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  1. toniter

    toniter No Limits

    Joined:
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    Leading Causes of Death
    • Heart disease: 695,547.
    • Cancer: 605,213.
    • COVID-19: 416,893.
    • Accidents (unintentional injuries): 224,935.
    • Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 162,890.
    • Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 142,342.
    • Alzheimer's disease: 119,399.
    • Diabetes: 103,294.
    Don't believe Covid is just a virus like the flu. Don't flirt with an early demise. Get your vaccination.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • Funny Funny x 1
    1. sirius1902
      Yuuuuup I recommend you get 10 shots because we already know that 2, 3 & 4 shots don't stop the contraction of the virus or death! Stupid fucking people!
       
      sirius1902, Sep 15, 2023
    2. anon_de_plume
      anon_de_plume, Sep 17, 2023
      stumbler and toniter like this.
  2. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Average charge for COVID-19 hospitalization, by state
    Alia Paavola - Wednesday, October 20th, 2021

    The cost of a complex and noncomplex COVID-19 hospitalization in each state varies, according to a new interactive map from Fair Health, an independent nonprofit focused on enhancing price transparency in healthcare.

    To determine the average cost of both a complex and noncomplex COVID-19 hospitalization across states, Fair Health used its most recent FH Total Treatment Cost COVID-19 benchmarks, which were determined from its database of millions of billed medical claims across the U.S.

    For the cost breakdown, Fair Health defined a complex COVID-19 hospitalization as one in which a patient is admitted to the hospital and required ventilation or admission to the intensive care unit. The total charge includes ICU costs, ventilator costs and costs for room and board of increased complexity. In comparison, a noncomplex COVID-19 hospitalization is one in which a patient is admitted to the hospital but does not require ventilation or admission to the ICU. This includes charges such as room and board, laboratory testing, imaging and IVs.

    The state with the highest average charge for a complex COVID-19 hospitalization is Nevada, at $472,213. The lowest is in Maryland, where facilities charge an average of $131,965.

    Here is the average charge for a complex COVID-19 hospitalization and noncomplex COVID-19 hospitalization in each state:

