The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - #BecauseMiami: The Once Great State of Florida
Episode Date: June 28, 2024Stanley Campbell, Luther's brother, is running for United States Senate out of Florida. He's will be involved in the Democratic primary vs. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell for the right to take on incumbent Ri...ck Scott. He joins Billy Corben to convince the Florida listeners why they should vote for him. Mario Ariza is the author of Disposable City, which talks about climate change in Miami. Turns out, pretty much everything he wrote came into fruition. He talks to Billy about it. Plus, new laws will come into effect in Florida starting July 1st. We have a Top 5 List of the dumbest bills that will become law in Florida. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Because Miami, home of the Stanley Cup Champions, Florida Pandas. You're goddamn right, Billy.
How you feeling, Roy?
I'm starting to get over my hangover.
Starting? Yeah, starting. get over my hangover.
Starting?
Yeah, starting.
I would think you're still drunk, is what I would think.
Yeah, that's why I'm starting to get over my hangover.
I see.
Congratulations, Roy.
Thank you.
I feel like you and Greg Cody did this.
Yes, I was an instrumental part of the success
of the Florida Panthers.
I've been covering the team all season,
and Greg Cody just parachuted in with McGovern Raidit,
and that's how things got started.
Yeah, but you dazzled them with a little bit of your-
Hocus Pocus.
That's right.
And here we are.
My average cadaver.
I remember going to the inaugural season
at the Miami Arena, just blocks away from where we are.
And those were exciting times.
I had family from Philly, so they were like degenerate Flyers
fans. And so we were hockey people starting pretty young. Yeah
Bobby Clark from the the Flyers was the original general manager and he was the
architect with Bill Torrey and Brian Murray and as a Panthers fan seen where
they were in that situation to now I mean it's just like wow I'm just amazed that this is happening. Well now they're in Broward now, I mean, it's just like, wow,
I'm just amazed that this has happened.
Now they're in Broward.
Now they're moving literally up in the worlds.
So I have a really bad transition from Stanley Cup
to Stanley Campbell, our first guest on the program,
but I'm going to forego that.
Stanley, do you have a cup around you?
That would be Stanley's Cup.
I have one.
Hey!
The Stanley Cup. Roy, my cup. Hey! That is the Stanley Cup.
Roy, as you know, Uncle Luke, Luther Campbell
of Two Life Crew fame, a friend of the show, a friend of mine.
If Uncle Luke was my brother, that
would be the single most impressive thing on my resume.
I will have you know, Stanley Campbell is, in fact,
the brother of Uncle Luke, and it is the least impressive thing
on his resume.
He has had a long and distinguished career the brother of Uncle Luke, and it is the least impressive thing on his resume.
He has had a long and distinguished career in the military, in business, in the medical field.
He worked for NASA.
Oh, wow.
So I think we should start there. Stanley, are you a rocket scientist?
Well, you know, they like to call me a rocket scientist.
I just call it a mathematician that just happened to have a program that actually flew on the
Voyager 2 and is still working today.
How's that going?
Do you have to use software updates or what happens?
Yeah, so interestingly enough, it actually left the entire Milky Way solar system.
So it's actually kind of gone past every planet that we know plus some more.
Is it easier than updating an iPhone?
It's a little bit easier than updating an iPhone,
but I can tell you, you got more power in that iPhone
than everything that flew from here almost 45 years ago.
Well, I have an Android, so.
Quick follow-up, Stanley,
was it supposed to exit the Milky Way,
or did you mess up the programming there?
No, no, it's supposed to go to every planet that we have and then it's supposed to keep
going until it can't send back anything anymore.
Like an iPhone, right? Like an iPhone, until it stops working.
Yeah, until it stops working.
Stanley, you are running for, you know, we had your brother on the show who was talking about,
but did not run for Congress.
You are in fact running and qualified to run
for the United States Senate against Rick Scott.
But in order to do that,
you must first win a Democratic primary.
You are running against,
we'll call her the establishment candidate,
Debbie Mercosol-Powell, a former congresswoman who was basically the handpicked candidate of Senator Chuck Schumer,
the majority leader, Democrat in the United States Senate.
