DeSantis for the win

Except I don't believe anything you state above. It is all bunk. Can we ask why DeSantis is hiring a press secretary that has an outstanding restraining order against her.

I guess I have to read that National Review thing now...
Desantis hires a woman charged with violating a restraining order against me as his new press secretary, at the same time a smear piece from the Nationalist Review is released.
https://rebekahjones.substack.com/p/i-guess-i-have-to-read-that-national?r=gc2sd

What a week.

On Monday, Desantis hired a new press secretary - the woman who is being criminally charged with violating a temporary restraining order I was forced to take out against after she repeatedly harassed and stalked me online. Her trial is set for next month. Her only previous job experience was doing PR for the totalitarian ex-president Mikheil Saakashvili, and writing a failed hit piece on me on an alt-right blog, followed by nearly three months of online stalking and harassment.

You can view a record of Pushaw’s now-deleted tweets from April 1 - 23, 2021 as a PDF here or download as an excel file here.
Tuesday, May 18, also happens to be the anniversary of the day I was told I could either resign with a small settlement (and agree not to sue) or I would be fired I was given until May 21, 2020 to make a decision.

You can read the separation letter from my position as Environmental Scientist and Specialist in Public Health, which notably states I was fired for no cause, here.

But let’s rewind a few days - back to Wednesday, May 12, 2021.

While heading to the studio to shoot for an upcoming documentary about misinformation and anti-science campaigns in the USA during COVID-19, I got a notification that Jeb Bush had retweeted a National Review article that looked nearly identical to a tabloid article published a year ago by the Daily Mail.

I read a few lines - mostly salacious, highly-sexualized language about how I had somehow tricked the entire world to believe some vast conspiracy against a corrupt governor- chuckled a bit, and then went back to work.

On at least four occasions the Desantis administration has tried to ‘cancel’ science and the information I provide by releasing these alt-right blog pieces, filled with flagrant lies and failed attempts at character assassination.

First they went after me, my family, and even my children, publishing their names, birthdates and even photographs in The Daily Mail. Disgusting and vile tactics that were rightfully decried from both sides of the aisle.

But this isn’t even the first time the National Review published this article - they first released it in February, and along the way have essentially been pushing the same narrative.

But it never works. They can’t get it to “stick.”

Every single time, people see through the speculation, innuendo and complete lack of evidence provided by these libelous smear jobs.

I don’t doubt this one will be forgotten, too.

After all, the timing of the article against current events - political and economic - begs the question …

Why am I such a threat to Desantis’ re-election, and way lay it on so thick now?

Is he worried I’m running for Governor of Florida?

Is this about my meeting with Rep. Jamie Raskin last week, and how we’re organizing briefing committees to Congress about what happened?

Is it the movie deals, the book deal, my working on campaigns of people looking to unseat him?

Or is it simply that he’s mad the press never “moved on” like he hoped they would?

While I’m flattered that the GOP-disinformation network thinks one girl with a laptop is capable of duping the entire medical, academic, professional, and media establishments in a matter of months, I’m merely one small voice among a sea of folks who have come forward about the sickness and death caused by Desantis’ failed COVID-19 policies.

Staff from the Florida Department of Health, the Agency for Healthcare Administration, the Department of Corrections, and other state agencies, have been coming forward with information about the secrecy and spin pushed by Desantis’ administration since before I was ousted for wanting to file a whistleblower complaint.

And have continued to shine a light on his failings throughout the pandemic despite his threats and intimidation.

The bravery of state employees who have leaked reports to the press, spoken on the promise of anonymity, and put their careers on the line should not be diminished by those with no first-hand knowledge or experience of what has gone on inside state government the last 17 months.

My issues with how the state was presenting COVID-19 data to the public were specific, nuanced, and clearly outlined in the Whistleblower complaint I filed with the state more than 10 months ago.

Each of those specific allegations were proven – not just by me and my information as the head of the public data systems and the COVID-19 dashboard, but by the Miami-Herald, Florida Today, The Tampa Bay Times, and further validated during the whistleblower complaint investigation in sworn affidavits by state employees.