    Alabama
    Complex: $279,604
    Noncomplex: $51,511

    Alaska
    Complex: $417,208
    Noncomplex: $108,870

    Arizona
    Complex: $361,540
    Noncomplex: $95,966

    Arkansas
    Complex: $242,358
    Not complex: $42,568

    California
    Complex: $461,780
    Noncomplex: $111,213

    Colorado
    Complex: $350,456
    Noncomplex: $72,068

    Connecticut
    Complex: $239,251
    Noncomplex: $55,660

    Delaware
    Complex: $272,929
    Noncomplex: $43,767

    District of Columbia
    Complex: $277,806
    Noncomplex: $44,433

    Florida
    Complex: $355,450
    Noncomplex: $67,620


    Georgia
    Complex: $292,931
    Noncomplex: $61,254

    Hawaii
    Complex: $245,665
    Noncomplex: $67,393

    Idaho
    Complex: $303,873
    Noncomplex: $95,584

    Illinois
    Complex: $277,078
    Noncomplex: $54,574

    Indiana
    Complex: $242,582
    Noncomplex: $41,064

    Iowa
    Complex: $278,396
    Noncomplex: $51,641

    Kansas
    Complex: $308,910
    Noncomplex: $53,269

    Kentucky
    Complex: $246,423
    Noncomplex: $43,244

    Louisiana
    Complex: $274,374
    Noncomplex: $42,681

    Maine
    Complex: $302,704
    Noncomplex: $71,036

    Maryland
    Complex: $131,965
    Noncomplex: $31,339

    Massachusetts
    Complex: $209,209
    Noncomplex: $62,894

    Michigan
    Complex: $207,926
    Noncomplex: $35,082

    Minnesota
    Complex: $262,910
    Noncomplex: $44,631

    Mississippi
    Complex: $301,713
    Noncomplex: $73,901

    Missouri
    Complex: $275,719
    Noncomplex: $53,514

    Montana
    Complex: $220,851
    Noncomplex: $97,905

    Nebraska
    Complex: $253,189
    Noncomplex: $58,798

    Nevada
    Complex: $472,213
    Noncomplex: $102,115

    New Hampshire
    Complex: $256,069
    Noncomplex: $62,621

    New Jersey
    Complex: $377,198
    Noncomplex: $87,301

    New Mexico
    Complex: $272,593
    Noncomplex: $98,336

    New York
    Complex: $272,746
    Noncomplex: $72,163

    North Carolina
    Complex: $234,988
    Noncomplex: $44,977

    North Dakota
    Complex: $210,995
    Noncomplex: $41,695

    Ohio
    Complex: $255,776
    Noncomplex: $41,605

    Oklahoma
    Complex: $373,128
    Noncomplex: $59,413

    Oregon
    Complex: $261,022
    Noncomplex: $82,907

    Pennsylvania
    Complex: $373,506
    Noncomplex: $77,844

    Rhode Island
    Complex: $242,162
    Noncomplex: $72,971

    South Carolina
    Complex: $302,258
    Noncomplex: $75,381

    South Dakota
    Complex: $266,635
    Noncomplex: $45,100

    Tennessee
    Complex: $292,556
    Noncomplex: $58,281

    Texas
    Complex: $378,052
    Noncomplex: $63,647

    Utah
    Complex: $261,593
    Noncomplex: $96,611

    Vermont
    Complex: $253,036
    Noncomplex: $70,792

    Virginia
    Complex: $279,741
    Noncomplex: $46,183

    Washington
    Complex: $334,224
    Noncomplex: $80,336

    West Virginia
    Complex: $216,126
    Noncomplex: $43,311

    Wisconsin
    Complex: $269,412
    Noncomplex: $53,268

    Wyoming
    Complex: $353,623
    Noncomplex: $102,772

    https://www.beckershospitalreview.c...ge-for-covid-19-hospitalization-by-state.html
     
    Last edited: Sep 15, 2023
    1. View previous comments...
    2. sirius1902
      Oh.... so you don't like your information so your changing it by going to a different site..... hmmmmm still doesn't prove shit!!!
       
      sirius1902, Sep 15, 2023
  3. sirius1902

    sirius1902 Porn Star

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    By the way, this is old information Dec 2022
     
    1. toniter
      What nine months old? You think things have changed that much? I hear herpes is climbing the list fast!
       
      toniter, Sep 16, 2023
      stumbler and anon_de_plume like this.
  4. sirius1902

    sirius1902 Porn Star

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    Screenshot_20230829_071238_X.jpg
     
    • Funny Funny x 1
    1. mstrman
      :hilarious::hilarious::hilarious::hilarious::hilarious::hilarious:
       
      mstrman, Sep 15, 2023
  5. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

    Joined:
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    upload_2023-9-15_12-35-50.jpeg
     
    • Funny Funny x 2
    1. anon_de_plume
      And there's a reason why this meme goes unattributed.

      Spacey likes anonymous sources.
       
      anon_de_plume, Sep 17, 2023
      stumbler likes this.
    2. shootersa
      shootersa, Sep 17, 2023
      sirius1902 likes this.
    3. anon_de_plume
      You only say this "last word" crap because you know you're a fraud and you have nothing. Spacey is a fraud.
       
      anon_de_plume, Sep 17, 2023
      stumbler likes this.
    4. sirius1902
      LMFAO He did it! hahaha so stupid
       
      sirius1902, Sep 18, 2023
      shootersa likes this.
  6. silkythighs

    silkythighs Porn Star

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    Fw7wR8pWYAAQ2Bw_1684982863906_1684982885517.jpg
     
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  7. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    ‘It Shouldn’t Be Vilified’: Fox News Doctor Slams DeSantis For Attacking Covid-19 Vaccine
    By Jamie FreveleSep 18th, 2023, 12:41 pm

    447 comments
    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) recently advised his constituents under the age of 65 that they shouldn’t get the new Covid vaccine, but one doctor is saying his approach is wrong — on Fox News.