And you have not been feeling the love.
Before we get there, I want to talk a little bit about your background and the most obvious
question is, why are you running?
I'm actually running because I moved back here
about four years ago, my brother kind of talked to me
about the vaccines and everything
that was happening with that.
We had a 84% vaccination rate in Aventura
and we had 4.5% vaccination rate in Opalaka.
So knowing that that's only about three and a half miles
difference, we had to figure that out.
And when I came down, it had not much to do with Opalaka.
It had everything to do with the governance
and how the application of the vaccines were coming.
So when you got a governor who's going
to give 21% of the vaccines to publics, and there's no publics in our neighborhoods,
then that became an issue.
So I have one of the largest health care
networks in the country.
We message into every point of sale pharmacy
in the United States.
And so what I did was I brought that down here,
and then we went to work.
We actually started training nurses and doctors
and pharmacists to be able to apply to get
their own medication.
And then that eventually became the way the nation actually deployed the vaccine.
But it was harsh.
And then when we got that part settled, then the next place we looked was on the farms,
because you have migrant farm workers who didn't want to get vaccinated because if they gave
the wrong information, they could actually be deported or
something like that. So we wound up having a nice little scuffle,
but we got through it.
So Stanley, according to your bio, you run a global health
care technology company that is directly responsible for
preventing $121 million in Medicare fraud
daily and over half a trillion dollars to date. I will ask you, how could you possibly represent
the state of Florida when you are preventing one of our top industries, Medicare fraud?
You're actually taking jobs away from hardworking Floridians in the Medicare fraud industry. Shame
on you. How is it you think you can
help Florida when you are taking money away from the state?
What we're really doing is we're trying to save the Medicare trust fund. Medicare and
Medicaid are funded to certain congressional regulatory levels. And if we use too much
of it and it runs out too fast, then we don't have health care for some of
the poorest people in the country and for our elderly. That is the mantra. But the longer
I stayed, I see other things outside of health care. We got a legislation that doesn't allow
us to teach our full history. So if you can't teach all of Black history, why teach any of it
is almost the way that they position us. And so when you look at that, you look at, we got a
senator who wants to shut down social security on top of cutting back Medicare and Medicaid. He
didn't sign for the Medicaid expansion. Those are the kinds of things that I know we can do better.
And that's a million people who don't have insurance, and now you're going to take away
their subsistence from Social Security when Social Security hasn't even kept up
with cost of living increases, you know, in a common form.
So I have to say, I love the richness of your wanting to run against Rick Scott,
who is going to be self-funding a campaign
to the tune of nine figures,
thanks in no small part to his being the CEO
of the healthcare and hospital network responsible
for what was at the time the largest Medicare fraud
in the history of the United States.
I love it.
I mean, you're literally the antidote to Rick Scott.
But I wanna ask this question,
cause this is a pretty sensitive issue.
It's an ongoing issue with the Democratic Party. We hear a lot about Democrats taking black voters
for granted and I'm concerned. I've been hearing a lot from Miami-Dade countywide black candidates.
You are a statewide Florida candidate who feel like they are not getting the love from the
Democratic Party. I mean, you have a relationship
with this presidential administration through your wife, Cheryl Campbell, who is an assistant
secretary of administration for the Department of Health and Human Services. And yet, you know,
there's been news stories about you feeling some disrespect and feeling as though you are not
getting, I guess, a fair shake in this Democratic primary.
Tell me about it.
Well, I can tell you it's more than feeling because, you know, I'm a Navy pilot.
I can feel bad.
I feel good.
We still got to go flying.
But I can tell you the thing that is most troublesome is that we claim ourselves to
be the Democratic Party,
and we're all for democracy,
when in fact that's not the case.
They picked, handpicked the person out of Washington
who couldn't win our last election,
and they say, this is who we want you to pick.
And even though, you know, we just won the,
or just earned, not won,
we earned the AFL-CIO, largest union in the
United States and the history of the United States.
We got 38, well, two abstentions, 36 votes, and two were against us.
So out of 40 people, two organizations, two of them were gangsters and they expect that
two should outweigh 38. This makes no sense. And so what we've got to do is basically get Chuck
Schumer out of this race. We even got to get the White House out of this race and let the people
of Florida pick who they choose to represent them.
