Florida Leads the Nation

Ronald Dion DeSantis - Florida Department of State
Governor DeSantis: We’re #1
Florida tops the nation in ICE arrests this year.

ICE agents in Florida have made more immigration arrests so far this year than counterparts in any other part of the country, outpacing even places with announced “surges,” new data shows.

The Miami Field Office for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Office is credited with about 120 arrests per day in 2026 or 9,880 total as of March 10.

The Florida arrest data reflects the efforts of Gov. Ron DeSantis, President Donald Trump’s closest ally in his mass deportation agenda. DeSantis last year opened Alligator Alcatraz, a horrifying immigration detention center in the Everglades swamp.

Minnesota, where a so-called surge left two U.S. citizens dead, still trailed Florida. The St. Paul field office had made 5,530 arrests as of March 10, about 4,300 fewer than the Miami office.

Florida Led the Nation in Executions in 2025, Accounting for 40% of U.S.  Total - Davis Vanguard

Florida carried out 19 executions in 2025, surpassing Texas, Alabama and South Carolina combined, and more than doubling the state’s previous record. The unprecedented pace is drawing sharp reactions.

Each execution costs an estimated $24 million.

Florida also leads the nation in death row exonerations. This means 30 people sentenced to death in Florida have since been cleared, found innocent and freed.

“That’s an alarming number to me. Thirty is a lot. That’s 30 innocent people who were either sentenced to be executed or sentenced to death who should not have been?” 

How many innocent people have been executed in Florida?

children sick with measles
Florida is the first state to end all vaccine mandates, including in schools.

Florida plans to end all state vaccine mandates, including for children to attend schools, said state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, a prominent immunization critic.

The move would make Florida the first-ever state in the U.S. to withdraw from requirements credited with increasing vaccination rates in communities and preventing outbreaks of infectious diseases.

The rollback could result in fewer school children getting immunized against deadly viruses such as polio and measles.

Nazi Book Burning
Florida is No. 1 in school book removals and restrictions for third year in a row

The most targeted book in Florida last year was the classic “A Clockwork Orange,” which was removed at least 14 times. Also in the top 10 was “Wicked,” which inspired the famous musical and the popular fantasy romance, “A Court of Mist and Fury.”

During the 2023-24 school year, Florida had more than 4,500 instances of book removals, according to PEN America. The year prior, it had more than 1,400. The current numbers being less than the year before aren’t comforting to Baêta. She says, for example, if books with LGBTQ+ themes are removed one year, they’re not getting replaced with other books with LGBTQ+ themes the next.

Advocates against the removals warn that books with LGBTQ+ or racial topics are being disproportionally targeted.

Most Common Types of Property Damage After a Hurricane
Florida leads the nation in home insurance non-renewal rates, as insurers withdraw from the market. Florida has some of the highest homeowners insurance costs in the U.S., with average annual premiums reaching around $6,642.

But the weather is pretty good, most of the time.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;

MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;

https://www.academia.edu/

……………………………………………………………………..

A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The latest American disgrace

We Americans are accustomed to puffing out our chests and claiming that we are the greatest nation on earth. We probably have the greatest fighting force (or did until Trump appointed a clown to lead it), but otherwise we have fallen far from the top.

(And please no smart-ass “Love it or leave it” comments. If that’s your best, you are a FOX News viewer without the intelligence or honesty to understand facts. So stop reading now, and get the rest of your information from Donald Trump.)

Here is an example of the greatest nation on earth:

One-third of Americans cut back on other expenses to cover healthcare in 2025, survey shows 

By Sriparna Roy. March 12, 202612:03 AM EDT Updated March 13, 2026

Smiling Uncle Sam is in his costume. He is so rich he is half-buried in dollars and he is throwing dollars in the air
Unlike state and local governments, the U.S. federal government never can run short of dollars. Even if it stopped collecting taxes, while tripling its spending, it still would not run short of money.

March 12 (Reuters) – Roughly one-third of Americans cut back on food, utilities or other daily expenses to pay for healthcare last year, research from ​the West Health-Gallup Center showed on Thursday, as steeper prices and ‌rising living costs hit households.

A nationally and state-representative survey of nearly 20,000 U.S. adults in all 50 states and in the District of Columbia, conducted from June to August 2025, found ​that 33% of respondents had made at least one trade-off in daily expenses ​to pay for healthcare.

This was far more common among Americans ⁠who do not have health insurance, with 62% of those surveyed saying ​they have made at least one sacrifice to pay for healthcare, including 32% ​who had to borrow money and 24% who had prolonged their current medication.
 
