What A Day - Florida, Man
Episode Date: March 7, 2023Florida’s 2023 legislative session begins today. Lawmakers in the Republican-controlled state legislature are expected to push Governor Ron DeSantis’s conservative agenda, ahead of his widely-expe...cted 2024 presidential bid.Police in Atlanta, Georgia charged 23 people with domestic terrorism this week for allegedly attacking police during a protest against “Cop City” — a proposed $90 million police training center in a wooded area near a predominantly Black neighborhood.And in headlines: Israeli fighter pilots have joined protests over a proposed overhaul to that country’s judicial system, Russian military forces may be close to capturing the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, and Oklahomans will vote on whether to legalize recreational marijuana.Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastCrooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Tuesday, March 7th. I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Traevel Anderson. And this is What A Day,
where when we hear about the avian bird flu, we simply ask, where?
Yeah, where'd the bird fly? Out the window, south for the winter. Details, people.
A little willful ignorance can really help you sleep at night, Josie. On today's show, Russian forces are closing in on the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut.
Plus, Oklahoma voters are heading to the polls to decide whether to legalize recreational marijuana.
But first, I have the slightly depressing honor today of previewing what
is on the docket for Florida's 2023 legislative session, which begins today. Very valid response,
Josie. We've obviously spoken at length about Florida's Republican Governor Ron DeSantis and
all of his foolishness, so you already know where this is going. So Josie, I want you to take some deep
breaths with me along the way. Okay. I'm trying. I'm trying to breathe deep. Yes. But I'm not
excited. You don't have to be. That's okay. That's all right. We need to know, but we don't need to
love it. Exactly. So even before the legislative session begins, more than a thousand bills have
already been filed. And because the
state legislature is controlled by Republicans, it's all but guaranteed that whatever DeSantis
wants will come to fruition. The state Senate president even said last month, quote, we're
going to get his agenda across the finish line. For our sanity, Josie, I'm just going to discuss two main categories of things we can expect.
But keep in mind, this is literally just the tip of the iceberg.
First up is the issue of education.
By now, we're all familiar with the don't say gay mess and the anti-critical race theory foolishness coming out of the state.
Well, the legislature is bound to ratchet literally all of that up, you know, by 10 times or so.
There are at least 10 bills aimed at removing, quote-unquote, indoctrination and, quote-unquote, ideology from the public school system.
That's all the way from pre-K through colleges and universities. One of those bills would ban any college degree focused
on critical race theory, gender studies, or intersectionality, as well as any major or minor
that quote-unquote engenders belief in those concepts. That same bill, if passed as is,
would also explicitly ban state colleges and universities from, quote, using diversity,
equity, and inclusion statements, critical race theory rhetoric, or other forms of political
identity filters as part of the hiring process. So basically, no more affirmative action,
even though it's white women, not people of color who benefit the most from affirmative action.
But that's a separate conversation for a different time.
There's a different bill that also wants to ban school employees from using pronouns for kids that don't align with their sex assigned at birth,
even if the parents agree.
So, you know, whatever happened to those alleged parents' rights that the Florida state legislature was trying to protect in all
of this. That same bill would also extend the Don't Say Gay bill, which applied to pre-K up
to third grade. It would extend it all the way up to eighth grade. This just feels so cynical to me
because it's so explicit, like what the real driving forces here are, right? Like, we're fine indoctrinating
you as long as we agree with the indoctrination. We're fine listening to your parents as long as
we think your parents are conservative enough. Otherwise, like all our principles out the window,
right? Yeah. Just upsetting. It's upsetting. Maddening. Yeah. So what's the second issue
to keep our eyes on? You said education, but that was really like 13,000 issues and one.
It was.
That's the thing, right?
So many of these bills kind of hit on a variety of different categories, purposefully so.
The second category, though, I want to talk about is gun control in this state where 11 mass shootings have happened this year alone, according to the
Gun Violence Archive. Some lawmakers are proposing a complete removal of concealed carry restrictions,
which is quite absurd. Under the bill, Floridians would no longer have to apply for a license for
concealed carry, and the regulation of concealed carry permits would completely end. Now, DeSantis
has already said he'd approve something like this,
and if it passes as it is expected to, Florida would become the 26th state to remove such
permitting requirements. I guess that makes sense. 11 mass shootings is not enough. We need more.
Apparently. What could possess you to, I just don't, yeah. It doesn't make sense. Not to us
sane individuals, at least. But that's not even the worst of it. Right. What? How is that possible? Well, they'll be considering bills to enact further restrictions on abortion and reproductive rights. There's a bill that would require private companies to check their employees immigration status. DeSantis has said that juries should be able to issue the death penalty even
when they're not unanimous. And he's even asking the state for $12 million more to continue the
program where he sends migrants from border states to Martha's Vineyard or D.C., like we've covered
at length on the show before. There's so many changes that could be coming to Florida over the
60-day legislative session, changes that would be, in many cases, long sought after wins for the most conservative of the GOP.
But of course, when they win, so many folks lose.