    Dr. Marc Siegel, a Fox News contributor and regular commentator, appeared on America’s Newsroom with hosts Bill Hemmer and Dana Perino to discuss the fentanyl crisis as well as the comments by DeSantis. And Siegel not only expressed his disagreement with DeSantis, but said that giving people the freedom to choose whether or not they should get the vaccine “doesn’t mean denigrating” it.

    Siegel also made clear that it’s not a governor’s decision to make, saying: “I think he did a great job at the beginning of the pandemic with nursing homes, with keeping businesses open, with keeping schools open. Hurray for that. He should not be weighing in on vaccines.”


    First, he expressed his confidence in the new vaccine:

    This particular vaccine is quite safe. It’s a tiny bit different than the previous one. It’s been looked at. Yes, the pharmaceutical companies should be more transparent. Yes, I’m very confident in this vaccine.

    But then he went even further into why DeSantis should not be making medical decisions for the people living in his state:

    But let me tell you where this vaccine decision should be made: not at a governor pulpit, but in a doctor’s office. It shouldn’t be vilified. Choice, Dana, doesn’t mean denigrating something. How about we bring it to the doctor and the patient? I say to the patient, ‘When did you have Covid last? I don’t want you to have this vaccine. You just had Covid. You had a bad reaction to the last vaccine. I don’t want you to have that.’ I make my recommendations, and the patient decides. Over the age of 65 for sure is the high-risk group. But I want to be able to do it on a one-on-one basis.

    Watch the video above via Fox News.


    https://www.mediaite.com/news/it-sh...lams-desantis-for-attacking-covid-19-vaccine/

    upload_2023-9-18_17-36-11.png
     
  8. toniter

    toniter No Limits

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    • Like Like x 2
  9. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Law violators still breaking the law and still in this country.
     
    • Agree Agree x 2
    1. toniter
      Here come the judge. Here come the judge. DuhSantis better run and hide.
       
      toniter, Sep 19, 2023
      anon_de_plume and stumbler like this.
  10. sirius1902

    sirius1902 Porn Star

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    Behind the scenes, Ron DeSantis is making things worse for Kevin McCarthy
    The Florida governor strategized Wednesday with leaders of the House cadre pushing Speaker Kevin McCarthy to the brink.

    Screenshot_20230919_160638_DuckDuckGo.jpg

    Ron DeSantis speaks during a fundraising event.
    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis talked on the phone Wednesday with conservative Reps. Chip Roy, Thomas Massie and Bob Good. | Charlie Neibergall/AP Photo

    By EUGENE DANIELS

    09/14/2023 11:25 AM EDT

    In the high-stakes fight that is threatening to shut down the federal government next month — and tear House Republicans apart — Ron DeSantis is taking sides.

    The Florida governor spent about 30 minutes on the phone Wednesday with conservative Reps. Chip Roy of Texas, Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Bob Good of Virginia — leaders of the cadre that is pushing House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to embrace a shutdown if Democrats won’t agree to hard-right policy demands.

    DeSantis’ message, according to a person familiar with the call: “I got your back. Keep fighting.”

    The call is the latest signal that DeSantis is working to insert himself into the spending fight on the Hill in a bid to elevate his standing among Republican primary voters.

    “Ron DeSantis knows that both parties — including the current and previous administration — are to blame for Washington’s reckless spending spree,” said DeSantis campaign spokesperson Andrew Romeo. “He is urging congressional Republicans to hold the line in this current spending standoff and end days of rubber stamping multi-trillion dollar spending bills that harm the American people.”

    DeSantis spent three terms in the House and is a founding member of the House Freedom Caucus, the hard-line group that is pushing McCarthy to fight harder against Democrats on spending and other members — and threatening his gavel if he doesn’t.

    Still, it’s notable DeSantis is associating himself with McCarthy’s internal foes as tensions inside the House GOP reach a boiling point. Inside a closed-door conference meeting Thursday, McCarthy exploded at his critics.