You already said I can beat Rick Scott on Medicare and Medicaid. That's one. We know he's a crook.
He's a crook. He's supported a crook. And so that's what do. Crooks hang together. So we got that.
But then when he didn't take $2 billion from Obama for the train,
thinking he's gonna wait on Trump
and then he could give,
he politicized our transportation system.
And now today we don't have a way to get from Orlando
to Tampa and back.
And we don't have a way to get all the way from Miami
to Jacksonville and back.
And we don't even have a start
on going from Pensacola to Jacksonville.
So these are the kinds of things that when you politicize every single thing, you can't get
anything done. So I just got tired of yelling at the TV. I know I could beat that guy. I know I
could beat Debbie. That's not going to be so difficult. But I know I can beat Rick Scott, and I'm
going to beat him like he stole something because he did steal something.
Silly, let me ask you though. I mean, there is Florida especially, just good old fashioned
American racism. What do you say to people that are concerned about a black candidate being able
to win statewide? They look back at Val Demings a couple of years ago,
losing to Marco Rubio by double digits.
How do you respond?
I don't think Val lost because she was black.
I thought Val lost because she allowed them to frame her
as the policeman coming into our neighborhood to arrest us.
I don't think it's about race,
because at the end of the day I
made a pretty good living as a black man, but I can tell you what it is about is
quality and character and the forthrightness and a person who shows up.
She could easily have walked away with the AFL-CIO nomination because she was already 3 fourths there.
But she just took them for granted
and she doesn't know our population.
And this is a population I've been working with
all of my adult life for the most part.
And I was born and raised in a union family.
So I know it from that deep.
She came here when she was 14.
So for me, when I'm going out,
I don't put race as a front. That becomes very obvious. Just look at me. I put my picture on
everything that I push out because I want you to know what I look like, what I sound like.
And for me, having a degree in physics and mathematics and 14 patents and AI, that would mean
I would be the only Senator with experience with artificial intelligence. We have no House member
or no Senate member who can even spell AI. And so that becomes important because it will be the most
transformational thing in our lifetime.
And then when you move over to healthcare,
I have the largest healthcare network in the country.
I message into every point of self pharmacy.
I understand how that information transacts.
And I've been working on women's health with five medical doctors.
My chief medical officer is an OBGYN oncologist. So I'm not
defaulting or anything else. We might have the same policies. We may even like the same things.
But now then what? Who is the state of Florida going to trust to get those things done?
Last point, I have a very long-term, 55-year relationship
Cuban because when we were bussed to Miami Beach, the Cubans were coming in at the same time.
Starnes Republican, voted for Trump, voted for Rick Scott and all the rest. And I'm saying,
Luis, oh man, I've got to get you to vote for me. You know I'm better than Rick Scott.
He says, oh man, but here's the bottom line.
My wife, my everybody, my whole family is going to vote.
Look at the border.
And I say, yeah, look at the border.
The border should not be what it is,
but that's the same border that every president has.
The thing is you have two children,
sons who are twins, who are nonverbal. Who do you trust to build the healthcare system when you're gone that will take care of your children?
And that's the bottom line. The bottom line is vote your own personal interests.
If you're a rich guy who doesn't pay taxes,
then maybe Rick Scott is your guy.
Because I'm going to come and get some of that money.
Because right now, poor people can't pay taxes.
And the massive wealth of the tax
comes from the middle class.
And those are the people who are union workers. Those are the working class people.
So we're not going to bother them. But if you're ultra rich,
we got to get some more money because you're using these same
systems. In some cases, you're using more of them, and you're
just not paying your fair share. So that's what this is.
All of that is very impressive. But you've never been arrested
for obscene lyrics.
There is that.
Well, you know.
Not yet, anyway.
Not yet.
It's only July.
Stanley Campbell is running for the United States Senate in the once great state of Florida.
Find out more at stanleyforflorida.com.
Thanks so much for being here.
Thank you. Thank you, thank you again.
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Mario Alejandro Ariza is the author of one of the Miami must read books,
Disposable City, Miami's Future on the Shores
of Climate Catastrophe.
