Florida
Legislation to limit children’s exposure to drag performances passes in Florida Senate
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – Hamburger Mary’s in Jacksonville is a restaurant the place feminine impersonators carry out and their reveals are at occasions “kid-friendly.” Laws in Tallahassee might jeopardize what occurs contained in the restaurant.
Jordan Sinclair is part-owner and present director at Hamburger Mary’s. She together with others imagine the group is below assault. The enterprise hosts drag reveals which might be kid-friendly, which means there isn’t a cussing or sexual innuendo.
“The priority for us isn’t about the way it’s going to have an effect on our enterprise,” Sinclair mentioned. “It’s extra about the way it’s going to have an effect on youngsters on this planet. I imply, we’re going to do what we have now to do, we’re going to comply with the legislation and we’re going to–if they are saying, ‘child’s can’t come right here’, then youngsters received’t be allowed in right here. However, it’s extra about what it does for the mentality of youngsters rising up.”
READ: Full textual content of invoice
TELL US: Do you assume Florida lawmakers ought to regulate drag performances?
The impression on youngsters is why native state Senator Clay Yarborough’s proposal was accredited within the Senate Tuesday.
“On this invoice, we outline grownup stay efficiency with requirements accredited by the U.S. Supreme Courtroom to find out whether or not or not speech is taken into account obscene, and we additionally present accountability and penalties if a enterprise admits a toddler to an grownup stay efficiency that comprises such actions,” Yarborough mentioned.
Yarborough says it doesn’t ban delight occasions or parades. However, native state Senator Tracie Davis voted towards the invoice.
“All this invoice is definitely doing is additional attaching a stigma to an already stigmatized group of people or seen the ramifications of this rhetoric throughout the state and it’s already taking a dangerous impact,” Davis mentioned.
That impact is what Jordan Sinclair and others are feeling.
When requested if she feels below assault, Sinclair mentioned, “I do, I believe the restaurant is below assault. I believe drag is below assault. I believe trans persons are below assault. I believe, you already know, LGBTQ persons are below assault. Yeah, it feels private.”
Copyright 2023 by WJXT News4JAX – All rights reserved.
Florida
Six former Florida State basketball players suing Leonard Hamilton over NIL
Six former Florida State basketball players are suing coach Leonard Hamilton over unpaid NIL cash, according to Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger. On3’s Pete Nakos confirmed the report.
“In a landmark filing, six former FSU basketball players are suing Seminoles coach Leonard Hamilton over $1.5 million in unpaid NIL cash they say he promised them,” Dellenger wrote on Twitter. “The complaint details a team-wide boycott of a practice last season over the payments.”
The six plaintiffs listed — Darin Green Jr., Josh Nickelberry, Primo Spears, Cam’Ron Fletcher, De’Ante Green and Jalen Warley — allege Hamilton promised each of them $250,000 in NIL payments from the coach’s “business partners,” per the complaint.
The players never received payments from Hamilton, Florida State or any other party. In fact, several players actually transferred into FSU under the guise they would receive the money.
Within the complaint, there are multiple text message exchanges between players and Hamilton and players and Will Cowen, an executive with one of Florida State’s NIL collectives.
The boycott referenced above happened during a practice before a game against Duke on February 17th. The players walked out of the gym and out of Hamilton’s practice over frustration of unpaid NIL compensation.
Hamilton assured the players they would be paid the following week, per the complaint. Florida State wound up losing to Duke 76-67. Players were worried over taxes, rent and car notes, per the complaint.
In fact, players didn’t want to disappoint Hamilton over NIL dollars but it was hard not to, considering the large sum. None of the six plaintiffs are currently on the team.
Green and Nickleberry no longer have eligibility and the four others transferred out of Florida State.
Florida
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Florida
Crucial decisions made in 1980 in South Florida cast a shadow on Jimmy Carter’s presidency
Many thought the president was fooled by Fidel Castro as the Mariel boat lift taxed South Florida. His indecision after the Liberty City riots angered many.
Jimmy Carter’s favorite moment in Palm Beach County might have been the time 2,500 people turned out for a book signing in 1995 at a Boca Raton bookstore.
His low point, at least in South Florida, likely was the day 15 years earlier, when he came to Miami’s riot-scarred Liberty City in 1980 and angry protesters tossed rocks at the presidential limousine.
Carter, who died Sunday at 100, was an unassuming but charismatic Georgia peanut farmer who rode post-Watergate anger to oust Gerald Ford from the White House in 1976 and become America’s 39th president. He was himself voted out four years later by Ronald Reagan’s “Morning in America” conservative wave.