Most of what has been alleged about Desantis’ failed COVID-19 response came after I was ousted from my position, brought forward by brave state employees with information I no longer had access to – like sudden gaps in reporting deaths leading up to the election and how state employees were ordered not to even mention COVID-19 in the weeks leading up to the election.

The Orlando Sentinel had to sue the state of Florida to gain access to the White House Task Force reports that showed much worse conditions for Florida than the Governor had led people to believe. That wasn’t my data, either, and I certainly wasn’t working with Trump's administration to smear Desantis.

Many in the press, state government and even my own lawyers believe I am naïve in believing a mix of incompetent sycophants and scared pacifists were responsible for the mishandling of the COVID-19 reopening in the state. I wanted to remain private. I didn’t want to get into a feud with the Governor.

When the Governor chose to out me to the world and launch me into quasi-celebrity status, he left me no choice but to speak out.

This imaginary grand battle between myself and Desantis is about as accurate of a portrayal of what’s happened this past year as the state’s positivity numbers (which is to say, not).

Comparing a scientist who reports data and advocates for transparency, with the man who runs one of the most populated states in the most powerful country on earth makes no sense.

I have no power.

I am nobody.

I’m just a scientist with a laptop and a commitment to facts, science, truth and transparency.

The Governor should take responsibility for his failed policies, for the missed opportunities to protect Florida’s people from COVID-19, for pushing out his own experts and alienating his employees who became so desperate and afraid that they wrote a public letter saying they felt their lives did not matter and that if they spoke up they would be fired just like I was.

DeSantis runs the state, not me, and his failing COVID-19 response was only ever mitigated by local action and the collective efforts of science communicators like myself in ensuring the people of Florida knew what was going on and could make informed decisions about their personal safety.

For a brief overview of all of the unethical, immoral and possibly illegal actions of the DeSantis administration during COVID-19, with proof (that’s still a thing), please read the article posted here.

Note: 99% has nothing to do with me.

I left the state in May 2020.

Desantis’ troubles only increased by several orders of magnitude after that, so making it seem like I am somehow the sole source of the data showing his failure seems like he’s trying to put everything bad ever said about him onto… me.

It seems I have managed to do something that few get the opportunity to do, though it was certainly never my intention – put cracks in the armor the GOP has spent decades molding, believing that they were invincible and no citizen, no “nobody,” could possibly breach their shield of power.

Despite the smear campaigns, the raid on my home, and even political imprisonment, I have not given up fighting for the people of Florida.

I’m a problem they can’t get rid of.

I’m a voice they cannot silence.

I’ve managed to go through their machine and come out the other side not tattered and torn, but stronger, more resilient, with more allies than ever before.

For now, I’m going to continue focusing on the science, getting information to the people, and ensuring that everyone’s voice is heard.

I want to thank everyone for all their support this last year. My family and I have found love and grace in the public’s unwavering support, and it is because of you that I’m able to continue to provide this information, fight disinformation, and work toward a better future for all of us.

I still can’t wrap my head around why Desantis would hire my stalker, who is facing criminal charges in Maryland for violating a restraining order, as his press secretary, or why an outlet like the National Review would risk such a large libel suit to further Desantis’ baseless claims.

I can only think that this is yet another escalation on his part, and I fear for my safety, my family’s safety, and the safety of anyone who gets in his way.

If a girl with a laptop can bring down a corrupt governor, imagine how much we can change the world when we stand together.

(Move at above url -- Her post includes a point-by-point Debunking of the "Rebekah Jones, the COVID Whistleblower Who Wasn’t" article by Charles Cooke. Her outline includes ALL the text messages and documentation between her and other staff members showing she did not crash the dashboard, she never locked anyone out, and documented the state of Florida confirmed she acted appropriately throughout her entire employment including her last few weeks.)

Wow, you mean your evidence is the words from Jones' mouth herself? Well then! That seals it.
 
You can go to the link --- she has posted all the documents which prove her assertions.

Oh, I'm sure they're legit.

Just like the two examples of when she said she was forced to change deaths, but then later said that didn't happen (because she wasn't given that info).
 