Among those with insurance, close to three in 10 have made at least one sacrifice, the survey ​found.
 
Most Americans with private health insurance are paying higher premiums and steeper ​out-of-pocket costs in 2026, including millions of people in the government-subsidized Affordable Care Act plans ‌in ⁠which extra COVID pandemic-era subsidies have expired.

One-third of Americans had to cut back on food, utilities, or daily expenses to pay for healthcare? The greatest nation on earth??

Hah. Gimme a break.

It’s not that the “greatest nation on earth” can’t afford healthcare. It’s simply that the right-wing government of the greatest nation on earth doesn’t want to pay for it because …uh…it would benefit the poor, whom everyone knows are lazy, good-for-nothings who want everything free. Right?

Oh, and then there’s the right-wing excuse that aiding the poor is “Socialism” while aiding the rich (via tax dodges) is good old capitalism. 

Here is what some capitalists say about that:

Alan Greenspan says US recession is likely | CNN Business
Fed Chair Greenspan

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency. There is nothing to prevent the federal government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody. The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always print the money to do that.”

Three Lessons from Ben Bernanke's Time at the Fed
Fed Chair Bernanke
Beardsley Ruml - Wikipedia
Fed Chair Beardsley Rummel

Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. It’s not tax money… We simply use the computer to mark up the size of the account.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Beardsley Ruml:  “The necessity for a government to tax in order to maintain both its independence and its solvency is true for state and local governments, but it is not true for a national government. The public purpose which is served should never be obscured in a tax program under the mask of raising revenue.”

Federel Reserve  Chairman Jerome Powell stated, “As a central bank, we have the ability to create money digitally.

Jerome Powell - Wikipedia
Former Secretary of the Treasury Paul O’Neill

 

 

 

Statement from the St. Louis Fed: “As the sole manufacturer of dollars, whose debt is denominated in dollars, the U.S. government can never become insolvent, i.e., unable to pay its bills. In this sense, the government is not dependent on credit markets to remain operational.” You can find it in their publication titled “Why Health Care Matters and the Current Debt Does Not” 

Former Secretary of the Treasury Paul O’Neill: “I come to you as a managing trustee of Social Security. Today we have no assets in the trust fund. We have promises of the good faith and credit of the United States government that benefits will flow.”

Draghi Mario: biography of Draghi Mario and Meeting Rimini attendance
Former President of the ECB and Prime Minister of Italy Marie Draghi

The European Central Bank (ECB), like the U.S. government, is Monetarily Sovereign. Press Conference: Mario Draghi, President of the ECB, 9 January 2014
Question: I am wondering: can the ECB ever run out of money?
Mario Draghi: Technically, no. We cannot run out of money.

Paul Krugman - Wikipedia
Paul Krugman, an award-winning economist

Paul Krugman (Nobel Prize–winning economist): “The U.S. government is not like a household. It literally prints money, and it can’t run out.” — Numerous op-eds/blog posts

Hyman Minsky (Economist, key influence on MMT)
“The government can always finance its spending by creating money.”

Eric Tymoigne (Economist) “A sovereign government does not need to collect taxes or issue bonds to finance spending. It finances directly through money creation.”

 

 

Yes, though the compulsive liars of FOX News may disagree, true experts will tell you that the U.S. government has the unlimited capacity to finance healthcare insurance for every man, woman, and child in America, while still having sufficient funds for any future wars that Presidents may initiate to distract voters from the latest scandals.

Then, in a last-ditch effort to take dollars from the pockets of the poor, the right wing will falsely claim that “too much” federal spending causes inflation. (“too much” is any amount that helps the poor but doesn’t enrich the President’s family).

We debunk the inflation myth at “The inflation myths debunked. It’s never “money-printing.” It’s always shortages.)

You will notice that there always is enough money to start wars and to prosecute enemies. As this is being written, the Conservatives request an additional $200 billion to fight an unnecessary war, which will subsequently require billions more to replenish our depleted munitions.

Those brave fighters won’t be deterred by the loss of human life or myths about inflation.

The next time you are forced to choose between paying for health care vs. food, clothing, or school for your kids, do remember to thank the Republican Party and President Trump, and name another street after him.

How about “Trump’s Affordable Care Avenue”

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;

MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;

https://www.academia.edu/

……………………………………………………………………..