    “If you think you scare me because you want to file a motion to vacate, move the fucking motion,” he said, referring to the ouster maneuver that has been discussed by Good and other lawmakers.

    The person who described the phone call did so on the condition of anonymity. A spokesperson for Roy, who has served as an informal leader of the conservative splinter group, declined to comment. A spokesperson for McCarthy did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment on DeSantis’ role.

    In other recent signs of his interest in the spending fight, DeSantis released a video knocking the “D.C. establishment” for spending too much. And in an interview with CBS’ Norah O’Donnell, he blamed both Democrats and Republicans for overspending.

    DeSantis has shown much more attention to the spending clash than the GOP presidential frontrunner, former President Donald Trump, who has generally left McCarthy alone to handle fiscal matters.

    Trump has recently been more interested in another aspect of internal House GOP politics — the push to impeach President Joe Biden, which was formalized by McCarthy on Tuesday after months of pressure from Trump and his allies.

    Rachael Bade and Olivia Beavers contributed to this report.
     
    1. stumbler
      So you think sharing the blame for a government shutdown is a good political strategy? Good for you and the rest of the treasonous conservative/America Hating/Republicans.
       
      stumbler, Sep 19, 2023
    2. sirius1902
      If that's what it takes to stop this fucking lunatic from fucking the American people!
       
      sirius1902, Sep 19, 2023
  11. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

    Joined:
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    Ethics? We don't need no stinking ethics. We don't even believe in the Constitution let alone the rule of law.


    [​IMG]
    Florida ethics cases sit on DeSantis’ desk as he vows to ‘break the swamp’
    Skyler Swisher, Orlando Sentinel
    Tue, September 19, 2023 at 10:26 AM MDT·7 min read
    115


    [​IMG]
    Steven Ferdman/Getty Images North America/TNS







    As Gov.

    vows to clean up Washington if elected president, dozens of ethics orders seeking to punish the misdeeds of Florida politicians have been languishing on his desk in Tallahassee.

    The Republican governor hasn’t signed an ethics order since Jan. 28, 2021, according to his official website. Until he takes action, politicians and public employees won’t have to fork over thousands of dollars in fines, even if they settled their ethics cases and admitted wrongdoing.

    The list of ethics charges includes a former Orange County commissioner who failed to disclose she had a financial interest in a vote. Another case involves a Manatee County commissioner who made headlines for adding herself and four others to a VIP list for the COVID-19 vaccine when it was in short supply.

    The backlog signals that Florida isn’t serious about enforcing ethics laws, said Ben Wilcox, research director at Integrity Florida, a government watchdog group.


    “It is a bad message to public officials out there that they can maybe get away with violations of Florida’s ethics laws,” he said.

    Forty-two pending orders recommending penalties await the governor’s action, according to an Aug. 24 report from Kerrie Stillman, executive director of the Florida Commission on Ethics.

    Under Florida law, fines can’t be collected in those cases until DeSantis signs off on the commission’s recommended penalties, said Lynn Blais, a spokeswoman for the ethics commission.

    “The commission has no power to impose its recommended penalties,” she said. “Only after it is imposed is the attorney general’s office able to collect.”

    ‘Start doing his job’
    One of those recommended orders involves former Orange County Commissioner Betsy VanderLey, who voted to steer about $100,000 in county money to an engineering firm that was also paying her in an undisclosed conflict.

    Environmental activist Chuck O’Neal filed an ethics complaint against VanderLey in the summer of 2020, and she agreed to pay a $1,000 fine in December 2021.

    O’Neal was surprised to learn DeSantis hasn’t imposed penalties, more than three years after he filed the complaint.

    “There doesn’t seem to be any accountability in Florida state government whatsoever,” O’Neal said. “You can have the governor dismiss elected officials doing their jobs, yet ones found in violation of ethics complaints have no repercussions.”