I wonder who is going to file the first lawsuit. :sneaky:

Somehow DeSantis thinks he has legal control over a private company's actions and imagines that this is some sort of first amendment thing. He is sadly confused. The social media companies will laugh at him signing this bill into law that will fine social media companies "deplatforming" political candidates up to $250,000 a day.

All the bill does is encourage politicians to lie with impunity. And we already had enough of that.

fark_52zmFBwSU5TgDDkzGmB1_md7Xe0.jpg
 
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Somehow DeSantis thinks he has legal control over a private company's actions and imagines that this is some sort of first amendment thing. He is sadly confused. The social media companies will laugh at him signing this bill into law that will fine social media companies "deplatforming" political candidates up to $250,000 a day.

All the bill does is encourage politicians to lie with impunity. And we already had enough of that.

fark_52zmFBwSU5TgDDkzGmB1_md7Xe0.jpg
If that graphic has any validity, please explain why TV is regulated WRT politics?

Furthermore, I think that the graphic is reasonable before the internet existed. That reasoning is no longer valid in the social media world.

Social media by far is the most important media platform for politicians. It is much more important than traditional media. If social media shouldn't be regulated wrt politics neither should TV, radio, or print.

The only way someone can be for deplatforming is if they are an advocate for corporatocracy and laissez-faire capitalism.

deplatforming = corporatacracy
 
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Now that every single major cruise line has announced a vaccination requirement and are re-positioning ships away from Florida -- what is DeSantis going to do.

Royal Caribbean drops age for mandatory COVID-19 vaccines to 12
https://thepointsguy.com/news/royal-caribbean-drops-age-for-mandatory-vaccines-for-some-cruises/

The world’s largest cruise line on Friday said all U.S. passengers ages 12 and older will need to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccine to cruise with the line in Alaska starting on Aug. 1.

Even before Aug. 1, only fully vaccinated passengers over the age of 16 will be allowed to sail on Royal Caribbean voyages in Alaska.

Both of the age cut-offs are lower than the line had previously announced for sailings starting up soon in the Caribbean and the Mediterranean.

On those voyages, the line had announced that all passengers ages 18 and older would need to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccine to cruise.

It’s not clear whether the new age cut-offs just apply to upcoming Alaska sailings or the Caribbean and Mediterranean sailings, too. A spokesperson for Royal Caribbean did not immediately respond to questions about the topic from TPG.

As of late Friday, Royal Caribbean’s website still listed 18 as the cut-off age for a vaccine requirement on Royal Caribbean sailings.

The new age cut-offs for Royal Caribbean sailings in Alaska were disclosed as part of an announcement Friday that the line and sister brand Celebrity Cruises planned to restart cruises to Alaska in July. The announcement was made by Royal Caribbean Group, the parent company of both Royal Caribbean and Celebrity.

The same age cut-offs announced for Royal Caribbean cruises in Alaska also will apply to Celebrity sailings in Alaska, the announcement said.

Celebrity already had dropped its age cut-off for mandatory vaccines for summer cruises last week from 18 to 16.

A growing number of cruise lines have announced they will require all or most passengers to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccine to cruise on at least some of their ships in the coming months.

In some cases, cruise lines are requiring all passengers to be fully vaccinated for COVID-19. In other cases, cruise lines only are requiring adults to be fully vaccinated.

Cruise lines that have announced a COVID-19 vaccine requirement for all or at least some upcoming cruises include Carnival Cruise Line, Celebrity Cruises, Crystal Cruises, Cunard Line, Disney Cruise Line, Holland America, Norwegian Cruise Line, Oceania Cruises, Princess Cruises, Regent Seven Seas Cruises, Royal Caribbean, Silversea, Virgin Voyages and Windstar Cruises.

Social media to follow suit:

party of private property they said...
party of freedom of speech they said...
party of libertarians they said...
what part of the word illegal don't they understand?
FL taxpayers thrilled they're going to pay to take an "L" in SCOTUS

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Ok, so your claims that the cruise industry would leave Florida are, like many other claims, horseshit. Got it.