A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The clear message from our President

I only started the war so MAGAs would forget Epstein, and now they (not me) are in deep sh*t. It’s not my fault. It’s all Israel’s fault. They knew I had no brains, so they told me I could win this thing in two days. No, wait. It’s all Hegseth’s fault. He should have planned for this. No, wait. It’s the Democrats’ fault for not giving Hegseth $200 billion for more lobsters.  No, wait, it’s all NATO’s fault for not opening the Strait even though we don’t need them. No, wait, it’s all Stephen Miller’s fault for not warning me. No, wait. It’s all Biden’s fault because of his kid’s laptop. No, wait. I have a secret plan to kill all the Iranian men, women and children. We have plenty of oil, so prices won’t go up. No, wait, we eliminated Iran’s nuclear ability last year, but now this year, they were just about to get the bomb. No, wait. I never touched that 14-year-old girl. No, wait. There is no inflation, and the economy is doing great, the greatest ever. No, wait. I inherited a terrible economy. No wait. We’re winning … somewhere. Hey, they believe me …in Wyoming. 

Red is an illusion. Why everything else is, too. The story of responsiveness.

What is generally called “consciousness” has baffled philosophers and physicists for centuries because of its seemingly mysterious, metaphysical qualities.

I have suggested that “consciousness” is straight physics: stimulus —> response —> response —> response, with each response, in fact, being the stimulus for the next response, in an endless chain.

Everything responds to stimuli, which means that everything possesses some degree of consciousness—whether living or inanimate, animal or plant. Humans, dogs, trees, and even AI can be considered conscious, with the main difference being the degree of consciousness, measured by the quality and quantity of stimuli and responses.

Because the term “consciousness” carries mysterious, unmeasurable connotations, I propose using “responsiveness” instead.

Objections to “responsiveness” may arise because it doesn’t encompass the sensation of consciousness. I submit that this sensation itself is not only an illusion, but that this illusion serves a significant purpose.

The brain and body together comprise the translation machine that makes stimuli intelligible. Without such translation, the world would be a confused mix of signals. For instance, read the following:

SDRAWKCAB DAER OT DRAH YREV SI SIHT 

What does it say? It says,

THIS IS  VERY HARD TO  READ BACKWARDS

The photons — i.e. the stimuli — you receive are quite similar in both examples, but the brain has not learned to translate backwards spelling.

Redness is the brain’s interpretation of signals from the eye. The electromagnetic wave itself is not “red.” It’s just radiation with a certain wavelength. The color is created by our nervous system, and is not in the light.

When you see something that does not exist, it is called an illusion. Color is a species-wide illusion. If you close your eyes, you will see phosphenes, the visual sensations that occur without light entering your eyes. They, too, are illusions

The sense of taste operates in a similar way. A compound known as PTC (phenylthiocarbamide) tastes bitter to most people, but about 25% of individuals do not experience any taste from it. For these people, the bitterness simply does not exist.

For the 75% who can taste it, bitterness is not an inherent quality of the substance; rather, it is an illusion produced by the interaction between the brain and the taste buds.  

Stick your finger with a needle, and you may feel pain, unless your finger has received an anesthetic. Pain is not an intrinsic property of a needle. Touch the needle against a fingernail, and you may feel nothing.

It is the pain receptors in your finger that send a signal to your brain, and that signal is translated to pain. Pain is one of the illusions created by the brain/skin combination (or other parts of the body and brain).

When infrared light hits your skin, you may feel a pleasant warmth, or a painful burning sensation, or nothing at all, depending on the intensity of the radiation, the duration of the stimulus, skin sensitivity, and the starting temperature of the skin. All of these responses are illusions created by the brain/skin system.

If you attend a rock concert, you may hear loud music. Afterward, you may hear a buzzing in your ears, especially in a quiet room. All are illusions of the sound waves touching the tiny bones in your ears, as translated by your brain. Waves of air have no intrinsic sound.

People are able to smell different odors.

The reason is genetic variation in olfactory receptors. Humans have about 400 functional odor receptor genes, and individuals vary in which ones work.

For each person, what is reality? Is odor real, or is it an illusion conjured by the brain?

If you watch television, you experience, not pictures, but thousands of flashing points of light. All else is illusion. A movie is the same. A photograph, too, is an illusion.

You cannot see a tree; you can only detect light rays reflecting off it. Your brain interprets these signals and identifies them as a tree. But those light rays merely are electromagnetic waves, not a tree. Your brain provides you with the “tree” illusion.

Everything you see, hear, feel, taste, or smell is an illusion, created by your brain and the rest of your body. If you lost those senses, you would live in a quiet, dark world, and that would be your reality — unless, for instance, you could sense magnetism like a migratory bird. Or a sea turtle. Or a monarch butterfly. Or a salmon. Or a shark.

Many birds have a light-sensitive protein called cryptochrome in their retinas that may enable them to perceive magnetic field direction as faint visual patterns. One wonders what a magnetic field looks like to a bird.

