Disease, Without Ideological Animosity

September 12, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 28 Comments

President Dwight Eisenhower with Florida Governor LeRoy Collins in 1955, the year of the polio vaccine rollout and Eisenhower's decision to put the full force of the federal government behind it. (Florida Memory)

On May 31, 1955, just weeks after the Salk polio vaccine was proved effective against the deadly and paralyzing disease, President Eisenhower outlined the benefits of universal vaccination and hinted he would use the full powers of the government to ensure inoculations. But cooperation from federal, state and local governments made that unnecessary. Polio was eradicated within a few years.

Simplistic and Damaging: How Schools Teach 9/11

September 11, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

An inscription on a wall at the 9/11 Memorial Museum at the site of the World Trade Center towers. Behind the wall is a repository of some 8,000 unidentified human remains. Virgil's quote, however, was taken out of context, and misapplied to the memory of the 9/11 victims. (© Pierre Tristam/FlaglerLive)

Narratives reduced to a focus on heroism and simplistic interpretations of good and evil do not help students reflect on the many controversial decisions made by the U.S. and their allies after 9/11, such as using embellished evidence to justify the invasion of Iraq in 2003. And they potentially reinforce political rhetoric that paints Muslims as potential terrorists and ignore the xenophobic attacks against Muslim Americans after the 9/11 attacks.

9/11: The Road Not Taken

September 11, 2021 | Pierre Tristam | 3 Comments

In Washington Square Park in Manhattan, an American flag turned emotional message board in the days after the 9/11 attacks. (© Pierre Tristam/FlaglerLive)

The military and political misuses of the 9/11 terrorist attacks were bound to have bewildering consequences for the nation’s budget and its sense of itself as a free and peaceful society, absent the prevailing of wise, more prudent choices. Those choices did not prevail.

Black Lives Matter: Where We Stand

September 10, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

black lives matter

Black Lives Matter has been called the largest civil movement in U.S. history. Lately, the movement and its leading organizations have become more traditional and hierarchical in structure. Two scholars of worldwide African communities and cultures – Kwasi Konadu and Bright Gyamfi – discuss BLM as both a movement and an organization.

Why Israel’s Vaccine Rollout Faltered After Early Successes

September 9, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

After an initial boost in vaccine coverage, shots slowed in Israel, and society opened perhaps too early. (Amir Appel)

After its fast start, Israel’s rollout slowed. There have not been any clear interruptions to vaccine supply, so factors such as hesitancy or access to healthcare may have been an issue. For example, there’s evidence of uptake being lower among Arab and ultra-Orthodox Jewish groups.

Nomophobia: Can You Bear to Be Without Your Phone?

September 8, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

smart phone anxiety

The anxiety felt when people are unable to use or be in contact with their smartphones is known as nomophobia, or no-mobile phobia. It is thought to be a product of the intense attachments to our devices, and is believed to be strongest among people who use their phone the most, like teens and young adults. And it’s not good.

Partisanship First, Good of Country Last

September 8, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Twisted metal from the World Trade Center, preserved at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York. The attacks had once, briefly, united the country. The country's soul has since become as twisted as the metal. (© Pierre Tristam/FlaglerLive)

The change in who we are as a country has been caused by partisan leaders being willing to rally their minions for any purpose so long as it might lead to demolishing their opposition. The good of the country no longer is even part of the goal, argues Irwin Connelly.

Next Assault on Affordable Care Act: Preventive Care

September 7, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

aca preventive care colonoscopies

The preventive health provision of the ACA has resulted in significant reductions in patient costs for many essential and popular services. But a court case is targeting preventing care, and appears headed for the Supreme Court.

Children’s Pandemic Concerns Are Usually Ignored in School Planning

September 6, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Fiun and mascots may not be enough. (Facebook)

We are choosing to view the pandemic-derived challenges surrounding childhood through an adult lens. In other words, we are re-inscribing western colonialist ideology on children, in the way we choose to understand their struggles and their need for education and socialization.

Tattoos’ Long and August History of Meanings

September 5, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Tattoos have a history as old as ancient Egypt and Greece, enriched through the ages by way of Native Americans, and given deep meaning more recently as expressions against oppression, racism and colonialism even as they’ve endured as signs of beauty and identity.

People Don’t Want to Work? Wrong. They Just Don’t Want to Work for Your Kind of Substandard Workplace.

September 5, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 42 Comments

First hint: the workplace was never a playground. (© Pierre Tristam/FlaglerLive)

After an earth-shattering 16 months that have seen hundreds of thousands of our family members, friends, and neighbors die at the hands of an implacable and indiscriminate foe, there’s just a genuine question of whether grinding it out for 40 hours a week at a job with substandard pay, low benefits, and little work-home balance is really worth it.

