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Florida Governor Ron DeSantis Isn't a Trump Alternative — He's a Far-Right Bigot Too (like, omigod...Teen Vogue alert)
Teen Vogue ^ | DECEMBER 8, 2022 | LEXI MCMENAMIN

Posted on 12/18/2022 2:57:22 PM PST by DoodleBob

Florida governor Ron DeSantis is certainly having a moment. In the wake of the failed “red wave” the media kept warning us about, DeSantis has been declared “the biggest winner of an otherwise dark election cycle for Republicans.” This week, Time magazine — responsible, you may recall, for the 2014 “transgender tipping point” — short-listed DeSantis for its 2022 person of the year award. This award isn’t necessarily granted to the best person in a given year: For example, past recipients include DeSantis’s current nemesis and then president-elect Donald Trump in 2016, and Adolf Hitler in 1938. But it’s another example of the media buzz around DeSantis and his possible presidential candidacy.

CNN’s recently laid-off pundit Chris Cillizza praised the timing of a potential 2024 run for DeSantis, calling him “the hottest thing going in the Republican Party” right now. Many other outlets have described DeSantis as, somehow, a substantive and possibly preferable alternative to Trump:

-From a profile in The New Yorker, June 2022: “The Florida governor channels the same rage as the former president, but with greater discipline.”

-An op-ed in Politico, July 2022: “Liberals should welcome Ron DeSantis’s rise.”

-The Tampa Bay Times, just two days after the election: “DeSantis emerges as the Trump alternative after Florida landslide.”

-An op-ed from a National Review staffer in the Washington Post, November 2022: “DeSantis would pave the way for a post-Trump GOP return to normal.”

A DeSantis presidential campaign seems all but sure to be coming. A recent poll of Utah voters found the governor in the lead among potential 2024 GOP presidential nominees, with Representative Liz Cheney and Trump trailing him in second and third place, respectively. In classic I’m-about-to-run-for-president fashion, DeSantis has a memoir coming out in February with HarperCollins. Although current Florida law (reinstated in 2018) would require DeSantis to step down from the governor’s seat to run for president, state Republicans are floating a rewrite of that policy to ease DeSantis’s road to the White House.

The normalization of this kind of far-right demagogue by the media is a dangerous mistake. DeSantis is not a more “presidential” or “respectable” version of Trump; he’s a politician who embraced Trump closely until the moment it stopped being politically useful, and who represents a grave threat to residents of Florida and the whole US. DeSantis has wrecked Florida’s policies on COVID, voting, education, protesting, immigration, reproductive rights, and more. Don’t buy the BS.

Governor DeSantis's entire political ideology can be distilled down to opposing what he refers to as "the woke left." He has used this term to categorize companies and individuals, such as the NCAA, after it refused to hold events in states like Florida that were legislating on trans youth in sports; Ben & Jerry’s for criticizing Israel; the Walt Disney Company for opposing Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” policy.

And in 2021, DeSantis pushed a proposal he called the “Stop WOKE” Act, restricting education on race, which he tied to “woke ideology” or “a form of cultural Marxism.” The Stop WOKE Act was challenged in courts and DeSantis staffers were asked what “woke” actually means. The governor's general counsel, per the Washington Post, defined it as “the belief there are systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them.” Florida, DeSantis said in his November acceptance speech, is “where woke goes to die.”

So by these definitions, DeSantis is making his fiefdom one where, if you say there are systemic injustices in American society, you are not welcome. This doesn’t sound like a gentler alternative to Trump. In fact, this might make it harder to figure out where he and Trump (and the rest of the Republican mascots) deviate.

Even though many candidates who backed “stop the steal” lost their races, others, including DeSantis, did not. As pointed out by the Tallahassee Democrat, DeSantis has never contradicted Trump’s accusation that the 2020 election was stolen. Furthermore, he signed into law a slate of election-related legislation increasing barriers to voting that were reliant on the grand “stop the steal” lie.

Soon after coming into existence, DeSantis’s Office of Election Crimes and Security — a.k.a. his “voting police” — made 20 arrests for “illegal” voting; 15 of those arrested were Black voters. (At least one charge of voter fraud was later thrown out by a state judge.) Videos of the arrests that spread across social media showed the voters to be confused about what they had done wrong.