It's a comedy, it's a love story, really,
is really what it is.
And most frustrating about it is that it takes a lot of the,
what should I say, a lot of the demagoguery
and a lot of the politics out of the climate change argument
and talks about it like in terms of,
como se dice, science and facts
and just, I don't know, opening a window.
Holy shit, it's hot as, sorry.
I mean, it is so hot today.
It is so hot outside today. And I know it is so hot outside today and I know that's
all very anecdotal and I know but we have had meteorologists on this program
who have told us no no no it's not just how you feel it is literally getting
hotter the seas are getting higher and we are essentially this is like three
how many f-bombs in this segment? That's two.
I'm gonna concentrate all of them right here.
I think it might've been three, Roy,
and I like that one slip by you because that means-
I don't think one slipped by me.
All right.
So I don't know.
Roy's exhausted, Mario, because you might know this,
but Roy's the head coach of the Florida Panthers,
and he had a very big win this week.
You might've heard about it.
Paul Murray's just got that news, huh?
But Mario, the book is fabulous.
It is not new, but what is new is your Atlantic story
of last week headline,
Miami is entering a state of unreality.
And the subheading for those of you
who really wanna laugh,
no amount of adaptation to climate change
can fix Miami's water problems.
So basically, basically in 2020,
you publish a book warning us, July of 2020,
publishing a book kind of warning us.
And four years later, almost to the month,
you publish an article going,
f*** it, it's too late.
Don't even...
That's three. Sorry, was that three? That's three. going, f**k it, it's too late. Don't even. That's three.
Sorry, that was, was that three?
That's three.
Okay, that'll be it for, so thank you and f**k you.
Four.
Oh, four, yeah, so is it too late?
I mean, what is, what are you trying to say here, Mario?
That's a great question.
I actually would love to write an investigative piece
trying to figure out whether or not
we've already passed the point
in climate emissions where Miami can or cannot be saved. What is certain at this point is
that it's not going to be fun and that it's already not fun, right? I wrote this book
a while ago. I said, hey, the insurance market is going to get pretty gnarly. The insurance
market's getting pretty gnarly. I said, hey, look, you're going to get pretty gnarly. The insurance market's getting pretty gnarly.
I said, hey, look, you're going to have trouble getting around
on days when it rains.
We're having trouble getting around on days when it rains.
And I said, hey, you're going to have a big problem when
a storm shows up on a high tide and it rains a lot.
And we're having a lot of trouble
when storms, regular rainstorms, show up on a high tide and it rains a lot, and we're having a lot of trouble when storms, regular rainstorms
show up on a high tide and it rains a lot. And that's without looking at the possible
effects of a hurricane. Climate change, its effects are already being felt in South Florida.
And the top level is that we don't have a lot of room to adapt here for the simple reason
that we live on a spongy porous limestone and the water comes up from underneath us
at the same time that it comes up from the ocean.
I try to explain that to people,
that the water is coming at us from every single direction.
We are on a peninsula, we have barrier islands,
the water is coming at us in every way.
It is inescapable.
And you're just one of those assholes that's always right.
Or as we call you in Miami, a hater.
So Mario's one of those guys who's like,
I hate to say I told you so, but he doesn't.
He doesn't hate to say I told you so at all.
Although on this one, maybe you hate to say I told you.
This is one of those things you kind of
want to be wrong about, right?
I wish I had been I
Really do because then my insurance prices might not have gone
I for my homeowners church, but you willed it. It's your fault for even for writing it for even saying it
Blame me. Yeah, so I mean you're right about rain bombs in this article not as fun as as Yeager bombs
My favorite lines right from the beginning it people on social media will know how absurd this is.
You're talking about the deluge recently
that meteorologists called a once in 200 years event,
and yet the next sentence is,
it was the fourth such massive rainfall
to smite southeastern Florida's base.
That's the thing, like,
how many once in 200 year events can we have?
It's now like four times in 200-year events.
These are becoming much more frequent, and that's not good,
and that is a direct...
Can you explain how that is a direct result of shit getting hot?