Millions of Unemployed Are About to Hurt a Lot More as Benefits Run Out

September 4, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

Out of business. (© FlaglerLive)

An estimated 8.8 million people will stop receiving unemployment insurance beginning on Sept. 6, 2021. Millions more will no longer get the extra US$300 a week the federal government has been providing to supplement state benefits.

Buried Power Lines Aren’t Fail-Safe

September 3, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Underground lines are susceptible to damage from water incursion driven by storm surges or flooding. So, choosing the location of power lines means choosing which threat is more manageable. And the public ultimately pays for maintaining the power grid, either via their electric bills or through taxes.

‘Our Darkest Hour’: Flagler County Sheriff Eulogizes Deputy Paul ‘Looch’ Luciano, ‘Invisible Hero’ Felled by Pandemic

September 3, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Deputy Paul Luciano's coffin as pallbearers approached First Baptist Church in Bunnell for this morning's service. (© FlaglerLive via FCSO video)

“This is a tough day for all of us. And, we begin this service doing the same thing we have been doing for the last 7 days, wondering why Paul lost his life serving and protecting our community.  We may never know that answer,” Sheriff Rick Staly said today in his eulogy of Corrections Deputy Paul Luciano, the jail’s first line-of-duty death in the department’s history.

Behind Hurricane Ida’s Record-Shattering Rainfall in New York and the Northeast: Yes, It’s Global Warming

September 2, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

An image posted by the New York City Fire Department after the flooding rains in Hurricane Ida's wake.

Evidence is mounting that, as the climate warms, the amount of precipitation from heavy rainstorms is increasing, especially in the central and eastern U.S. As the climate changes, risks of major flooding events will only increase further.

When Human Life Begins Is a Question of Politics, Not Biology

September 1, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

life conception human being

Understanding what it is to be human requires a lot more than biology. And scientists can’t establish when a fertilized cell or embryo or fetus becomes a human being. Flawed surveys and political declarations can’t change the fact.

How Warm Gulf Patch Quickly Turned Hurricane Ida Into a Monster Storm

August 31, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

The Loop Current runs from the tropics through the Caribbean and into the Gulf of Mexico, then joins the Gulf Stream moving up the East Coast. (NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio.)

As Hurricane Ida headed into the Gulf of Mexico, a team of scientists was closely watching a giant, slowly swirling pool of warm water directly ahead in its path. That warm pool, an eddy, was a warning sign.

An Emergency Room Nurse Pleads from the Darkness of Covid’s Front Lines: ‘Start Supporting, Stop Fighting’

August 31, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

Megan Dunaway, the assistant nursing manager at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare's Northeast Emergency Center. (Facebook)

“Stop fighting over what is real or not. Stop fighting over whether you should get the vaccine or not. Stop fighting over whether to wear a mask or not,” Megan Dunaway, an ER nurse manager, writes, pleading against covid denialism and for more support for hospital staff. “We, as a community, are in crisis.”

Is It a Crime to Forge a Vaccine Card?

August 30, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

vaccine card passport

When people are caught knowingly buying, selling or using false cards, the proof of guilt will often be clear. The real question is about the appropriate punishment. The law gives prosecutors and judges huge discretion on how to charge and sentence offenders.

This Is What Happens to Child Migrants at the Border

August 29, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

border processing

Behind huge numbers of migrants are individual children, many of whom have suffered from repeated trauma. Legally, the U.S. is obligated to care for these children from the moment they arrive until they turn 18, according to carefully defined procedures.

Hey, GOP: There’s a Museum Up in Montgomery Y’All Really Ought to See

August 29, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

You walk out of the fierce summer sun into a shadowy forest of rectangular steel columns, row upon row of them, six or seven feet tall, covered in rust the color of dried blood. (© Pierre Tristam/FlaglerLive)

Diane Roberts reports from the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Ala., a silent but devastating testimony to how Americans terrorized and murdered other Americans for wanting to live as full citizens of this country. The Equal Justice Initiative is here to remind us that Jim Crow isn’t gone. Our history still warps our present.

The Story of the Women Behind the First Domestic Violence Shelters

August 28, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

A "silent witness" at Flagler County's Family Life Center, the county's only shelter for abused persons, in operation since 1987. (© FlaglerLive)

The women who set up the first women’s refuges in the UK in the 1970s changed the world. They saved the lives of many women. And the projects and political actions they began have grown into an international movement which campaigns for justice and supports all survivors and victims of domestic violence.

