Long Live the Conch Republic
The colorful, mostly libertarian history of Key West

The United States acquired the island of Key West through neither military conquest nor diplomatic treaty. In good American fashion, it was purchased with private funds.
The island was uninhabited except by foliage and flamingos when John Whitehead spotted it while sailing from Nassau in 1819. It had little to recommend it—not even a source of fresh water—except a deep harbor, fortuitously placed between America's Eastern Seaboard and the busy gulf port of Mobile, Alabama.
Sensing the potential in that location, Whitehead and a business partner, John Simonton, tracked down the island's owner, a Spanish citizen named Juan Pablo Salas, and made him a $2,000 offer. "Salas accepted, no doubt believing he'd gotten the better part of the deal," writes Maureen Ogle in Key West: History of an Island of Dreams.
The island began to fill with settlers and just as soon acquired a reputation as a "deadly nest" of pirates and disease. "In another time and place, such a reputation may have killed the settlement," Ogle explains. "But in early-nineteenth-century America—alive with the pioneering spirit—that reputation only added to Key West's allure." As Simonton himself put it, "Capital and capitalists will always go where profit is to be found."
Wrecking, or salvaging the cargo of distressed sea vessels, was the town's chief industry. Wreckers provided an invaluable service, venturing out during violent storms at grave risk to themselves to prevent the loss of both life and goods when ships foundered on the hazardous coral reefs. "It was a vocation regulated by few laws," writes Victoria Shearer in It Happened in the Florida Keys, "but governed by firm rules of honor: The first wrecking vessel to arrive at a distressed ship became the wrecking master of record, directing the salvage and earning a larger share of the proceeds. Other wreckers received shares in proportion to the amount of tonnage they saved."
On shore, commission agents waited to receive the cargo and arranged to have it auctioned off—for a cut of the reward, of course.
The construction of public lighthouses (and the introduction of steam-powered ships, less likely to be blown aground) eventually put the wreckers out of business. Sea-sponge harvesting, cigar manufacturing, and tourism took over as engines of the local economy. The second of those was a product of government intervention: In the 1850s, Congress imposed stiff tariffs on Cuban cigars but failed to apply the duty to raw tobacco leaf. Predictably, entrepreneurs took to making bulk ingredient purchases in Havana and then set up factories in Key West, a mere 90 miles away. The workers were largely imported from Cuba as well.
During the 19th century, "a decidedly cosmopolitan city slowly emerged from the mangrove thickets," Ogle writes. "Because Key West sat at the crossroads of the Caribbean, everyone crossed paths with throngs of what one islander called 'world wanderers,'" from Bahamians to Irishmen to "Hindoos" to Swedes.
Key West naturally selected for a certain anti-authoritarian disposition. When state health officials responded to an 1896 smallpox outbreak by establishing a quarantine camp and closing the harbor, residents "balked," Ogle recounts. "At a town meeting, seven hundred people listened as one speaker after another denounced government interference. Key Westers paid taxes and got nothing but grief" from the state capital, they said. Eventually, "the crowd voted to inform the state legislature of their desire to secede."
It wouldn't be the last time.
***
By the early 20th century, Key West was gaining fame as a haven of vice. Saloons lined Duval Street. Gambling and prostitution were major attractions.
The situation intensified with the passage of the 18th Amendment, which banned the manufacture, sale, and transportation of alcohol. Suddenly, rumrunning became the biggest business of all. "Liquor washed over Key West during Prohibition like high tide under a full moon," Shearer writes. "Given its proximity to Cuba and the Bahamas, both of which were swimming in booze, the Florida Keys became a wide-open distribution point….Locals considered smuggling liquor a public service."
In Key West, even the Prohibition agents often left the islanders well enough alone—and for good reason. One story, recounted in both books, involves a 1926 speakeasy raid by a group of federal "revenooers" down from Miami. For whatever reason, this time the townspeople weren't having it. "Proprietors of the raided properties swore out warrants against the agents," Ogle writes, "charging them with assault and battery, destruction of private property, and larceny."
The justice of the peace for the Keys, Rogelio Gomez, "sided with the locals and granted the warrants," Shearer explains, making him "the only county magistrate in the United States ever to issue an arrest warrant against a Prohibition agent." The Miami agents, apparently seeing the writing on the wall, snuck out through the back door of the courthouse and escaped aboard a Navy ship. "The mess was finally cleaned up when the two sides—locals and feds—reached a compromise and dropped both cases," Shearer writes.