Right, right, right. Yeah, so what we're essentially doing
is, like, every time we turn on a car,
every time we run a coal-fired power plant,
we're putting, like, little sweaters on the car, every time we run a coal-fired power plant, we're putting little sweaters on the
earth, right? And we're just keeping in that much more heat, right? And as we keep in all of this
heat, and instead of radiating it off back into space, the likelihood or the probability of weird,
unlikely events happening increases
because there's more energy in the system, right?
So your once in 200 year event,
your event that has every year,
a 0.05% chance of happening,
all of a sudden stops being a once in 200 year event
and becomes more likely to occur.
Your one in 1,000 year event,
like the one that happened in Fort Lauderdale last year
when the airport got covered with two feet of water
and was shut down for a couple of days,
that becomes more likely to happen as well.
So it makes the extreme events, the unlikely events,
more likely amongst other things.
Not only did the Fort Lauderdale International Airport's
runway become a lake, but the drainage,
and everybody's like, oh, this is terrible.
I'm like, terrible, this was the design.
The drainage was just simply the runway pouring down
onto US-1, pouring down onto the highway.
That was the plan, I decided.
Made it really tough for the Florida Panthers
and for the media to get the Edmonton for game four.
Yes, that is why Roy is inventing
the first Zamboni submarine.
I want to talk about, you know, there's a line I say almost every episode
of this program that in Miami, truth is hate and lies are love
where we do not have reality, we have realty.
And I think that's probably what you're getting at with the title of your article.
Miami is entering a state of unreality because we remain, despite the fact that we have
some of the most valuable, vulnerable coastal real estate
in the entire world, we remain like the second largest
luxury real estate market after Dubai, particularly in low
lying areas like Miami Beach and on Brickell and on the
coast, places that we see on a sunny day
will be under a foot of water during the King tides,
for example, but can you explain the title
of your Atlantic story?
Miami is entering a state of unreality.
Yeah, I think there's a couple of layers
of unreality here, right?
There's the historical layer of unreality where there's the element of the con, the
grift, the selling Northeasterners on plots of land that haven't been even drained yet,
which we've been doing for hundreds of years.
But then there's also the more recent unreality.
The unreality seems to be getting thicker, hotter, wetter. Which
is that when we talk to investors, when we talk to people who are putting their money
down here, as a government, as somebody who's trying to sell something, you're like, oh,
we're adapting, right? We're putting up pumps, we're raising roads, we're putting one-way
check valves in the stormwater system, we're redesigning our stormwater system. We're mapping out our county heat
strategy. These are all good things to be doing, right? But it's a little bit like giving
the cancer patient stuff that is going to make the cancer feel better, but you're not
addressing the root of the cause, right? And the root of the cause here are greenhouse
gas emissions. And Florida doesn't have a strategy for reducing greenhouse
gas emissions. In fact, as a state, we're kind of juicing the emissions at the moment,
especially at the legislative level. So that's the fundamental state of unreality here, right? We
sell this conception that we're going to adapt, that we're going to learn to live with the water.
And to a certain point, we can adapt. To a certain point, going to learn to live with the water. And to a certain
point, we can adapt. To a certain point, we can learn to live with the water. But I've literally
had researchers tell me that there isn't enough money out there in the world to adapt Miami to
what is coming. And what is coming may be two feet by 2060, maybe four feet by 2100, or it might be a
lot more than that.
We don't know how this is gonna play out.
I remember reading a Herald article earlier this year
about the fact that the city had a new flood report.
The flood report was like, yeah, there's no,
I mean, exactly what you said.
If we put billions of dollars into this problem,
there are still some neighborhoods in the city of Miami and Miami Dade County that
will just be lost. Like we have to write them. We have to write
them off now. It doesn't even pay to to mitigate because we're
never going to be able to fix it. And these are homes to or
these neighborhoods are home to multimillion dollar developments
and luxury so called luxury condos whose parking
lots turn into indoor pools during a drizzle, whose elevators stop working to
the 70th floor when there's rain outside. But they have gorgeous views of the Bay,
I suppose. Absolutely gorgeous. Yeah. was an article though, my favorite, because this image, it was from last year,
Alex Harris in The Herald.