After initially putting COVID-19 safeguards into place, by the fall of 2020, DeSantis’s stance on the virus was that “the government, apart from protecting the elderly and making treatments available, should do almost nothing,” according to The New Yorker. Since spring 2020, more than 83,000 Floridians have died from COVID — that’s one in 258 residents. And in spite of DeSantis's comments about protecting the state’s elderly, Florida has the worst COVID death rate in the country for elders: Three-fourths of the state’s COVID deaths include the elderly.

The Palm Beach Post’s editorial board traced these outcomes back to DeSantis’s dismissive COVID policies. During the first year of the pandemic, he and his staffers cast doubt on the number of deaths, though one center at Columbia Law School said the data suggested deaths were actually undercounted. DeSantis lifted the state’s COVID business restrictions in September 2020, prior to the existence of a COVID vaccine, and ended all public health executive orders for the pandemic in May 2021.

Under DeSantis, Florida has also become more hostile to protesters. In 2020, while then President Trump fearmongered about “anarchy” overtaking Democrat-run cities, protesters fighting for racial justice were repeatedly hit by cars driven into protests — and some states, like Florida, decided to side with the drivers vs. the protesters. In spring 2021, DeSantis signed into law an “anti-riot” bill that lowers the bar for charging protesters with third-degree felonies and shields drivers who hit protesters with their vehicle from civil liability.

In April, before the fall of Roe v. Wade, DeSantis signed into law a ban on abortions starting at 15 weeks of pregnancy, without exception for rape or incest. Though DeSantis waffled on making further explicit statements on abortion in the months leading to the midterms, state Republicans won a supermajority in the Florida legislature in November, and are considering a more restrictive abortion ban starting at 12 weeks, or three months into pregnancy, potentially including an exception for rape and incest.

Inarguably, DeSantis is in part to blame for the nationwide spread of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation that has targeted young people, with his very public Don’t Say Gay campaign becoming a trendsetter for conservative ideologues controlling states across the country. Attacks on the LGBTQ+ community feel ever-increasing, and this feeling is borne out in the number of bills and laws introduced or passed that affect trans youth in more than half of states.

While the DeSantis administration’s legislation and messaging emphasizes that it is focused on children (What a moral accomplishment, targeting kids! Give the governor a cookie!), it has resurfaced early 20th-century laws to justify targeting the liquor licenses of businesses that feature drag programming. If you’ve been paying attention this year, you likely know attacks on drag shows are functionally a dog whistle in the broader campaign to target LGBTQ+ people, adults included. Plus, DeSantis's focus on schools already affects adults: Think of all the LGBTQ+ teachers impacted by these policies.

DeSantis’s lack of humanity also extends to immigration policy. He and Texas governor Greg Abbott forced migrants to travel thousands of miles from their respective states to “liberal” sanctuary cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago; others were directed to the residence of Vice President Kamala Harris. The Texas Tribune reported that Florida, under DeSantis’s leadership, “flew planes to Texas, allegedly lured migrants onto the flights by promising jobs, housing and services, and a free trip to Boston, and then left those migrants in Martha’s Vineyard [about a hundred miles away].… Three of those migrants have now sued DeSantis in federal court,” alleging they were manipulated and misled. In this process, the absolute cravenness of treating human beings like cargo for transport has apparently been overlooked by DeSantis.

Maxwell Frost, Florida’s newest congressperson, cut his activist teeth pushing for gun control after the 2018 Parkland shooting, which led to the creation of March for Our Lives. For his part, DeSantis said earlier this year, he plans to remove particular gun control restrictions in the state. And this summer, the governor signed a bill appointing an armed law enforcement member for each of the state’s schools, plus he wants to address the state’s teacher shortage by recruiting retired law enforcement officers. So, like, cops in schools, in all the ways he can attempt it.