Mind you, it's expected that Ron DeSantis will officially throw his hat into the ring
against Donald Trump and Nikki Haley and whomever else will be running for the Republican nomination
for president shortly after this session concludes. So the thinking is that this will,
you know, set his campaign up well to be a legitimate challenge for Trump. He'll be able
to say, I have won all of these conservative policies that have been passed in Florida.
You should vote for me because they still want to make America great again or whatever.
Though, of course, you know, I should be clear in my book,
both Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis are bad choices.
But that's what we're dealing with in the alleged sunshine state
that's bringing a lot of darkness our way.
It really is.
This is to be expected, but also very surreal decisions coming out of Florida.
All right. So moving on to a neighboring state of Florida,
my state of Georgia, here in Atlanta,
the protests over what opponents have called Cop City
have continued during a planned week of action
occurring as we speak.
And that has resulted in some serious backlash
from law enforcement.
So for those who may need reminding,
Cop City is a proposed 85-acre, $90 million police training center here in Atlanta. If built, it would sit within a 300-acre
forest in a largely Black neighborhood. So where to start on all the parts of this that aren't cool?
There is so much about this that isn't cool. Is it safe to say that Cop City is unpopular in Atlanta,
even though they've continued pushing it through?
Yeah, I think it's safe to say that. Of course, like public opinion varies. And this is still
Georgia after all. So a lot of conservatives here, but many residents are very unhappy with
the millions of dollars being spent on this facility. And in fact, plans for Cop City have
forged ahead
despite major backlash from city residents, right? The Atlanta City Council voted to lease the land
of the police union after 17 hours of pretty much entirely negative public comment. That was back in
2021. And if you've ever been to a city council meeting or watched one, you know that 17 hours
of negative comment means a lot of people really care about this because it's hard to get 17 hours of anything at a city
council meeting. So since Cop City was approved, the Stop Cop City movement, which is also called
Defend Atlanta Forest, has grown exponentially and it's really spread across the country. Many
of the people involved are environmental activists who are protesting the destruction of the local
forest in order to
build this facility. Atlanta really prides itself on being a city in a forest. And according to
Columbia University, a, quote, urban tree canopy covers almost 48 percent of the city. So the fact
that some of this would be destroyed to build this training facility is driving a lot of the protest.
And again, as we covered back in January, a protester named Manuel Teran
was killed by police. Police claim that Teran fired at them, but there has been some pretty
serious dispute of that claim. Ay yi yi. So you mentioned there have been these protests happening
this week. You mentioned some backlash from police. What exactly happened? Yeah, well,
the details are still coming out. But even from what we know, it seems clear that the police acted strangely, to say the least,
and that's pretty much the nicest way I can put it. Police claim that on Sunday, a number of
protesters set vehicles ablaze and destroyed property. Those alleged actions were done by
a very small minority of the hundreds who were protesting the area that day. And the people who did those
actions had masked faces, they were black and camouflaged, so they couldn't be identified.
What's strange is that, according to reports, the police didn't actually stop the destruction
from occurring or arrest anybody in the moment. The New York Times reports that, quote,
law enforcement officers looked on and initially did not intervene. Instead, they waited
until the protesters returned to the broader crowd, and then they swarmed the area and detained people
despite not knowing exactly who was at fault for the destruction, because again, they couldn't
see their faces. So according to a statement by protesters, quote, police retaliated viciously by
raiding the entire forest and arresting some people with no connection to
or awareness of the action on the other side. So, for example, the Southern Poverty Law Center
tweeted that one of their employees was, quote, arrested while acting and identifying as a legal
observer on behalf of the National Lawyers Guild. This is just more indication, right, that the
police were basically arresting people willy-nilly, indiscriminately, to say the more official word,
and were not super concerned with necessarily arresting the people that had actually committed the actions that they were upset about.
And by the way, weren't even concerned with stopping activity happen and then basically swarm the entire protest group. So what exactly are those protesters who've been detained facing? with domestic terrorism, which is extremely concerning. And that's in addition to the six that were charged with the same thing back in January.
Keep in mind that this is a pattern we've seen over the past few years, not only in
Atlanta, but elsewhere.
And it has a major silencing effect on the right to protest.
As one lawyer told The Guardian in January, Georgia's domestic terrorism statute is,
quote, overly vague.
He said that those charges were basically an attempt by prosecutors who were, quote,
trying to turn a political movement into a criminal organization.
So police's indiscriminate arrests and extreme overcharging here, this is just more evidence that the right to protest is contingent on law enforcement respecting your First Amendment
rights, respecting your constitutional rights. Because the reaction to Cop City is yet another
bad sign for protesters everywhere.
You know, if going out and standing up against this new facility means you could get charged with domestic terrorism, just being a legal observer means you could get charged with domestic terrorism.
It's a pretty serious sign that police are trying to crack down on protesting more broadly.
And if this is the type of training that they're trying to do at said cop city, we don't need no more of it at all.
This is the thing.
Like, they're saying they need more space to train so they can become basically harsher
cops.
Like, this is not helping their case, at least to many of us.
At all.
So we'll continue to follow this story as it develops.
But that's the latest for now.
We'll be back after some ads.
Let's get to some headlines.
