DeSantis Frets About Florida 'Reeking of Marijuana,' Says He'll Oppose Legalization
Once again, DeSantis is a guy who claims to love freedom—until he disagrees with the choices some adults make.
Once again, DeSantis is a guy who claims to love freedom—until he disagrees with the choices some adults make.
One man’s overgrown yard became a six-year struggle against overzealous code enforcement.
Under Florida's "pay-to-stay" law, inmates are charged $50 for every day of their sentence—including time they never spent incarcerated.
Ethan Blevins of the Pacific Legal Foundation explains why. I myself have made similar arguments.
The law makes it a misdemeanor to approach within 25 feet of a first responder after receiving a verbal warning to stay away.
Sandy Martinez faces that bill because of driveway cracks, a storm-damaged fence, and cars parked on her own property that illegally touched her lawn.
Plus: IDF scandal, Latin America's "small penis club," Havana syndrome, and more...
The Univ. of Pennsylvania legal scholar makes the most thorough critique yet of this approach to justifying regulations that bar social media firms from engaging in most types of content moderation.
The law would require platforms to use invasive measures to prevent most teenagers under 16 from making social media accounts and bar all minors from sexually explicit sites.
A just-good-enough remake fails to live up to its predecessor.
Efforts to revamp the tourist hot spot ignore the reality for local business owners.
Even as they attack the Biden administration's crusade against "misinformation," Missouri and Louisiana defend legal restrictions on content moderation.
Employing an 18- to 20-year-old at an adult venue could mean 15 years in prison, even if the young person used a fake ID.
A law forcing kids off social media sites is still likely coming to Florida.
Rather than destruction of property, Wendell Goney was convicted of possession of a firearm as a felon.
The First Amendment restricts governments, not private platforms, and respects editorial rights.
Supreme Court arguments about two social media laws highlight a dangerous conflation of state and private action.
The Supreme Court seems inclined to recognize that content moderation is protected by the First Amendment.
The laws violate the First Amendment because they require social media sites to abjure most content moderation, and platform speech they disapprove of.
Both states are trying to force tech companies to platform certain sorts of speech.
A shaggy roadtrip comedy set against the backdrop of late 1990s right-wing family values politics fails to come together.
Plus: Voters in Massachusetts reject state-mandated upzonings, Florida localities rebel against a surprisingly effective YIMBY reform, and lawsuits target missing middle housing in Virginia.
Deputy Jesse Hernandez, whose bullets miraculously missed the handcuffed suspect in the car, resigned during an investigation that found he "violated policy."
"You need meat, OK? We're going to have meat in Florida," DeSantis said during a press conference.
Plus: An immigration deal that's already collapsing, more expensive Big Macs, and Taylor Swift (because why not).
Disney has vowed to appeal the ruling.
Don't let a moral panic shut everything down.
The bills would classify police and correctional officers who kill people on the job as crime victims.
Florida Republicans and police unions insist that toothless civilian oversight boards are still more scrutiny than police deserve.
It is not the job of Florida taxpayers to support state officials' preferred presidential candidates.
Republican Presidential Nomination
Plus: Javier Milei’s powerful speech on economic prosperity in Davos
His political makeover into a Trumpy cultural warrior undermined what could have been a compelling campaign about the value of freedom.
Facial recognition technology is increasingly being deployed by police officers across the country, but the scope of its use has been hard to pin down.
"The First Amendment prevents DeSantis from identifying a reform prosecutor and then suspending him to garner political benefit," U.S. Circuit Judge Jill Pryor wrote.
The state Senate bill, which is extremely similar to another House proposal, aims to scrap major First Amendment protections in defamation cases.
Plus: Fort Collins tries passing zoning reform for the third time, Coastal California cracks down on Airbnbs, and state lawmakers try to unban rent control.
The colorful, mostly libertarian history of Key West.
Plus: State officials attempt to ban Donald Trump from 2024 election ballots.
How Florida’s legacy of slow-growth laws is holding back its post-COVID boom.
Zora Neale Hurston’s hometown of Eatonville, Florida, was one of the first all-black municipalities incorporated in the U.S.
It's Miami vs. Tampa in the Florida sandwich wars.
Bureaucracy usually mires construction projects in delays. Florida is trying to buck that norm.
Ballots should be counted quickly and accurately.
Watch Florida's Hispanic communities for clues about the 2024 election.
Buffett realized that what the consumer thought of him was ultimately more important than what he was.
Former state lawmaker Jeff Brandes says the Florida Legislature has "ceded its role" to high-profile Gov. Ron DeSantis.
“Just tell the truth, and they’ll accuse you of writing black humor.”
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