    The governor’s slowness in signing ethics orders doesn’t square with his recent, high-profile suspension of Orange-Osceola State Attorney Monique Worrell, O’Neal said.

    “He needs to quit running around Iowa going to picnics and start doing his job as governor here in the state,” O’Neal said.

    DeSantis accused Worrell, a Democrat, of not aggressively prosecuting crime, saying she was “clearly and fundamentally derelict” in her duties. Worrell called the governor’s action politically motivated.

    The reason for the ethics backlog is unclear. Jeremy Redfern, a DeSantis spokesman, did not respond to a request for comment. The issue has flown mostly under the radar in Florida politics, although it was noted in a 2020 USA Today Network report and then again in a WFLA television report in July.

    On the campaign trail, DeSantis is vowing to take a tough stance on corruption in Washington, telling voters he wants to “break the swamp” if elected president.

    “We need a new era of accountability with these agencies in D.C., and we will bring that on day one with me,” DeSantis said at one event.

    High-profile cases
    The list of recommended orders involves both Republicans and Democrats and includes several high-profile cases.

    Vanessa Baugh, a former Manatee County commissioner, came under scrutiny for creating a VIP list for a COVID-19 vaccine pop-up event in February 2021 when the shot was in high demand that included herself, a developer and three others. Baugh has been an ardent supporter of DeSantis, voting to name a park after the governor.

    The commission found she violated the ethics code by using her office to deviate from the county’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution policy, and Baugh, who said she chose not to receive the vaccine at the pop-up event, agreed in November to pay an $8,000 fine.

    Action is still pending on a recommended $20,000 fine for no-party spoiler candidate Alex Rodriguez over ethics charges stemming from a 2020 South Florida state Senate race.

    Rodriguez pleaded guilty to criminal charges that he accepted $45,000 in bribes as part of an alleged “ghost” candidate scheme that prosecutors say was orchestrated to siphon votes away from former Democratic state Sen. José Javier Rodríguez.

    The list also features former Apopka Mayor Joe Kilsheimer, who faced allegations that he vacationed at the taxpayer’s expense by improperly billing expenses during a national mayors’ conference in 2017. Kilsheimer agreed to reimburse the city $668 and pay $2,500 in penalties.

    Some cases involve Democrats, including former Broward County Mayor Dale Holness and Dustin Daniels, the chief of staff when Democratic gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum was mayor of Tallahassee.

    Holness agreed to pay $1,000 in an ethics charge that he repeatedly failed to accurately disclose his income as required by state law. The commission found Daniels violated the ethics code by using city equipment to send a campaign-related mass email, recommending a $1,000 fine.

    Mark Herron, a Tallahassee lawyer representing seven people on the list, said his clients usually are “ready, willing and able” to pay the fines.

    But “they are not beating down the door saying please get him to sign the final order,” Herron said.

    ‘Toothless tiger’
    Florida law limits the ability of the Ethics Commission to enforce the ethics code, which deals with abuse of office and other standards of conduct, said Wilcox, research director for the government watchdog group.

    “People have called the Commission on Ethics a toothless tiger,” he said. “It’s not any fault of the Commission on Ethics for lack of aggressiveness. It’s the fact the Florida Legislature has not allowed that agency to be a really effective enforcer of ethics laws.”

    The ethics commission cannot self-initiate an investigation and must receive a sworn complaint to open a probe. That is like only allowing the police to stop a speeding car if another driver calls and complains, Wilcox said.

    If the commission deems a complaint legally sufficient, it is investigated, and the commission votes on whether to find probable cause that a violation occurred. If that happens, officials accused of wrongdoing can request a hearing before an administrative judge. They also can try to settle the case with the commission.

    The commission can recommend penalties, including fines, reprimands and even removal from office. But it’s up to agency heads to enforce those penalties.

    Recommended penalties against most public officers, employees, or candidates are forwarded to the governor.

    Findings against state representatives and senators are referred to the House speaker and Senate president. Legislative leaders also have not been aggressive in levying penalties against legislators who commit ethical violations, Wilcox said.