If all this wasn’t enough, DeSantis is also a hypocrite. No one was quicker to compare him to Trump than DeSantis himself, a few years ago. In a 2018 campaign ad, DeSantis “builds a wall” with one of his children and reads another (seen later in the commercial wearing a MAGA onesie) a book about Trump, with “Ron DeSantis: Pitbull Trump Defender” stated in all caps at the bottom. Given the advent of conservatives winning by flip-flopping on Trump, such as J.D. Vance, the hypocrisy here is worth identifying, even if it not surprising.

Just like Trump, DeSantis is a wealthy, pro-corporate, Ivy League-educated politician masquerading as a populist. Further empowering someone like this, especially after the chaos his governorship has wrought, would have serious consequences. But holding this against DeSantis, or holding up DeSantis as if he’s unique from Trump, as if their individual wrongdoings are what we need to stop, misses the forest for the trees. We need to reject this normalization at the root.

Media commentary that separates DeSantis from the broader conservative campaign to shred any remaining social safety net for marginalized communities in the US plays into a concept presented by the philosopher Hannah Arendt: In one of her writings about the Holocaust, which she witnessed, she coins her theory of the “banality of evil. As described by theorist Judith Butler, “If a crime against humanity had become in some sense ‘banal’ it was precisely because it was committed in a daily way, systematically, without being adequately named and opposed.”

DeSantis’s tactics — and their movement into the mainstream — don’t exist in a vacuum; they are empowered by a media ecosystem that is all too eager to sanitize the governor's image and thereby enable him. Arendt, Butler wrote for The Guardian in 2011, “was trying to point to the way in which the crime had become for the criminals accepted, routinized, and implemented without moral revulsion and political indignation and resistance.” This banality — this “normal” — should never be accepted as such.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: chat; chriscillizza; clintonnonnews; cnn; desantis; florida; leximcmenamin; newsforumabuse; rondesantis; smokybackroomforum; teenvogue; tldr
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To: DoodleBob
I will have to give this some 'serious' thought - because I DO,
of course, get all of my political opinions from Teen Vogue.

Don't you?

.

/s

61 posted on 12/18/2022 3:46:06 PM PST by GaltAdonis
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To: Bruce Campbells Chin

You are exactly right.

It won’t stick so well.

Meanwhile, Trump has lots of baggage, past and present.

Reagan was eviscerated as much as possible, but it ultimately didn’t hold water, and everyone knew it. Every Repub is beaten up, that is known.


62 posted on 12/18/2022 3:47:21 PM PST by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue./Federal-run medical care is as good as state-run DMV)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/local/wisconsin/2022/12/16/who-is-miss-wisconsin-grace-stanke-the-2023-miss-america-winner/69733368007/

Seeing that today, I thought of all of the rural FReeper Wisc. potential candidates who were overlooked....


63 posted on 12/18/2022 3:48:24 PM PST by Paladin2
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To: escapefromboston

“Republicans thinking they will go easy on him just because he’s not Trump are deluding themselves.”

Many Republicans are thinking that other Republicans will go easier on DeSantis then they have on Trump. Trump, partially because of his own fault, was surrounded by back stabbers.


64 posted on 12/18/2022 3:48:32 PM PST by Armscor38
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To: Bruce Campbells Chin

“I think everyone understands that the Democrats will label and attack DeSantis the exact same way they have gone after Trump.
The difference is that the attacks won’t stick the same because DeSantis doesn’t commit the same mistakes as does Trump.”

I agree.


65 posted on 12/18/2022 3:51:47 PM PST by Armscor38
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To: DoodleBob

She’s a commie.


66 posted on 12/18/2022 3:59:54 PM PST by fretzer
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To: Armscor38

Wonder how many politicians aren’t backstabbers.


67 posted on 12/18/2022 4:00:13 PM PST by escapefromboston (Free Chauvin)
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To: DoodleBob

Such big words for such small minds


68 posted on 12/18/2022 4:03:29 PM PST by Nifster (OI see puppy dogs in the clouds )
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To: DoodleBob

Teen Vogue?

Gasp, one looses at least 15 IQ points reading the name.
And the rest will be lost reading anything headed by that airhead shown in your pic.


69 posted on 12/18/2022 4:05:22 PM PST by Da Coyote
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To: DoodleBob

Maybe all she needs is for her dad to grab her nose ring and kick her them they in the ass?