Fallen Deputy’s Daughter’s Anguish: ‘This Virus Has Come Home, It’s Everywhere and It’s Killing the People We Love’

August 28, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 20 Comments

Flagler County Sheriff's Corrections Deputy Paul Luciano, who died Thursday, with his daughter Tina Luciano last June. (Facebook)

Tina Luciano, the 30-year-old daughter of Paul Luciano, the Flagler County Sheriff’s Corrections Deputy who died on Thursday of covid complications, had written of witnessing her father’s struggle three weeks ago, and wrote again after losing him on Thursday, both times voicing her grief–and both times urging people to get vaccinated.

The Supreme Court Ended the Eviction Ban. Now What? 4 Questions Answered.

August 27, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Rent due. (© FlaglerLive)

The Supreme Court on Aug. 26, 2021, ended the Biden administration’s ban on evictions, putting millions at risk of losing their homes. Legal scholar Katy Ramsey Mason explains what the ruling means, who will be affected and what happens next.

ISIS-K, the Taliban’s Rival Group Behind the Kabul Airport Attack

August 26, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Airmen prepare to load qualified evacuees aboard a U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III aircraft at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul last week. (Taylor Krul/DOD)

ISIS-K sees the Afghan Taliban as its strategic rivals. It brands the Afghan Taliban as “filthy nationalists” with ambitions only to form a government confined to the boundaries of Afghanistan. This contradicts the Islamic State movement’s goal of establishing a global caliphate.

A Christopher Columbus Statue Survives

August 26, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

The Christopher Columbus Monument boxed in Marconi Plaza Philadelphia (Wikimedia Commons)

“It is baffling to the Court that the City of Philadelphia wants to remove the Statue without any legal basis,” a judge ruled, rejecting a plan to remove the statue of Christopher Columbus from Marconi Plaza Philadelphia on Aug. 17. “The City’s entire argument is devoid of any legal foundation.”

In Maskless Flagler, We’re All Covid’s Sitting Ducks

August 26, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 64 Comments

The prevailing mood at last week's Flagler County School Board meeting. (© FlaglerLive)

Flagler County is in the worst public health crisis it has known in its history, with at least 10 covid deaths a week as many school infections in 3 weeks as all of last year combined, yet the debate remains immobilized by a war on masks that defies science and daily grim realities.

Clues to Misinformation Behind Public’s and Right-Wing Media’s Misuses of Vaccine Database

August 25, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Unverified reports of vaccine side effects in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, or VAERS, aren’t the smoking guns portrayed by right-wing media outlets, but they can offer insight into vaccine hesitancy and misinformation.

Have You Thanked a School Bus Driver Lately?

August 25, 2021 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

thank a school bus driver

Pandemic fears and enhanced unemployment benefits have left the nation facing a serious shortage of qualified school bus drivers. The problem is acute, despite districts implementing recruitment campaigns, offering sign-up bonuses, and even fudging on the standards.

Essential and Often Overlooked: America’s Public Library Workers

August 24, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

Chart: The Conversation, CC-BY-ND Source: Institute of Museum and Library Services Get the data

It’s clear that not all of the library workers furloughed since March 2020, when virtually all U.S. libraries were closed amid lockdowns, have been brought back on staff. At the same time, many library workers have had to directly engage in person with the public throughout the pandemic, exposing them to health risks.

Behind the Feds’ Tesla Investigation, and the Future of Self-Driving Cars

August 23, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

tesla investigation

The probe covers 765,000 Tesla cars – that’s virtually every car the company has made in the last seven years. The investigation will put pressure on Tesla to reevaluate the technologies the company uses in Autopilot and could influence the future of driver-assistance systems and autonomous vehicles.

An FPC Student’s Perspective: Time to Rethink Inequitable and Irrational Dress Code in Flagler Schools

August 23, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 39 Comments

Clashing consistency: Students in Flagler schools are urging the school board to revise the district's dress code. (© FlaglerLive)

The district’s dress code is irrational, outdated, unfair and sexist. It limits individual expression, and it’s an utter waste of time, argues Jack Petocz, a junior at Flagler Palm Coast High School who calls on the school board to listen to students’ concerns and revise the code.

The Meaning of Happiness from the Ashes of Pompeii

August 22, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

A plaster casting of a Pompeian citizen. (Jeremy Thompson)

“Here dwells happiness,” confidently proclaims an inscription found in a Pompeiian bakery nearly 2,000 years after its owner lived and possibly died in the eruption of Vesuvius that destroyed the city in A.D. 79. What did happiness mean to this Pompeiian baker? And how does considering the Roman view of felicitas help our search for happiness today?

Ashura Explained: the Shiite Muslim Holiday that Inspires Millions

August 21, 2021 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

ashura Like Mel Gibson in the Passion of the Christ, but for Shiite Muslims. (Hassan Reza)

Ashura is marked by Shiite Muslims around the world. The modern-day impact of the Islamic pilgrimage has changed over the centuries. What was once a commemoration of martyrdom today inspires much more, including social justice work around the globe.

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