Around this time, Key Westers (also known as "Conchs") rejoiced when the U.S. Coast Guard relocated its headquarters away from the island. "And why shouldn't they have?" asks Ogle. "From the point of view of Key West rumrunners, the Coast Guard represented unfair competition. As soon as the Guard's servicemen seized a cargo of contraband booze, they turned right around and sold it….Who wouldn't be resentful?"
The onset of the Great Depression a few years later hit the island city hard. It's an exaggeration to say Ernest Hemingway's personal expenditures single-handedly kept the economy going, but only just. The celebrity writer ate and drank at the city's taverns; took out-of-town friends on deep-sea fishing expeditions; bought and renovated his now-famous residence on Whitehead Street; and lured in other literary types with disposable income, including the poet Robert Frost, the philosopher John Dewey, and the playwright Tennessee Williams.
But even Hemingway's largesse wasn't enough for the struggling town. In 1934, Julius Stone Jr., head of the Florida division at the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, arrived with an ambitious plan: to "turn Key West into a first-class tourist destination" by rehabilitating the historic downtown with a combination of federal dollars and local volunteer labor. Hoping to cultivate the arts scene, Stone also tasked a cadre of writers, painters, thespians, and musicians employed by the Works Progress Administration and the Federal Writers' Project with beautifying the island.
Perhaps the least libertarian aspect of Key West history, then, is that its fame as a hub of arts and culture was purchased in sizable part with tax money. But that story's epilogue is worth bearing in mind: After the New Deal programs dried up, locals created an arts league in an effort to maintain their new reputation. Stone himself, "back in town as a practicing attorney and mover-and-shaker, served as one of the organization's first presidents," Ogle writes. "Later, he would flee the island when one of his many shady deals turned sour."
Leading lights such as Hemingway and Frost, lamenting the touristification of the island, decamped. But those who remained bet on the allure of "bohemianism," producing glossy brochures that, in Ogle's words, "played up the island's live-and-let-live attitude and portrayed the community as a hotbed of eccentricity." Later, the same spirit would make Key West into a gay enclave famous for its drag shows.
There does seem to be something to the notion that Conchs are just different from other folks. In 1962, Americans held their collective breath as the country tottered on the edge of war. News broke that the Soviets had installed nuclear missiles in communist Cuba, putting attack capabilities in the United States' backyard. But despite being on the literal frontlines of that showdown, Shearer reports, "Life in Key West remained curiously, quintessentially laid back. After all, October in the Florida Keys, the height of hurricane season, had always been fraught with a degree of danger."
In the 1970s, the Keys emerged as a way station in the international drug trade. The same personal and geographic characteristics that had allowed Key West denizens to flourish during Prohibition (including a high tolerance for risk and hundreds of miles of marshy coastline) made it tough for federal law enforcement officials to keep up with traffickers half a century later—especially when local law enforcement officials were sometimes in on the game.
***
By 1982, the feds had come up with a new tactic for catching drug runners and illegal immigrants entering the country through the Keys. Their move sparked an uprising that, in a sense, continues to this day.
On April 18, without warning, the U.S. Border Patrol set up a checkpoint on U.S. Highway 1 at the top of the Keys—the only road out of town—and began searching all vehicles attempting to pass north onto the mainland. By some reports, the roadblock caused traffic to back up for 19 miles. Motorists, most of whom were vacationers headed home at the end of the weekend, sat for hours in the heat waiting for their chance to pass.
The tourism industry felt an immediate impact in the form of canceled reservations. Proprietors didn't take that lightly.
Mayor Dennis Wardlow and the island's Chamber of Commerce initially tried the legal route: They flew to Miami and filed for an injunction in federal court. It was to no avail. So the outraged Key Westers opted for a more dramatic response.
On April 23, Wardlow announced that Key West was seceding from the Union. "They're treating us like a foreign country," he said, "so we might as well become one." Assuming the title of prime minister, he lowered the stars and stripes and raised the light blue flag of the fledgling Conch Republic. "We serve notice on the government in Washington," he declared, "to remove the roadblock or get ready to put up a permanent border to a new foreign land. We as a people may have suffered in the past, but we have no intention of suffering in the future at the hands of fools and bureaucrats….We're Conchs and we've had enough."