5.56mm


70 posted on 12/18/2022 4:06:14 PM PST by M Kehoe (Quid Pro Joe and the Ho got to go)
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To: Kaiser8408a

What gets me is the impressionable and brainwashed Dems were already using the term Fascist twenty times a day——about the George W. Bush administration.

Every possible place to talk about what a dictator and totalitarian far right bigot W was and the country was practically finished was used. I remember the New York Review of Science Fiction pushing anti-Bush cheap shots within the issues’ editorials.

Then came Trump.

Now they have to use the soggy old slander ammo against another supposedly out of control dictator.


71 posted on 12/18/2022 4:06:49 PM PST by frank ballenger (You have summoned up a thundercloud. You're gonna hear from me. Anthem by Leonard Cohen)
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To: jdsteel

Don’t forget they even trashed Bush II, McCain, and Romney.


72 posted on 12/18/2022 4:11:28 PM PST by alternatives? (The only reason to have an army is to defend your borders.)
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To: DoodleBob

The percentage of Democrats who believe it is morally acceptable to steal an election is fairly high and growing. It is just farther out on the curve with Trump.


73 posted on 12/18/2022 4:21:43 PM PST by alternatives? (The only reason to have an army is to defend your borders.)
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To: DoodleBob

Women should not be giving any advice to teen girls.


74 posted on 12/18/2022 4:21:45 PM PST by KC_Conspirator
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To: DoodleBob

Just PROVES that UGLY people are DEMOCRATS!


75 posted on 12/18/2022 4:22:18 PM PST by Ann Archy (Abortion....... The HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: DoodleBob

Looked at the pic of the fiery-haired chick and have one comment: that is the most castrating witch I’ve ever seen.


76 posted on 12/18/2022 4:24:49 PM PST by I want the USA back (News media not worth camel spit. My pronouns: Who, What, I Don't Know.)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Hey Lexi, that dairy cow wants her nose ring back.
@@@@@@@

Looks like a nose ring used on hogs, keeps them from rooting around in the trash.....


77 posted on 12/18/2022 4:31:44 PM PST by Billyv ( Ephesians 6:11 for we battle not against flesh and blood...Pray for our leaders and nation )
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To: DoodleBob

Please don’t procreate.


78 posted on 12/18/2022 4:47:06 PM PST by CatOwner (Don't expect anyone, even conservatives, to have your back when the SHTF in 2021 and beyond.)
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To: DoodleBob

1. “They” arre pigcrap crazy.

However, this is a very good patchwork piece of lies, myths, distortions, misinformation, disinformation and psychopathic hate.

No wonder our teenagers are so mentally confused, full of blind hate, fake history, far-left neo- MARXIST disinformation and psychopathic views of the truth.

PS to They: Florida is full of old people and old people die because they are old, medical conditions or not.

Cuomo killed more old people in just a few months than any other current political figure, though they tried hard enough. How about a nice honest piece about his COVID killer policies re the sick and eldercare facilities?

While you can call yourself he/she/they or it, when you rearrange the letters it still spells out “SHIT”!.


79 posted on 12/18/2022 4:51:53 PM PST by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper (Figures )
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To: DoodleBob
Governor DeSantis's entire political ideology can be distilled down to opposing what he refers to as "the woke left." He has used this term to categorize companies and individuals, such as the NCAA, after it refused to hold events in states like Florida that were legislating on trans youth in sports; Ben & Jerry’s for criticizing Israel; the Walt Disney Company for opposing Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” policy.

And in 2021, DeSantis pushed a proposal he called the “Stop WOKE” Act, restricting education on race, which he tied to “woke ideology” or “a form of cultural Marxism.” The Stop WOKE Act was challenged in courts and DeSantis staffers were asked what “woke” actually means. The governor's general counsel, per the Washington Post, defined it as “the belief there are systemic injustices in American society and the need to address them.” Florida, DeSantis said in his November acceptance speech, is “where woke goes to die.”

I don't get it.

What's not to like?

80 posted on 12/18/2022 4:58:25 PM PST by Golden Eagle (The LGBTQ indoctrination agenda is designed to outlaw the Bible, and anyone who follows it.)
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