King Tide floods offer glimpse of Miami's soggy,
salty future, can anything be done?
The answer of course, as you know, is no.
In Spanish, also no.
But this lead, Mario, is something out of your book.
It's the roar of a generator running some sort of
stormwater drainage pump in like a pocket park
in Little River, the Little River neighborhood of Miami,
and which was like right on a canal.
And so what was happening is,
there's this multimillion dollar pump
that they're starting to spend all of our tax dollars on
all over the city.
You've got like nearly a foot of water in the sunlight
During king tides in this pocket park. They're dumping the water or pumping the water out of the park
into the
the river the canal
And then ten feet away. Just imagine this in one shot
We're just kind of panning around ten feet away
10 feet away, just imagine this in one shot, we're just kinda panning around,
10 feet away, the water is lapping back up over the seawall,
back into the pocket park again.
So this is just the ultimate, like, image,
the ultimate symbol of the futility of all of this.
So is that where we are?
I mean, forget triage, is Miami in hospice right now?
Is it just about keeping
the dying patient comfortable, keep the booze flowing, keep the cash going and keep the
luxury real estate selling until everybody catches up with this and goes, hey, we can't
afford insurance, we can't afford these flow, we can't, we can't, there's going to be no
mortgages for 30 years because no one's going to be bullish on this market for 30 years.
It's not a going concern.
Is that where we are?
Are we in the hospice stage of Miami right now?
The conversation that inspired the title of my book
was with a big time commercial real estate guy, luxury real
estate guy.
And when I got to the end of the conversation with him,
we were talking about something else.
We were talking about, I think, workforce housing. Back in 2018 of the conversation with him, we were talking about something else.
We were talking about, I think, workforce housing.
Back in 2018, I remember asking him, well, what do you think about climate change?
What do you think is going to happen here?
He's like, look, first of all, you have to have a good bedside manner with the patient.
He was hoping to get four to five more business cycles out of the city before the whole thing
down the drain.
If you look at who's investing here, right, if you look at who lives here, there's a lot
of people who are really smart and who understand what's going to happen here and who think
that, you know, the game in musical chairs is going to go on for a certain amount of
time.
Mr. Mayor, you're brilliant.
You were super smart.
Yep.
I'm one of them. I own a house here in Miami. I'm
pocketing it, right? But at the same time, I happen to believe
that there are actual fixes that people could do to get Miami more
time. And they involve reducing the amount of fossil fuels that
we're putting into the atmosphere. Right? That's just
adorable. That's adorable.
A concept. However, right. I will tell you that the sort of long con against the rising tide that the
city plays, right. With its property development, uh, with its,
its high rises with its bond ratings, right. Uh, with its ability to,
to bond out money, That game is gonna stop.
Esa pachanga va a parar at some point, right?
And it may happen because a big storm
rips out the heart of the city
as it goes up the Miami River,
or it may happen more slowly.
Death by a thousand floods, right?
I don't know how that's gonna happen,
but I do know for certain that the water is gonna come
and it's gonna keep coming.
We're expected to have six more inches of sea level rise between 2020 and 2030, right?
Four to six.
We've already gotten six since I moved here in the early 90s, right?
The ocean is six inches high.
Mario, Alejandro Ariza with all the good news.
And it's true, it's a disposable city.
This is a town where people will pay $30 for a cocktail, $1,000 for a steak and
a briefcase.
It's just one of those things where it's like the people who are buying this luxury real
estate can afford it and then can, I guess, kind of throw it away like a Dixie cup when
they're all done with it.
Hashtag because Miami.
Redisposable City.
It is a must read for anyone moving to Miami on their way out of Miami. Redisposable City. It is a must read for anyone moving to Miami on their way out of Miami.
And of course his latest story in the Atlantic Miami is entering a state of unreality. Mario,
thank you so much for being here. Thank you so much Billy.
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Speaking of Miami entering a state of unreality,
I think probably Florida is entering a state of unreality.
And also hospice, hospice care. The stateality. And also hospice care.
The state of Florida's on hospice care.
And the frightening thing about it, of course, Roy,
is that the Florida of today is the America of tomorrow.
So it's like Miami, Florida, and then America.