Wardlow's cheeky intention was to declare war on America, fire one shot, surrender, and then ask for $1 billion in aid for rebuilding. His countrymen carried out the plan of attack as only Key Westers would. "Using the Conch Republic's weapon of choice—hard, stale Cuban bread," Shearer writes, a member of Wardlow's war cabinet "hit a cooperative young uniformed naval officer over the head, then immediately handed over the loaf."
The rebellion was part publicity stunt, part genuine protest. ("We're happy to secede today with some humor," Wardlow said. "But there's some anger, too.") It was effective on both counts: The roadblock was speedily removed, and the gag became a tourism bonanza.
Today, Conch Republic apparel is available at pretty much all of Key West's many, many T-shirt shops. A 10-day "independence" celebration happens every April, drawing thousands to the island. (The festivities include a mock battle in which combatants pelt naval vessels with water balloons and conch fritters.) Community leaders boast that Conchs are a people with a "sovereign state of mind." The micronation even sells novelty passports—and there are documented cases of holders successfully using them to travel abroad and reenter the United States. Sovereign, indeed!
In 1994, the Conchs sent an "official" delegation to the Summit of the Americas in Miami. In 1995, when a government shutdown in Washington caused the closure of Dry Tortugas National Park, just off the Florida coast, the Republic "threatened to use three antique biplanes loaded with stale Cuban bread to bomb the park's Fort Jefferson" unless the popular tourist destination was reopened, Shearer writes.
More recently, in 2006, the fake country "annexed" a stretch of an abandoned overseas bridge after the Coast Guard told a group of Cuban refugees that landing there did not trigger "wet foot, dry foot"—the policy at the time of granting legal status to any Cuban who landed on American soil.
Peter Anderson, who held the title of Conch Republic secretary general, "led a landing party of Conchs who staked miniature flags along the bridge," wrote Darien Cavanaugh in a 2015 article for the War Is Boring website. "Since the federal government decided in its infinite wisdom that the old Seven Mile Bridge is not territory of the United States, the Conch Republic is very interested," Anderson told reporters; Washington "chose not to defend" the bridge against the invasion.
And there you have the colorful history behind the Key West motto, emblazoned on everything from sweatshirts to souvenir passports: "We seceded where others failed."
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When the conchs attempted to pull out, was that an inserection or an outserection?
She was a shell of herself after the conch pulled out.
Good to see Conchs with the gonads to stand up to DC's busybodies, in the tradition of many good Americans such as our founders who stood up to King George.
On the 12th day of Christmas reason gave to me...
12 flordia articles
11 DeSantis screeds
10 orange an baaaadds
9 flordia man stories
8 Disney articls
7 don't say gays
6 fl town council stories
5 flordia brick bats
4 flordia elections
3 flordia Republicans bad
2 flordia pythons
And a both sides are bad from caaaalliii
Perfecto
Must be Florida weekend.
Florida month. Ten Florida articles for every other state mentioned.
Merry Floridamas!
Sounds like a Beach Boys lyric for Remy.
🙂
😉
The January issue's main theme was 'all things Florida'.
Maybe Reason's relocating.
The Velvet Fascism Of "Protect Our Democracy"
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/velvet-fascism-protect-our-democracy
If there is one thing a neo marxist loves, it is redefining words to take ownership of an argument. Sea lions on steroids.
You see Jeff engaging in that technique here every single day. Although I would argue that Jeff is more a traditional fascist than a neo-Marxist.
Great. Now we have to hear sarc complain about using fascism correctly and how it is a right wing government.
In the neo-Biblical tale of Jeffah and the Whale, the character Jeffah consumed the giant fish in one gulp. He then tore into the chips with vinegar.
Ackshuyally, contrary to the taxonomy of jack-legged preachers, whales are mammals, so Jeffah would be gorging on what .ight best be called Cow of The Sea.
🙂
😉
Mmmm cow.
1. The word "fish" meant any primarily aquatic animal in English until the 1700's when it came to refer exclusively to gilled aquatic vertebrates. Before that it was also used to refer to fish, beavers, lobster, dolphins, seals, penguins, sea lice, auks, etc.