    As of late, the nine-member ethics commission has been shaken up by revelations that its chairman violated a state law barring public employees from serving. Glen Gilzean landed a $400,000-a-year job as administrator of DeSantis’ Disney oversight district in May and continued to serve as ethics chairman until resigning from the ethics board last month.

    The new chair is Ashley Lukis, a lawyer whose husband served as DeSantis’ chief of staff.

    One of DeSantis’ recent picks has sparked controversy. He appointed Tina Descovich, a co-founder of the conservative education group Moms for Liberty. Under state law, the ethics commission — appointed by the governor, House speaker and Senate president — must be bipartisan with no more than five members belonging to the same party.

    Criticism that Florida’s ethics commission isn’t effective is unwarranted, said Caroline Klancke, director of the Florida Ethics Institute.

    Earlier this year, lawmakers doubled the maximum fine from $10,000 to $20,000 for an ethics violation and increased government transparency by expanding financial disclosure requirements for local officials.

    “Florida has some of the most extensive ethics laws applicable to public officers and employees in the entire country,” said Klancke, a former general counsel and deputy executive director for the ethics commission.

    But O’Neal, who filed the ethics complaint against VanderLey, said he sees a need for improvements based on how his case was handled.

    “If we are going to have an ethics commission, it should function in a timely manner, dispense a just penalty and have that penalty enforced somewhat concurrently with the ethics violation,” O’Neal said.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/florida-ethics-cases-sit-desantis-162600484.html
     
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  12. sirius1902

    sirius1902 Porn Star

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    You fucking retards definitely don't know the constitution! So much so, you had to put a fucking warning label on it!!!! Fucking scumbags!!!!
     
    • Agree Agree x 1
    1. mstrman
      I've said it, he's CCP.
       
      mstrman, Sep 19, 2023
      sirius1902 likes this.
  13. silkythighs

    silkythighs Porn Star

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    FzogOd6aAAExV38.jpg
     
    • Like Like x 1
  14. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    And who is getting hurt the most? The children of Florida.

    It takes a while to show up but I have seen it more than once myself. Once a school system comes under attack they lose their best people and especially their best teachers first. Because they can get jobs somewhere else. Then no quality people want to move into a snake pit so the incompetent and dysfunctional begin to grow. Until eventually parents figure out their kids can't get into the colleges they want of get the jobs they want because they are basically uneducated. But by then there is years of distraction and some of those kids are damaged for the rest of their lives. All just because some demagogue believes "owning the libs" will make him president. So who gives a fuck about the kids.


    Florida is undergoing a public school 'brain drain' – and it's all Ron DeSantis' fault: columnist

    Adam Nichols
    September 20, 2023, 3:40 PM ET


    [​IMG]
    (Photo via AFP)


    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has quietly moved away from much of his anti-woke crusade, swayed by tanking poll results that suggest his campaign to become president is in big trouble.

    But a columnist wrote Wednesday his policy shift has not altered his conservative attack on his state’s education system – and it’s created a severe “brain drain.”

    “DeSantis has enacted multiple 'educational gag orders' that criminalize classroom discussions of race, gender identity, and ugly historical realities that might make white students 'feel guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress,'" wrote Kali Holloway in The Nation.

    POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

    She went on, “The end result is an exodus of teachers, and what Florida Education Association (FEA) head Andrew Spar has called “one of the worst teacher and staff shortages” in the state’s history.’

    Spar said teachers across the state have told him they want out of the career, beaten by encroaching right-wing politics and threats of legal action if they inadvertently teach the wrong thing – coupled with low pay.

    Halloway reported that, in January 2019, when DeSantis was sworn in as governor, the state had 2,217 teacher vacancies in K-12 public schools.

    In January 2023 it had 5,294 and, in August this year, 7,000.

    The exodus from public schools is reflected in higher education. His takeover of the state university New College, filling its board of trustees with his allies, drove 40 percent of faculty to quit.