I don't give a shit if DeSantis backtracks or not. I care if the cruise industry leaves Florida - which I said was very unlikely (it is).

Step forward if you are a state that cruise ships will be sailing out of.

Not so quick Florida.

Another example of some fine "winning" by DeSantis.


Norwegian and Royal Caribbean submit plans to resume sailings from ports outside Florida
https://www.wesh.com/article/norweg...sailings-from-ports-outside-florida/36523419#

Both Norwegian and Royal Caribbean cruise lines have submitted plans to resume voyages.

None of the plans include sailing from Florida.


It's been 14 months since the pandemic brought the cruise industry to a halt, and on Monday, Norwegian became the latest to announce plans to start sailing from Seattle to Alaska.

"To have cruises actually saying that they're going to be sailing out of a U.S. port is significant for the industry. That being said, the CDC still has to give final approval for these sailings out of Seattle," cruise expert Chris Gray Faust said.

Four different cruise lines have announced plans to sail to Alaska with fully vaccinated passengers only.


Unlike Florida, Alaska has no law preventing a company from asking for proof of vaccination, so cruise lines are using the vaccination requirement as a way to get CDC approval to start sailing again.

Currently, a federal order requires each ship to earn a certificate to sail by ensuring COVID-19 safety precautions are in place and proving it during a test sailing. Those requirements stand unless the cruise line commits to sailing with 98% of the crew and 95% of its passengers fully vaccinated.

It is unclear when sailing will start again at Port Canaveral.

Royal Caribbean has reached an agreement with the port to start the required CDC test cruises in June.

Norweigan is set to sail out of Port Canaveral in November but wants to do so with 100% of its passengers and crew members fully vaccinated, and Florida law forbids asking for proof.

The managing editor of CruiseCritic.com said their latest survey shows most people planning to cruise support vaccine requirements.

"It's at 86% right now, but that's up 5% from January, so the idea of having to have a vaccine to cruise has actually been gaining more traction over the last few months," Faust said.
 
Step forward if you are a state that cruise ships will be sailing out of.

Not so quick Florida.

Another example of some fine "winning" by DeSantis.


Norwegian and Royal Caribbean submit plans to resume sailings from ports outside Florida
https://www.wesh.com/article/norweg...sailings-from-ports-outside-florida/36523419#

Both Norwegian and Royal Caribbean cruise lines have submitted plans to resume voyages.

None of the plans include sailing from Florida.


It's been 14 months since the pandemic brought the cruise industry to a halt, and on Monday, Norwegian became the latest to announce plans to start sailing from Seattle to Alaska.

"To have cruises actually saying that they're going to be sailing out of a U.S. port is significant for the industry. That being said, the CDC still has to give final approval for these sailings out of Seattle," cruise expert Chris Gray Faust said.

Four different cruise lines have announced plans to sail to Alaska with fully vaccinated passengers only.


Unlike Florida, Alaska has no law preventing a company from asking for proof of vaccination, so cruise lines are using the vaccination requirement as a way to get CDC approval to start sailing again.

Currently, a federal order requires each ship to earn a certificate to sail by ensuring COVID-19 safety precautions are in place and proving it during a test sailing. Those requirements stand unless the cruise line commits to sailing with 98% of the crew and 95% of its passengers fully vaccinated.

It is unclear when sailing will start again at Port Canaveral.

Royal Caribbean has reached an agreement with the port to start the required CDC test cruises in June.

Norweigan is set to sail out of Port Canaveral in November but wants to do so with 100% of its passengers and crew members fully vaccinated, and Florida law forbids asking for proof.

The managing editor of CruiseCritic.com said their latest survey shows most people planning to cruise support vaccine requirements.

"It's at 86% right now, but that's up 5% from January, so the idea of having to have a vaccine to cruise has actually been gaining more traction over the last few months," Faust said.

Ah yes, Alaska is a good place to substitute for Florida. I can't tell you how many times I was considering going to Florida when I thought "hell, you know what? Alaska is probably more what I'm looking for."
 
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