2. Taxonomically all land vertebrates are fish as they evolved from lob-finned fish becoming tetrapods. Whales which evolved from land ungulates are taxonomically fish.
3. The original Hebrew text says
Weird. It double posted half a post.
1. The word "fish" meant any primarily aquatic animal in English until the 1700's when it came to refer exclusively to gilled aquatic vertebrates. Before that it was also used to refer to fish, beavers, lobster, dolphins, seals, penguins, sea lice, auks, etc.
2. Taxonomically all land vertebrates are fish as they evolved from lob-finned fish becoming tetrapods.
"One of the central tenets of modern taxonomy is that every group has to include, by definition, all of the groups that evolve from it. So rats did not stop being mammals when the rodent group branched off the evolutionary tree. Every branch on the tree of life is considered to be a member of all its parent branches.
This means, for example, there can be no definition of fish that does not include everything that evolved from fish. Following this logic you could argue that as amphibians evolved from fish, amphibians are fish. Mammals evolved from animals that evolved from amphibians, so mammals are fish. We are fish."
Whales which evolved from land ungulates are taxonomically fish.
3. The original Hebrew text says a big fish. I doesn't mention a whale.
Ah, but no non-whale water-dwelling animal with fins, scales, and gills nor, for that matter, any land dwelling animal, is big enough to swallows a man whole. Nor could a man survive in the acidic stomach of a whale or any other organism. So the desert legend is still jack-legged.
"Now the Lord had prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah. And Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights."
It was a one time fish solely to contain Jonah.
How thoughtful and Omnibenevolent of JHVH-1!
They left out a couple more legal issues with the ruling, though some are a bit technical.
-This is a constitutional issue, and should not have been heard in a state court at all, but removed to a federal court
-The statute they’re enforcing required a resolution within 5 days, because it’s meant to solve clear issues of ballot qualification, such as whether a candidate is old enough to serve. The judge heard closing arguments well after testimony concluded and it took her weeks to issue a ruling, making it legally invalid
-Congress has the authority to enforce all provisions of the 14th Amendment, and there is no indication this power is deferred to the states. In fact, given that the whole point of the 14th is that it limits state power, it’s clearly not within a state’s purview.
It’s ridiculously transparent that these judges are contorting beyond any recognition in order to force their preference into a legal ruling.
How was wrecking carried on in the days before wireless? How would anyone know there was a wreck out there? Did they just patrol the likely spots until they found one?
People did manage without cel service for most of history.
A telescope would give you all the info you needed.
Or from the mouth of seamen.
Perhaps all the mispronounced tales of conch and seamen in the keys is what attracted the gay population.
Perhaps more so than the Cayman islands causing those folks to utter, “Cayman my ass!”
You can't say Cay man. DeSantis signed a law.
So Gay for Pay or Dough for Blow?
🙂
😉
Of course, the effectiveness of this is shown by the fact that wrecking is still a profession and governments still want their cut of the take.
According to the Wikipedia entry, that's exactly what they did: patrol the likely spots until they found one.
Jeffy, this is just for you.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/i-am-not-student-hitler-trump-defends-poisoning-blood-comments-says-illegal-immigration
"He didn’t say it the way I said it either,” Trump continued. “It’s a very different kind of a statement."
Not only does "vergifte das Blut" not mean the same thing as "blood poisoning" but the statements referred to two very different meanings, occurrences and situations .
They knew this comparison was vicious nonsense, we knew it was vicious nonsense. But they wanted to give their army of shills and trolls, who also knew it was vicious nonsense, a new war club to wave around.
And sure enough, we all saw Jeff, Sarcasmic and Shrike trolling with it the next day.
Well, turd lies. It's what turd does.
Trump was said (by Ivana, in 1990) not to have had a copy of Mein Kampf by his bedside, but "My New Order", a collection of Hitler's speeches:
"Last April, perhaps in a surge of Czech nationalism, Ivana Trump told her lawyer Michael Kennedy that from time to time her husband reads a book of Hitler's collected speeches, My New Order, which he keeps in a cabinet by his bed. Kennedy now guards a copy of My New Order in a closet at his office, as if it were a grenade. Hitler's speeches, from his earliest days up through the Phony War of 1939, reveal his extraordinary ability as a master propagandist.
"Did your cousin John give you the Hitler speeches?" I asked Trump.