    DeSantis has shrugged off any suggestions of an impending educational brain drain,” wrote Holloway.

    “ Of the New College faculty departures, he said, “If you’re a professor in, like, you know, Marxist studies, that’s not a loss for Florida.”


    https://www.rawstory.com/desantis-education/
     
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  15. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    And for the rest of the story (there's always the rest of the story when it's wrong story and stumbler) .........


    Rankings: Education - States With the Best Education (usnews.com)
    The quality of a community’s schools can be central to a family’s aspirations. And though public education has largely been a local matter for school boards and states that allocate most of schools’ funding, the federal government has played a large role for the past several decades. The No Child Left Behind Act, for example, put in place annual testing requirements for states, while the Every Student Succeeds Act enshrined the annual testing requirement but rolled back the federal government’s involvement in K-12 education.

    In evaluating the best states for education – one of eight categories driving the overall Best States rankings – U.S. News examined metrics tied to both higher education and the space from pre-kindergarten through high school. Learn more about the best states for education below, and see the Best States methodology for a detailed look at the data behind the Best States rankings.

    Florida Rankings | US News Best States
    Florida attained statehood in 1845, yet not until a pair of railroad barons built lines down the Atlantic and Gulf coasts in the late 1800s and early 1900s did the state take off, spurring the phenomenal growth of what’s now the third-most populous state.

    Henry Flagler arrived aboard the first train to Key West, southernmost point of the U.S., in 1912, marking completion of his Florida East Coast Railway linking the East Coast from north to south. In his path, he left grand hotels – the Hotel Ponce de Leon in St. Augustine, and the Breakers and Royal Poinciana in what became known as Palm Beach. Another Henry – businessman and steamship owner Henry Plant – pushed rail lines down Florida's West Coast.

    With millions of visitors each year to its beaches, major amusement parks centered around Orlando and cruise ships departing from ports on both coasts, tourism is a major contributor to Florida's gross domestic product. The state’s agriculture industry is also robust, with Florida groves producing many of the country's oranges and a winter vegetable industry that makes agriculture a year-round enterprise.

    Tourism, which pays a sizable share of the state’s sales tax, also has enabled Florida to remain among the states without a personal income tax – adding a lure as the nation’s leading retirement haven.

    The state has 1,197 miles of coastline and a land mass of 53,630 square miles. It’s 792 miles by land from Pensacola in the far northwestern Panhandle to Key West at the end of the archipelago that stretches south of Miami, and along the way there is no natural elevation higher than 345 feet – on a ridge of the Panhandle. No state has a lower peak.

    With several large cities, the state also has a sizable system of state universities and community colleges. The University of Florida in Gainesville and Florida State University in Tallahassee have been rivaled in enrollment by the University of South Florida in Tampa, University of Central Florida in Orlando, and Florida International University in Miami. Among the best known private institutions: University of Miami.
     
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  16. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    106,324
    Busted: DeSantis' camp was told Florida's crime-reduction stats were bogus — but touted them anyway

    Matthew Chapman
    September 20, 2023, 5:47 PM ET


    [​IMG]
    (Photo by Octavio Jones/Getty Images)


    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has made a claim that crime in the Sunshine State is at a "50-year low" under his leadership a key selling point on the presidential campaign trail. But according to NBC News, staffers at the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) told his camp that it wasn't true – and they ran with it anyway.

    “The ethics of what we were reporting, we knew the numbers were bad,” said one FDLE employee. “We foot-stomped it to leadership over and over again; they did not care. They did not care.”

    Multiple staffers told NBC that top officials at FDLE pressured departments to hand over numbers knowing they were incomplete, with another employee saying, “The numbers gave the governor and the [executive office of governor] what they wanted. They were looking for a particular narrative.”

    POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

    The issue stems from a recent change to Florida's crime reporting system. For decades, the state has used "summary" crime reports, meaning that a single incident with multiple crimes only reports the most serious crime. In 2021, the federal government ordered all states doing this to submit "incident-based" reports instead, which capture every crime in one incident — but several counties in Florida have not updated their systems yet and can't fully report their crime data.