Israelis are in their ninth week of protests against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's proposal to overhaul the country's Supreme Court.
As we've mentioned before on the show, the plan could weaken Israel's legal system and threaten its democratic institutions.
The unrest has now crossed over into Israel's military, and reserve duty pilots in its air force are especially concerned about what the changes could mean for them.
Nearly all members of an elite air squad said they'd skip on a training exercise this week in protest. According to local reports, they're worried that the reforms will enable the current
far-right government to order them to get involved in an illegal conflict.
The battle for the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut rages on as Russian military forces
appear to be close to capturing it.
If and when Bakhmut falls, it would be the first time in several months that Russia has been able
to take over a city in Ukraine. And even so, military experts say it would not be a big win
for Moscow. Bakhmut itself isn't strategically important on its own, and the vast majority of
people living there have already fled. Nevertheless,
Ukraine's top generals have vowed to defend the city despite heavy losses on both sides during the brutal months-long campaign. New Zealand's Georgina Byer, the world's first openly transgender
member of any parliament, died yesterday. She was 65 years old. A lifelong champion of LGBTQ plus
rights, Byer began her trailblazing career in politics in 1995 when she became the mayor of a small town on New Zealand's North Island, giving her the distinction of being the first known trans mayor in the world. Party. Beyer is best known for her work fighting for marriage equality and other protections for the LGBTQ plus community, as well as helping to pass a landmark bill that decriminalized sex work
in New Zealand, a cause that was personal to her as a former sex worker. Take a listen to Beyer
reflecting on her life in this interview she did with Radio New Zealand back in 2021.
You know, you've got to live on the edge of it, and that's what life is sort of about. And
I'm glad that, yes, I've faced a lot of adversity, but you can't live in your victimhood all the
time. You can't wallow in it. You've got to learn from it, move on and change it, and change what,
you know, created that. And I hope I've been able to do a bit of that.
One of Byer's friends announced her death on social media, saying she passed away peacefully
in hospice care.
If you've ever encountered or been a family traveling with small children,
you know they've been through enough already. The Transportation Department announced it's putting out an online dashboard
to show travelers which airlines have committed to allowing families to sit together at no extra cost.
So far, that list is pretty short.
Only Alaska, Frontier and American Airlines
will let you sit with your kids without ponying up more cash. The move follows President Biden's
pledge during last month's State of the Union address to come down on junk fees and hidden
surcharges. Now let's see a few more airlines put that junk back in the trunk. I won't even get
started on the cost of flying with children,
but if anybody wants to hear an eight-episode podcast about it, I am ready.
Oklahomans will head to the polls today to vote on whether recreational marijuana should be legal
in the state. The special election comes five years after voters legalized medical marijuana
in the Sooner State by a solid margin. Cannabis advocacy groups have worked ever since to put
recreational weed on the ballot, since thousands of Oklahomans are arrested every year for marijuana possession. If it passes,
the measure would allow adults 21 and over to buy and possess up to an ounce of cannabis,
as well as grow a limited number of plants for their own use. It would also allow residents
with cannabis-related convictions to petition the state to have those charges expunged from
their records.
Roll that in your ballot and smoke it.
Puff, puff, pass, honey.
When it comes to chocolate, Switzerland is anything but neutral. The chocolatiers over at Toblerone will be forced to change their packaging
after announcing plans to move some of its production from Switzerland to Slovakia
due to regulations that monitor the Swissness of products that evoke
Swiss imagery. The original Toblerone packaging predominantly showcases the Matterhorn,
an iconic mountain in the nearby Alps. Toblerone will replace the Matterhorn on its packaging with
a generic peak, still evoking the shape of the triangular honey and almond nougat chocolate.
Swiss officials have been enforcing a Swissness law since 2017.
Food products that claim to be from Switzerland have to contain at least 80% Swiss products,
and the essential manufacturing of the food must take place in Switzerland.
These rules lose their power as soon as you cross the border,
which is why over here in America, Gruyere can be any old cheese with tiny holes in it.
And that Swiss Miss hot cocoa you're drinking definitely came from Wisconsin.
Swiss Miss hot cocoa is better than anything that Switzerland makes.
I'm just going to say it. It's so good.
Somebody is very upset at you right now.
I know. I'm so sorry.
But Swiss Miss is that girl.
It really is.
I take my Swiss Miss powder that girl. It really is.
I take my Swiss Miss powder.
I put it in a glass of cold milk and I lightly stir it so that there's still chunks of like powder that I can scoop out with my spoon.
It's a very comforting experience. Reverend Trevelle speaking on the religious experience of Swiss Miss Hot Cocoa, which truly is so good.
It's great.
And those are the headlines.
That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
summit the chocolate Matterhorn, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just how to direct charges straight to your junk fee folder like me,
well, today is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Trey Bell Anderson.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And let our myths be Swiss.
Call it whatever they want.
I will keep drinking it.
They can call it Wisconsin myths for all I care.
Wiss myths.
Wiss myths.
Oh my God.
That has been trademarked.
Crap.
Get on it.
What a Day is a production
of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed
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Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is Jossie Kaufman, and our executive producer is Lita Martinez.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.