Trump hesitated. "Who told you that?"
"I don't remember," I said.
"Actually, it was my friend Marty Davis from Paramount who gave me a copy of Mein Kampf, and he's a Jew." ("I did give him a book about Hitler," Marty Davis said. "But it was My New Order, Hitler's speeches, not Mein Kampf. I thought he would find it interesting. I am his friend, but I'm not Jewish.")
Later, Trump returned to this subject. "If I had these speeches, and I am not saying that I do, I would never read them.""
Accordingly, based on Ivana's reported statement, and Marty Davis' reported corroboration of it, I'd say Donald Trump was almost certainly lying when he said, "I know nothing about Hitler. I’m not a student of Hitler. I never read his works."
But Trump lying isn't exactly revelatory, is it?
How is Trump lying, shill?
WTF is that bitch on about?
How'd it become part of Florida? Guess I'd have to buy the book. I'm guessing Whitehead and Simonton didn't buy allodial rights.
Maybe here
https://www.keywest200th.com/timeline
How to win friends and influence people, Exhibit 190 (with video):
https://twitter.com/Ace_chicago/status/1738678439534592409
I-190 is the main entrance to O'Hare International Airport, and this (12/23) is one of the busiest travel days of the year at one of the busiest airports in the US.
Apparently Open Society is funding the protests and interfering with Christmas celebrations has been a major part of their campaign. But I can't understand the connection of Christmas with the Hamas/Israel war.
Why would you be surprised that a Nazi acts like a dickhead?
One side is being reported to have burned the Christmas tree in Bethlehem.
cars going around them in the grass.
All it would take to discourage this would be brave motorists just one time running over the vermin. Where are the men?
It’s not like they’re white people having a Christmas parade. That’s what really energizes red SUV’s to go awol.
We need common-sense red SUV control.
What about the opposite end of the state, where the Republic of West Florida reigned? Someone recently was pursuing the claim that the land was rightly British Dominion and was treating it as the British Dominion of West Florida; maybe you can find it on the Wayback.
In other libertarian news, the government of Argentina is allowing protesters to pay for their own police presence and cleanup apres protest. In fact, the government is insisting that protesters cover the costs, so they are not seen as sponging off the public coffers.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-67809237
What if protestors don’t want security and decide they want to burn, loot, and riot? Who pays for the police then?
If they make it legal to shoot looters and rioters, things might start going the right way.
The Vice-President, obviously. Just like in America.
The protesters are kindly prevented from looting or killing by the police ZAP squad, who are there to keep the protesters from accidentally (or purposely) harming lives and property. The government helps the protesters provide restitution by sending them a bill.
Not sure if anyone else loves Rand Paul's festivus tweets but my favorite from yesterday.
Rand Paul
@RandPaul
I'm sorry. I didn't mean to leave out
@justinamash
. He also listened to my Dad, but then he set himself on fire after his TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome) diagnosis.
Oh God, that’s beautiful. Amash’s career suffered a terminal TDS diagnosis.
He wanted to be president so he took some really really bad advice and decided that bullying the victim of a smear campaign was indeed the road to success.
Merry Christmas shrike.
The U.S. national debt has increased twice as fast under President Joe Biden as of December 2023 compared to former President Donald Trump, according to data released by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).
https://justthenews.com/government/congress/national-debt-has-increased-twice-fast-under-biden-trump
Who knew that spittin tobaccy played such a large part in the economy?
Obviously the CBO just hates democrats and Joe Biden in particular.
So the purchase of the island by American citizens made it U.S. territory? I don't think things worked like that even then. The U.S. acquired Florida from Spain at about the same time. Would Key West not have been included in the transferred territory if it weren't for that private purchase?
Yes, Key West was a part of the transfer of Florida from Spain to the US. The story is facetious.
The Conch Republic uses the Gadsden Flag, but with a coral snake, and is defended by a National Guard of Hemingway impersonators on jet skis.
The purchase of the island was followed just two months later by the US military arriving and planting the flag. No one objected, and the island became US property.
JUST LIKE THE MOON!
Also, Libertine =/= Libertarian
This Christmas, Pluggo would like to make a small donation for Tiny Tim.
Toy seamen instead of toy soldiers?
Ebenezer Spooge
The ghost of Climax Past.