He then spent the rest of his life becoming perhaps the most beloved former president, by becoming a respected elder statesman on numerous domestic and world topics and setting a standard for community service worldwide through numerous organizations, all while fighting advancing age and several health issues, including a bout with brain cancer.
Mariel boat lift, Iran hostage standoff, energy crisis tested Carter’s presidency
Carter’s struggles with Miami’s boiling summer of 1980 — a one-two punch of the Mariel boatlift from Cuba and the May race riots — might not have been on the same level as the humiliating 14½-month Iran hostage standoff, an energy crisis, and what Carter infamously called the nation’s “crisis of confidence.” But the image of people booing him at a Liberty City town hall meeting fed criticism that he was a nice guy who was in way over his head as president. And it helped cost him re-election that fall.
Carter had been the original anti-Washington outsider presidential candidate.
In February 1975, Carter, then 50 and fresh off wrapping up his term as Georgia governor, visited The Breakers in Palm Beach to speak at a money-raising dinner for a medical school. He drew little attention from passers-by as he told reporters, “Yes, I am a serious candidate” for president.
Almost exactly a year later, when he came through for a three-day campaign swing through Palm Beach and Broward counties, all that had changed. He had won the Florida primary in March, with 34% in a field of 12 Democratic candidates, and by the summer, he led the pack of 1976 Democratic presidential nominees. And by the end of that year, he was president-elect. He’d beaten Gerald Ford, 55 to 45%. In Florida, his margin was about 52 to 47%.
Over the next four years, Carter would deal with a full plate of issues. Some would become great successes: top among them the Israel-Egypt Camp David peace accords. But 1970s economic “stagflation” — weak job growth coupled with inflation — steadily eroded the nation’s patience and confidence in the man who had won them over by promising never to lie to them.
Early in 1980, his attention again would turn to Florida.
After six Cubans had crashed the Peruvian embassy on April 1, then-Cuban President Fidel Castro declared that anyone who wanted to boat down to the port at Mariel and pick up a loved one was free to do so. Carter announced the United States would take 3,500, saying on May 5, “We welcome you with an open heart and open arms.”
Castro called his bluff. In the ensuing weeks, South Florida absorbed 125,000. Miami-Dade County’s social services and schools were overwhelmed. Eventually, some refugees would migrate north, taxing Broward and Palm Beach counties and the Treasure Coast.
For Castro, it was a convenient purge of dissidents, the disaffected and troublemakers, whom his propaganda machine branded as unworthy “worms.” And he also took the opportunity to empty his prisons. About 10 percent of the refugees were Cuba’s most hardened criminals or people with mental illnesses. They fed a crime rate that became a national sensation. People suggested the wily Cuban dictator had hoodwinked an American president again.
That would have been more than Florida could handle. But other refugees, especially those who had arrived from Haiti to a far different welcome, complained newly arrived Cubans already were getting preferred treatment.
And then there was Arthur McDuffie.
From Liberty City race riots to Habitat for Humanity
On Dec. 17, 1979, the insurance salesman — black, 33, and with no criminal record — had been chased by police through Liberty City and ended up dead. District Attorney Janet Reno, who later would be Bill Clinton’s U.S. attorney general, took four white cops to trial, alleging they beat McDuffie to death and then covered it up. Blacks fed up with what they saw as decades of police abuse seethed and waited. In March, a judge, warning the case was “a time bomb,” moved the trial to Tampa.
It didn’t matter. When the officers were acquitted May 17, furious residents of Liberty City broke windows, looted, pulled white motorists from their cars and beat them to death and burned one shop after another. The violence would last three days and leave 18 dead, 400 hurt and $100 million in damage.
In a four-hour visit to South Florida, Carter was noncommittal about what the federal government would do — if anything — to help South Florida recover from a refugee crisis brought about by national policy, and rebuild neighborhoods burned after decades of building Black rage that certainly wasn’t specific to Miami. As Carter left a community center following a tense town hall meeting, people threw rocks, cans and bottles at his limo; one bottle hit it.
“The people are not easily fooled,” a Miami News editorial said, “and they have long memories, longer even than Mr. Carter may think.”
By July, Carter’s White House would reveal a package of aid. It was too late. Months later, Carter was voted out.
In the ensuing decades, his image would shift as he devoted his life to philanthropy and peacemaking. In 1989, now eight years into his forced retirement, Carter still was a popular figure when he addressed about 2,500 people at a $60-a-head benefit at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton.
And two years later, he was back in South Florida with Habitat for Humanity, which builds affordable housing around the world. In that one week, he and volunteers would build 14 houses and a daycare center. The neighborhood: Liberty City.
Eliot Kleinberg retired from The Palm Beach Post in 2020 after a 36-year journalism career.
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