I mean, you're seeing it with a lot of the laws
that are spreading throughout the land,
just like the worst laws that we export from Florida.
You know, this has always been kind of the,
I don't know, the laboratory of the worst of democracy.
Here, like, you know, the NRA sent their lobbyist here
to create the Stand Your Ground bill, among others,
where, you know, the Shoot Your Neighbor law,
that they were able
to successfully push through the Florida legislature and then they said okay we
can now export this thing all over the country to mostly Republican led
legislatures around the country and you have this and you're seeing this with
some of the the education bills the book bannings, some of the abortion laws.
Florida is like, it's like, oh, this is really shitty in Florida, so we should definitely
institute this in our state.
And so, on that note, July 1st is when a lot of the new bills, I think now there's almost
like 180 bills that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
Oh, that's BS.
No, totally, totally BS.
You know, you say that Florida of today is America tomorrow.
We are quickly becoming yesterday.
How so?
As you said, all these rules, all these laws
are becoming, affecting other states.
I mean, we're an incubator.
Yeah, it's a race to the bottom.
Yeah, it's a race to the bottom.
No, I mean, what do we export from Florida?
We export, you know, fraud and crime and terrible, terrible laws.
But we are.
We are the laboratory for the worst of democracy.
It's not about offering more freedoms to more Americans, but how to restrict rights to as
many people as possible.
Unless of course you are a white male.
Crystal fascist, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So Roy, just to leave on a light note, we are going to do the top five dumbest laws
going into effect in Florida next week on July 1st.
Monday.
Monday, that's right. Number five, requiring teaching the
history of communism. I mean it's not that I have a problem with this because
obviously there's already, I mean this is already a part of world history classes,
this is already in the curriculum and the problem here is that this isn't about
improving the quality of education. This is about straight-up demagoguery and it world history classes, this is already in the curriculum. And the problem here is that this isn't about improving
the quality of education, this is about straight up
demagoguery, and it talks about China and Cuba, of course,
and Latin America, does not mention Russia
or the Soviet Union at all, but most importantly,
in this state we are banning, as Stanley Campbell
mentioned earlier, we are banning the teaching
of some historical
topics while encouraging and emphasizing others.
Like black history.
Like for example, black history and the chapter on the upside of slavery being taught in Florida
public schools. And so what you're doing by sort of prioritizing this,
saying black history doesn't matter,
but teaching communism, which incidentally is not a threat
in this country whatsoever,
the fear of reliving some of the worst parts
of American history, racism, misogyny,
limiting the rights of women and minorities and immigrants,
that is a very real threat.
And as we know from the FBI,
the threat of violence among right-wing groups
is a real threat, but what we're teaching is leftists
and guerrillas and what happened in Latin America.
And by the way, fine, I'm fine with teaching that.
The problem is you can't then say, oh, but we're not,
but this other history, American, but we're not.
This other history, American history, doesn't matter.
This is actually what we'd call, not only is that the politicization of education, but
it's also, one might say, grooming and indoctrination, Roy, because as we know, every accusation
is a confession.
Number four I'm going to try to make these live here Roy I'm just really tired and
so am I. I'm sick and tired really. I'm sick because I'm hungover. I know you need to start
you need you need hair of the panther that bit you dude you need to keep drinking that is the
best hangover remedy. That's the plan. That is the best hangover remedy. And you didn't drive, you're gonna take Brightline back, right?
No, I'm not gonna be a Cobble Bowl and any deaths on the road.
Actually, what is more likely that you would hit and kill somebody on the way home if you were driving,
or you would hit and kill somebody on the way home if you were on the Brightline?
Yeah, the Brightline's gonna win that one.
I think so. The Brightline's drunk.
The Brightline is chasing the Stanley Cup up and down South, Florida to every party
They can possibly find
What what number we on again? Yeah, see that see I wasn't so good at this education thing
Count the ten the ten commandments, Louisiana number four this gets so much more grim number four
No local heat protections for outdoor workers
No local heat protections for outdoor workers.
We were just talking to Mario Ariza how it's getting hotter.
It is oppressively hot outside right now.
And you have construction workers,
you have agricultural workers
working outside in this weather.