NYT warns the USSC about making the wrong political decisions around the cases involving Trump.
https://dnyuz.com/2023/12/23/the-supreme-courts-big-trump-test-is-here/
Virtually no legal analysis. Just a warning leftist media will scold them.
Democracy so fragile it needs philosopher kings.
Why even have elections?
So (D)emocracy can look legitimate. They’ve done this in Illinois for years with uncontested elections.
Are you kidding? The left has been trying this out for years.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/29/why-elections-are-bad-for-democracy
https://washingtonstand.com/commentary/nyt-elections-are-bad-for-democracy
It sure would be a shame if people suddenly thought the courts were behaving as political actors.
AP has story about anti war politician in Russia being banned in Russia from the ballot. Doesn't understand the irony of their story.
https://apnews.com/article/russia-election-presidential-duntsova-putin-nomination-e2260c1f786b554bb10e3b175b7992ae?utm_campaign=TrueAnthem&utm_medium=AP&utm_source=Twitter
Hey. If the Democrats can do it…
It's far from clear that the errors in her documents were not disqualifying, but to compare the US legal system to that of a country in which the rule of law practically does not exist is ludicrous. Which explains your take on it, of course.
It's (D)ifferent.
The US legal system that routinely lets criminals skate, gives slaps on the wrist to bad acting cops, and has been practically single minded in trying to take out one man for the last 7 years?
It’s patently obvious that leftist despise the Rule of Law unless they can twist it to their own purposes (thus morphing it into the Rule of Men), but let’s not quibble about little things like that.
Key West naturally selected for a certain anti-authoritarian disposition. When state health officials responded to an 1896 smallpox outbreak by establishing a quarantine camp and closing the harbor, residents "balked," Ogle recounts. "At a town meeting, seven hundred people listened as one speaker after another denounced government interference. Key Westers paid taxes and got nothing but grief" from the state capital, they said. Eventually, "the crowd voted to inform the state legislature of their desire to secede."
This doesn't speak well to the intellect of Conchers at that time, especially since the procedure of variolation against deadly Smallpox was known and successfully practiced by The Founding Fathers during The American Revolution and Smallpox vaccination was invented by Edward Jenner shortly thereafter in 1792. Had the Conchers done Smallpox vaccinations, they could have lived a free life without quarrantine camps.
Is Steffie actually praising this stupidity as a good thing?
As T.J. observed, Ignorant (and dead) and free in a state of civilization never was and can never be.
If they only did things voluntarily, the state wouldn’t have to force them!
/jeff
Uh, Smallpox is a communicable disease spread by casual contact and far more deadly than COVID-19.
Had it broke out on an isolated island, it could have spread easily, everyone could have died, and without wills (a likelihood when dealing with stupid people) all their booty is belong to The State by the law on Intestate Property.
And if the island had a lot of commerce with people sailing from abroad, they could have caught the deadly disease and spread it as well.
By The NAP/NIFF Principle, you have every right to commit suicide, but no right to drag anyone else along with a deadly disease.
And if you value that Principle and seek it to be a good contagion spread worldwide, it helps to be alive first.
Things like this are why Libertarians are their own worst enemies.
Actually enjoyed reading this history. Thanks Stephanie. Still baffled by the barrage of Florida articles.
If Reason had an end of the year awards for their staff, I believe Liz Wolfe would take home Rookie of the Year. And deservedly so. She is talented. But I’m not sure she’s got enough to win that in consecutive years.
It’s terribly difficult to win rookie of the year more than once. Hardly anyone has done it.
"Are we fighting in Ukraine in order to “queer the Donbass”?
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/our-lgbt-empire/
"The American concept of homosexuality is quite unique. It resembles no previous culture’s idea of gay relationships. We certainly do not have a monopoly on acceptance of gay sex. It’s a wild world out there. There is, if I can put this delicately, something funny about the idea that we have anything to teach the Arab world about sodomy. Or Southeast Asia. Albanian sworn virgins are a tradition that originates in the Kanun of Lek. Do we want to send a bunch of Westernized NGO staffers to tell these ladies that they’re actually “trans”?
There are many places where our version of gay rights is extremely unpopular. The two biggest religions in the world are the Roman Catholic Church and Islam. Both condemn gay sex. China does not go for it either; there is no gay marriage there, and the ruling party periodically cracks down on gay activism, which it considers contrary to Chinese family values. The entire continent of Africa has exactly one country that has legalized gay marriage (South Africa).