    Despite this, say staffers, FDLE leaders treated the numbers they did have as a comprehensive list of all crimes – knowing that it wasn't.

    “The governor’s office wanted to say outright that we were at a 50-year crime low and we told department leadership, verbally and in writing, that was not accurate because of the deficiencies in the data,” said yet another staffer. “We went back and forth several times and we agreed, after being heavily pushed, to say we were trending in that direction.”

    FDLE's spokeswoman Gretl Plessinger pushed back on the accusation, saying, “Florida’s crime rate is indeed at a 50-year low, and criticism about FDLE’s robust data collection methods is unfounded. Despite your assertions, no current or former employee has ever expressed concerns to FDLE leadership regarding the calculations.”

    DeSantis was touted as the strongest alternative to former President Donald Trump for the 2024 nomination after he handily won re-election as governor last year, but voters and donors alike have soured on him after a series of campaign missteps, and he is trailing Trump by more than 40 points in the latest polling average.

    A recent CNN poll in New Hampshire found DeSantis barely clinging to fifth place in that state, behind Trump, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.



    https://www.rawstory.com/desantis-crime/
     
    1. toniter
      Goodbye to Donald and Ronald...
       
      toniter, Sep 21, 2023
      stumbler likes this.
  17. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Hellooooo Nikki!
     
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  18. silkythighs

    silkythighs Porn Star

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    Nikki doesn't stand a chance vs Trump.

    DRsCoOtVwAAGC3Y.jpg
     
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  19. sirius1902

    sirius1902 Porn Star

    Joined:
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    Fact-checking Ron DeSantis' 2023 State of the State claims about crime

    Crime rate
    "Florida's crime rate stands at a 50-year low."

    DeSantis' talking point is accurate.

    The Florida Department of Law Enforcement shares crime data from local law enforcement agencies with the FBI for its Uniform Crime Reporting program. The most recent state data available is from 2021. That year, Florida had a crime rate of about 1,952 crimes per 100,000 residents — nearly a 10% decrease from 2020.

    That 2021 crime rate is the lowest recorded in Florida since 1971. It's worth remembering that the quality depends on the accuracy of the information supplied to the state, and local agencies have made errors before. The COVID-19 pandemic may have contributed to the decline, but its effects are still being studied.

    Hear a claim during the legislative session we should fact-check? Email us at truthometer@politifact.com.
     
    1. stumbler
      Consider DeSantis's state, Florida. Its homicide rate was roughly 50 percent higher than New York's in 2021. Florida's two most populous cities, Jacksonville and Miami, each had a homicide rate more than double New York City's last year, even though both had Republican mayors

      https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/31/briefing/crime.html
       
      stumbler, Sep 21, 2023
    2. stumbler
      This is why I almost always copy and paste entire articles and include the links. So people know I am not lying by omission with dishonest selective editing.


      From the same article that was deliberately cut out.

      "By and large, state level crime rates follow similar patterns over time, with most states experiencing similar decreases in crime as Florida over the past 50 years," Lyndsay Boggess, a criminology professor at the University of South Florida, told PolitiFact.

      https://www.politifact.com/article/2023/mar/07/fact-checking-desantis-2023-state-of-the-state-cla/
       
      stumbler, Sep 21, 2023
  20. toniter

    toniter No Limits

    Joined:
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    Messages:
    8,808

    Not so fast...
    DeSantis Claims Florida’s Crime is at a ‘Record Low.’ But He’s Using Incomplete Data
    https://www.themarshallproject.org/2023/06/20/desantis-florida-crime-rate-incomplete-data

    "Only 49 agencies from Florida, representing less than 8% of police departments, were included in an FBI federal database last year, according to a Marshall Project analysis. This means more than 500 police departments in Florida — including most of the largest agencies, like the Miami Police Department, the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, and the St. Petersburg Police Department — are missing from the national context. Florida’s participation rate is the lowest of any state in the country."
     
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