Lot of great agriculture this time of year.
You've got watermelons growing, you've got lychee,
you've got some mangoes that weren't destroyed. It seems like a real light crop this year. Again, climate change in full effect.
What the state said is Miami-Dade specifically tried to pass some ordinances to require employers
to give their workers access to water, maybe like a little break in the shade. That's a basic human
right? Water? Once every four hours or so, maybe give them 10-15 minutes in the shade.
Have, right, water sustenance, you know, to preserve life, for example.
And the state said, not so fast!
Comorita! Comorita!
Rights of workers to not die of heat stroke and exhaustion and dehydration?
F*** to the nah.
That's six.
What we're going to do is we're going to block cities and counties from implementing laws
to protect workers and what we're going to say is you have to rely on the state to regulate
that.
But guess what?
There are currently no federal or state laws protecting outdoor workers from heat.
So it's like you can't do it, we'll do it,
but we're not doing it.
So you know who gets to make these rules?
Who's that, Billy?
Employers.
So if Dan decides that you're gonna work outside,
in the heat, in the sun,
you will not get water or a shade break.
I did that on Tuesday.
Was that Tuesday?
At the elbow room.
Or as Roy calls it, Tuesday. Yeah, Tuesday? At the elbow room. Or as Roy calls it, Tuesday.
Yeah.
At the elbow, oh, but you were,
dude, you were bathing in beer,
being dumped out of a giant cup.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I was wearing my Panthers jersey.
There was no way they were gonna dump beer on me
while wearing that jersey.
No, sir, I spent a lot of money on that.
Yeah, or on your Flanagan's Marlins jersey either.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
Number three.
Oh, there it is.
Oh, it is glorious.
Oh, it's so shiny.
That doesn't fit you, Roy.
That's for Claire.
What size is that?
That's tiny.
That is way too small for me.
Yeah, I was gonna say, you're skinny, but you are long.
Yeah, yeah, I'm tall.
You are like, that is not for you
uh number three citizen oversight boards stripped from investigating police who
police is the police right nobody that's exactly you're goddamn right meatball
number number two this is your favorite.
I'm waiting.
You know what? Taking bears!
Oh, it's taking bears? Oh, Jesus Christ.
It's what Andrew Gillum does on a Saturday night at Twist.
Taking bears. Taking bears, that's right.
So taking bears!
You can kill bears in self-defense
that is now legal in Florida.
It's what I call Stand Your Ground.
I'm hungover, man.
I'm sorry with the Florida dad jokes.
And finally, number one one and thematically appropriate for
this episode, climate change has been eliminated from Florida laws!
I don't know what to say we are the most vulnerable state in the Union one of
the most vulnerable states in the world home to some of the most valuable
vulnerable coastal real estate as we just talked about. And climate change is not something you can say,
it's not something you can legislate.
The bill would boost the expansion of natural gas,
it would reduce regulation on gas pipelines in the state,
despite the fact that we're already 74% reliant
on natural gas to power our electric grids here.
Also, no windmills or wind powered electric sources
can be off the coast of Florida. What? Local governments can't prioritize like green legislation.
Like if a county wanted to switch its fleet, its motor fleet to electric cars. Dude, I just,
I just don't. No wind turbine. What about dams? I just don't. No winter by the way.
What about dams?
I just don't know.
I mean, we're talking about like existential shit, man.
And the Florida legislature is like, nah, we good.
I wish we had a light Miami moment to kind of go out on.
We don't.
But we don't.
Congratulations, Roy.
Oh, thank you.
The Florida Panthers.
Ain't that something?
30 years, man.
30 years.
I mean, think about this.
Five consecutive playoff appearances in the first 25 years of this team's existence,
only five playoff appearances.
Absolutely remarkable and exciting.
And what is going to be the next Miami franchise to win?
Into Miami already has a trophy but they haven't won an MLS cup so that'll probably be the next one.
I'm sorry I fell asleep, what are we talking about?
Soccer!
Go enter Fort Lauderdale, go cats. Vamos a gatos e cocaine's
Howdy folks, it's Mike Ryan and as you know, I've been telling you on the air about the game time app
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