Even many places that are inclined to be chill about private acts between adults balk at how far America is taking things. In America, tens of thousands of people cut off their breasts or genitals every year trying to change their sex. Judges tell parents they will lose custody if they don’t let their children be castrated. Rising STD rates among gay men have led the CDC to approve the continuous use of antibiotics as a prophylactic (DoxyPEP), even though this will surely result in antibiotic-resistant superbugs. Our birthrates are collapsing, and almost half of the children we do have are out of wedlock. There are lots of reasons other countries might look at us and think maybe we don’t have our sexual norms exactly right.
If our idiosyncratic vision of sexual liberation is so unpopular, why do we push it? Even if you really believe in the gay cause, surely you can understand, as a point of prudence, that other people don’t like it and that it will harm other causes you care about to link them. It is a genuine mystery."
Just for the record I don't harbor any antipathy toward gay people or gay marriage. Mrs. Grimsrud and I have had gay friends for half a century. But I found this piece interesting because it dissects the western goal of imposing it's "unique" version gay rights on the rest of the world using available carrots and sticks. And taxpayer dollars. I mean debt.
In international circles, NATO is referred to as NAFO and the western hegemony as globohomo. But the conflict is not about men taking cocks in their asses.
Don't conflate homosexuality with genderism. The Gay liberation movement was about sexual freedom. Genderism is about conversion. It is sexism itself, the opposite of liberation from compulsory sex roles.
Genderism is a denial of homosexuality, based on self-delusion, which its advocates demand government respect and (most importantly) enforce at gunpoint, if necessary.
Weirdly similar to MAGAt self-delusion, actually...it's odd they're not more supportive of their deranged fellow travellers?
Yes, the Horseshoe Theory.
But we do see wokesters defending radical Islam.
Hmmmm...Treating people like equal, sovereign beings with Individual Rights and expecting others to do the same...What's the worst that could happen?
WTF? I think Florida Today has fewer articles on Florida than Reason has this last week
It's DeSantis Derangement Syndrome.
After Jeb, one will take Florida seriously until DeSantis annexes Venezuela and make Miami capital of the Spanish Main.
So many snide comments, a lot are funny. The whole January issue is about Florida. There's a lot of weirdos in here so caught up in their ideas nd subterranean snipes that they can't see this magazine is about libertarianism. And Florida is the center of liberty and evolving American energy and thought in this still-free country -- so powerful and secular that people are missing it still... A great magazine and a great issue and article.
Merry Xmas to all celebrants, and a happy and prosperous new year to all of you, whether you're rustlers, cut throats, murderers, bounty hunters, desperados, mugs, pugs, thugs, nitwits, halfwits, dimwits, vipers, snipers, con men, Indian agents, Mexican bandits, muggers, buggerers, bushwhackers, hornswogglers, horse thieves, bull dykes, train robbers, bank robbers, ass-kickers, shit-kickers or Methodists.
Give that man a harrumph.
Just don't call us vermin or Jeff will faint.
Sevo included.
HALLELUJAH!. HOLY SHIT!!! WHERE'S THE TYLENOL?!?!?
https://youtu.be/TQXuazYI_YU?si=u7LsLXbyJ6KuNdfu
Later, the same spirit would make Key West into a gay enclave famous for its drag shows.
Are we sure it wasn't the Naval Base?
It is filled with seamen.
Twas the night before Christmas, when all through Reason,
Only one groomer stirring, hopes to be squeezin.
The strawman were flung by the score with no care.
In hopes that St. Anthony soon would be there.
The children were wrestled, Buttplug in his bed.
While visions of rescue danced in their head.
Worth mentioning that the described strategy -- "to declare war on America, fire one shot, surrender, and then ask for $1 billion in aid for rebuilding" -- was almost certainly inspired by the novel (not the movie) THE MOUSE THAT ROARED.
Also, a grammatical gripe about the line quoted from Ogle. She writes: "In another time and place, such a reputation may have killed the settlement." She should have written "MIGHT have," not "MAY have." "Might have" refers to a possibility existing in the past, or in an alternative scenario. "May have" refers to its being possible now that the thin really did happen.
Homosexuality produces zero babies.
Does everybody have to in order to have a species?