LoAmmo
Member
One of the Right's swiftest pushbacks against the umbrella of whatever-you-want-to-call-it, BLM, George Floyd, Racial Equality, whatever-demonstrations was in Florida, where their very Trumpy Governor, Republican Ron DeSantis, virtue-signaled to Trump's base with a new law.
If someone feels threatened by as few as three people, that might constitute "mob intimidation" (!) which is punishable by up to a year in prison.
If someone topples a monument (oddly specific, that), that could earn you up to 15 years in prison.
And if protesters, say, block a road, Florida's new law considers that a felony. And, incidentally, extends civil protections to Florida drivers who plow into the protesters, allowing them to claim "self-defense."
Very clearly, Florida "is having none of it," and the gauntlet has been thrown down: Not in Florida. We simply will not allow it.
Except, of course, for when we do.
That's about a clear-cut violation of Florida's new law, that was so important it had to be rushed into enactment, as one could imagine. The new law was designed, and expressly written, primarily to punish the specific act of shutting down highways. So, what kinds of draconian punishments were meted out to these scofflaws? Why, none at all. No arrests. No citations. No fines.
DeSantis himself said in April, "there needs to be swift penalties" for protesters who deliberately block roads. Well, there wasn't.
To know why is to know that Cuban-Americans in Florida are a strongly-reliable GOP voting bloc--one that DeSantis will need to count heavily on during his own re-election bid next year.
um, yeah...different. I mean, he's right, in a sense, in that, if the exact same number of black demonstrators shut down that exact stretch of highway for the exact same duration of time and caused the exact same dollar figure of damages (if any), it's not much of a stretch to imagine some non-zero number of them feeling the teeth in Gov. DeSantis' new law, and cooling their heels in the pokey. Is it possible to know this, for a fact; to exactly duplicate the situation as a sort of control experiment? No. It is not. (So save your breath, Derec.)
But, just the same, I'm gonna go out on a limb and assume that, in the words of Governor DeSantis, that little experiment would have been...
"different."
If someone feels threatened by as few as three people, that might constitute "mob intimidation" (!) which is punishable by up to a year in prison.
If someone topples a monument (oddly specific, that), that could earn you up to 15 years in prison.
And if protesters, say, block a road, Florida's new law considers that a felony. And, incidentally, extends civil protections to Florida drivers who plow into the protesters, allowing them to claim "self-defense."
Very clearly, Florida "is having none of it," and the gauntlet has been thrown down: Not in Florida. We simply will not allow it.
Except, of course, for when we do.
Scores of people crowded a major Miami-area highway Tuesday, chanting in support of rare protests that erupted days earlier in Cuba against the country's communist government. The rally caused an hours-long closure on part of the Palmetto Expressway in Miami-Dade County.
That's about a clear-cut violation of Florida's new law, that was so important it had to be rushed into enactment, as one could imagine. The new law was designed, and expressly written, primarily to punish the specific act of shutting down highways. So, what kinds of draconian punishments were meted out to these scofflaws? Why, none at all. No arrests. No citations. No fines.
DeSantis himself said in April, "there needs to be swift penalties" for protesters who deliberately block roads. Well, there wasn't.
To know why is to know that Cuban-Americans in Florida are a strongly-reliable GOP voting bloc--one that DeSantis will need to count heavily on during his own re-election bid next year.
Asked for some kind of explanation, the GOP governor said those who blocked the highway were "going out and peacefully assembling." He added that protests in support of Cubans are "much different" from the Black Lives Matter protests that inspired the state Republican law.
um, yeah...different. I mean, he's right, in a sense, in that, if the exact same number of black demonstrators shut down that exact stretch of highway for the exact same duration of time and caused the exact same dollar figure of damages (if any), it's not much of a stretch to imagine some non-zero number of them feeling the teeth in Gov. DeSantis' new law, and cooling their heels in the pokey. Is it possible to know this, for a fact; to exactly duplicate the situation as a sort of control experiment? No. It is not. (So save your breath, Derec.)
But, just the same, I'm gonna go out on a limb and assume that, in the words of Governor DeSantis, that little experiment would have been...
"different."