Does it have a color? Does it make a sound? Does it itch? Does it smell? The reality is that a magnetic field has no such intrinsic properties. Whatever a bird senses is a product of its brain and body — an illusion that may have no parallel in human cognition.

And then we come to dreams. Many animals dream, and we know that for humans at least, some dreams can feel terrifyingly real. Yet, of course, dreams are illusions created by the brain/body sensing system.

If light of certain wavelengths can create the illusion of physical objects, and dreams do likewise, in the context of reality, where is the line between what we see when awake and our eyes are closed and what we see when we are asleep?

The line is in the source of constraint. When we are awake, external physical signals dominate. When we sleep, internally generated neural activity dominates. But the machinery producing the experience is the same brain system in both cases.

The brain is always simulating the world. When awake, the simulation is continuously changed by outside stimuli. When dreaming, it runs on its own. And none of it is reality (just electromagnetic and pressure waves).

We never experience the world directly. We experience a brain/body-generated interpretation of stimuli, and what we think of as “consciousness” is the totality of our responses to those stimuli. 

That is why I prefer the term “responsiveness” vs. “consciousness.” With responsiveness, you have no mysterious, unmeasurable qualia, no subjective, intangible “feeling,” no nonscientific “self” floating outside your body.

There only are your responses to the stimuli that impact your brain/body sensing system.

And this brings us to the subject of free will. For free will to exist, there would need to be a separate agent within the brain that can choose independently of physical structure, prior causes, and incoming stimuli.

Neuroscience has not found evidence for such a mechanism.

The illusion of free will is very powerful, but it’s no more powerful than the illusions provided by all our other senses. Just as we feel sure of our ability to see a red apple, hear music, smell perfume, taste chocolate, and feel an itch, we also are sure of our ability to make independent choices.

All our experience is a constructed interface. What we take to be direct contact with the world is produced by the brain’s interpretation of signals and internal states. The experiences are not properties of the external world itself. They are useful representations —illusions that serve an important purpose.

Every second of your life, you are bombarded with trillions of stimuli from both inside and outside your body. Consider, each second, how many photons strike your eyes and skin, how many sound waves reach your ears, how many molecules give you scent and taste, and how many atoms your skin encounters.

Which are the important stimuli and which can be ignored? Which affect your survival? Your happiness? Your comfort?

All of this information must be processed by your three-pound brain while it simultaneously manages and regulates your complex metabolism.

To handle that staggering task, your brain must use shortcuts, and those shortcuts are the illusions that seem so real. No need to analyze each of the trillions of stimuli coming from those objects ahead of you. One’s a tree. It’s an oak tree. It’s not in your path. It’s no danger. Ignore it. Or wait. It’s starting to fall. Run!

And all that analysis of illusions occurs in a fraction of a second.

Every day, we must divide our responsiveness among thousands of simple tasks, from waking up, getting up, brushing our teeth, eating, digesting, dressing…

Think about one simple task: driving to work. Have you ever wondered why car companies have invested billions in training computers to perform a straightforward task that millions of us do without much thought?

They use cameras to sense and then evaluate the photons coming from all sides of the car. Are those photons from another car or from the picture of a car on the side of a bus? Are those turn-signal photons or just stopping photons? Reflected photons from a wet street? An icy street? And, is that a pond or a mirage on the street ahead?

You navigate without analyzing those trillions of stimuli that hit you every second, the vast majority of which represent illusions.  As the scientists put it, “The certainty of experience doesn’t guarantee its ontological status,” but it speeds the response time and reduces the brain’s workload.

That’s the primary purpose of any form of practice. To eliminate the need for time-consuming, energy-consuming thought.

So here I am: Everything I sense is an illusion. Everything I decide is based on illusion tempered by stimuli. And my body consists of one giant analytic brain making decisions that feel like free will. The whole process commonly is called “consciousness,” but I have suggested the term, “responsiveness” as more in tune with reality.

The remarkable thing is that this interface is so convincing that it feels to me like direct contact with the world and independent agency, even if the underlying processes are fully physical and causal.

Yes, the illusion is so powerful even I feel (accent the word “feel”) that somehow, somewhere there is a separate “Rodger” inside my brain making independent decisions not affected by microbes in my gut or chemicals in my nose.

So, I don’t blame you for feeling the same way. We are human, after all, and wrong as it may be, that is how humans feel.

But the reality is far different. You and I live in a world of illusion, brilliantly created by nature to help us cope with what nature throws at us.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell

Search #monetarysovereignty

Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;

MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;

https://www.academia.edu/

……………………………………………………………………..

A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY