Gender Theory: Why Now?

If you are unsure of the difference between sex and gender, or if you are question many of the hate myths about trans people, or possibly thinking trans people are new and never been accepted then please watch this video.

The host is easy to listen too, shows his sources, and uses facts, yes those pesky facts that refute all the anti-trans misinformation spread desperately through the right wing media.  The video covers how anti-trans groups formed fake medical groups to claim science said that trans was a sickness or such, but the video show that real professionals in medical science disagree and show that being trans and gender nonconforming is a normal difference some people have.  

Finally the hosts shows how the anti-trans movement push was started around 2008 when conservatives and fundamentalist religious groups were losing the war against gay people and gay marriage.  They were seeing gay people normalized on TV and moved to prevent that from happening for trans people.  Plus the video shows how this is about state control over everyone’s body.   He shows how the idea of strict gender roles formed when men felt marginalized and wanted to create a society that was male oriented and was based on male superiority.  For men to be superior, that meant they needed females to be inferior.  So strict gender roles were created and enforced.  This only has been the way for the last few centuries, not forever.  Hugs.  Scottie 

Does Gender Even Matter?

There’s a full blown panic sweeping America, and it’s all about gender, and especially people who don’t conform to traditional categories. But what is it about people’s gender choices that makes others so worried? Was this an inevitable facet of modern life, or is something more complicated going on? Let’s find out in this Wisecrack video on Gender Theory: Why Now?

AP News: Librarians fear new penalties, even prison, as activists challenge books

My spine shots (epidural steroid injection)

I take epidural steroid injections in between my steroid muscle injections.   It is a hard choice for me.   I have weird bones; in some places they grow too thick. in other places my bones are way too thin.   I try to limit the spine ones until I cannot stand the pain and must do it because they are so painful.  I have had to have three in the last 4 months.   This time was the most painful epidural I have ever had.  It was the first time I have ever cried out on the table.  I was struggling so hard not to move despite the pain.  Remember I take 2 kinds of morphine and muscle relaxers at the maximum dose allowed by the state of Florida, along with 800 milligrams of Ibuprofen.  I used to take stronger ones before state legislators felt they knew more than my doctors.  

First I waited more than an hour and a half before the doctor actually came into the room.  They are horribly understaffed, and the state of Florida makes providing pain relief care as impossible as possible.  Everything from restricting medication to requiring frequent visits, which means more costs for the poor people needing the service.  I used to go every three months, get my medications prescriptions.  I now must go every two months and my medications are restricted causing me to be in even more pain.   Since the next pain medication level for me is Fentanyl and I talked to my doctor again today and told him I am very scared of it.  I need more pain relief, but he understood.   He thought there might be one kind of muscle relaxer that might help me more.   I am already on maybe the most powerful one that the state will let them give me at the max dosage.  I was on one that worked great and helped me a lot but again the state legislatures make it illegal for doctors to prescribe it in their attempt by republicans to look tough on drug crime. So he changed that medication after he gave me the shots.

Back to today’s procedure.   I got there and checked in.  I have been going there so long I am very friendly with the check in and check out people.  I talked at length with (name redacted … out of respect for others, I won’t use their names.) the check in woman.  Because I really genuinely care about people, I often get in to conversations and become very friendly with people I interact with.  I noticed she seemed tired and bothered, so asked her if she was OK, was she sleeping Ok.  She told me no.  She had another death in her friendship circle.   She has suffered that a lot over the last year with many deaths of close friends and family.  A friend of the hers had been walking at night, got hit by a car that did not stop to check what they hit and simply called the police to say they thought they hit something.   An ambulance crew found the man just in time, he had to be resuscitated and returned to life, but he is in critical care.  She, her husband, and some friends went out and found some of his stuff but by the locations of his things including parts of his bracelets he was hit hard and maybe dragged.   She couldn’t sleep because her mind wouldn’t disengage and let her sleep.   Boy do I know that.  So I let her talk and express her fears.  I expressed my deep well hopes and well wishes.  It doesn’t take being religious to care or empathize with others.  

After being in the waiting room for a while which I think was not too long, I read some news, posted a few news stories, read some of my books on my tablet I was called in.  

I was not given the normal check in where they do your weight and your medications, so I had to make sure that my restricted medications were reapproved.  As I talked with the woman doing this I complimented her on her purple colored hair.  It was clear she struggled to grow hair and she tried to make the hair she had stand out, so she was delighted to talk to me about the color.  I told her I thought it was great, that I loved the color, which was the truth. I enjoy people exploring being different.  It shows personality and style.  She was delighted and happy.    I waited in that room a bit over an hour.  

Now many might be upset with the time I waited, and it is not right to make patients do that.   But the truth is, it is not the doctors and providers making us wait.  It is the constant need for more profit by corporations.   It was not like this before my doctors were forced to sell to a large health company in California.  They are always pushed to do more, see more patients, and always short on staff.   While I understand that people who work cannot tolerate such waits, most of those in my condition don’t work so our time is our own, so we can give it when we need to.  The only problem I had was the sitting in their chairs was painful, so I had to stand, sit, readjust, and so forth to deal with it.  

Short side note.  One time I was there I waited more than an hour.  My normal provider I love and have followed to every office she moved to was covering for three providers.  She was running an hour behind because of this.   This is the same woman who is the only doctor who gives me a hug both when coming in and when leaving.  She knows the most I have ever told any doctor of my abuse, and I needed to because she noticed the self-abuse on my arms.  When she opened the door to my exam room, I heard a woman come out into the hallway and yell at her / everyone that she had been there almost an hour and shouted abusive language demanding to be seen.  My favored normal provider is elderly, she had already gone to semi retirement of only part-time, she stays simply because she is like me, she cares. She had returned to full time to cover for a fellow ARNP who had gone out on pregnancy leave.  She told the woman the situation yet when she came into my room she was visibly shaken and stressed.  I told her immediately to take a few minutes to decompress and relax, as I was not in a hurry.  She smiled, relaxed and we hugged.  That is what it means to see others as people, as humans like yourself, to accept and acknowledge their needs.

Back to this morning.  When the young man … so many people in professions are to me these days.   Young I mean.  I followed him.  I had to remind him I couldn’t walk fast as he raced into the room, but he came out and apologized and told me to take my time.  As it happened, I had a lot of time.  He got stuff ready; I took the stuff out of my pants pockets along with taking off my glasses, put my hair in a ponytail, and he told me I could get up on the table.  Damn if I knew it was going to be another thirty minutes I would have waited as the table is painful for me.  He went out twice to check on the doctor and said the person the doctor was seeing must have lots of questions.  I told him that was OK as I appreciate it when the doctors / providers take their time with me.  There is simply no way to do the 10 minute visits the corporations demand to increase profits and give decent care to those in need.  

Side note.  After this doctor sold his practice which was required because a large hospital system screwed them out of 8 months of billing hours, the new company required him to see non-spine shot patients between each shot patient, plus do all the medications needing physician sign offs that day.  He seriously almost runs from room to room.  Yet once in the room he gives his all to the patient.  It is what drew me to his practice in the first place, he is like me, we truly and really care about people.  

And in true fashion, that same doctor gave me the time and attention to address my needs.  But this is the first time I ever cried out when given the spine shot.  I have had a lot of these, I knew the drill.  Plus, I am used to pain.  First from childhood abuse and in later years with my body failing, which my first orthopedic surgeon blamed on the trauma done to my body / bones from that abuse.  I never told him of my abuse but by my scans he already knew.  I am paying every day for what was done to me so long ago.

So when the doctor put the numbing agent in, I was prepared for the pain, the sharp sting.   But what followed next was more than I was used to.  My injections seem to be in three parts but that maybe just how I feel them.   First is the sting of the needle to inject a numbing agent.  Then the second needle to drive the guide needle into the spot.  Those are painful on an increasing scale, the stinging needle I handle easily, the guide channel is really painful but I bear it without moving, I have had a lot of experience doing that in my life.  Then comes the largest syringe of medications.  I get to see them draw it up, it is a mixture of at least two different stuff.  

This time when he put the guide in it was really painful, but I took it.  As I said I have known pain all my life.  He is the kind of doctor that seems to feel your pain and discomfort and talks you through it.   I told him I understood how important it was to remain still and not tense up. Like I said, I get these a lot.  He told me the nerves were really inflamed.    But when he went to put the medication in … The pain was horribly crashing over me and increasing.  For the first time I cried out, saying “flocks” as I desperately tried to stay still.  Every part of my body demanded I move and it took all the will power I had to stay there and let it happen instead of trying to run away.    The doctor was talking to me trying to explain why this time was so much worse than the others, but I was struggling to hear / understand him.  I again cried out “Oh good golly miss Molly” Seems the nerves in that spot were extremely frayed / inflamed.  It felt like he had inserted a golf ball into my spine.  When I said that the Doctor agreed with me and offered me comfort. 

As to the choice of words to cry out.  I am not normally a vulgar person, I had enough of that growing up.  While I don’t believe in bad words per say I know others do.  Even in great pain I tend to use the words I like to express it.   After all that is what curse words are, our expressions.  

Being the great caring doctor he is he did not rush out of the room to his next patient.   He talked to me, made sure I was OK, we returned to the conversation I had with him the last time he gave me shots.  We had been talking about my muscle issues and he even took the time to go back into my chart to find a new medication that might help me.  When I told him how painful the two muscles along the side of my spine would get and then told him they were not so painful today as normal, he kept asking me about it.  I described how they can get as raised as my fists and as hard.  What I did not realize is like the last time he gave me spine shots he mentioned how swollen they were, they were also swollen this morning.  I just get so use to the pain I don’t realize how mind numbing bad it is.   As I said he took the time to go through my chart and look at my medications and prescribed the only one left he thinks will help. 

 

I was in so much pain I could hardly drive home.  I had to have Ron help me into the house.  This morning, Tuesday, my leg muscles are so sore from me tensing on the table during the procedure that I can hardly walk.   I will take it easy today.  Ron just took the bandage off my back and he says that the needle mark / hole is really big.  Hugs.  Scottie

THE TIMES OF ISRAEL: Six months after October 7, some hostage families embracing anti-government protests

Six months after October 7, some hostage families embracing anti-government protests
No longer willing to keep their anger in check, a group of relatives of those held captive by terrorists in Gaza are speaking out against the prime minister and his cabinet

Read in The Times of Israel: https://apple.news/AHAVKf3WqRy-1RaspHVB77A

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

USA TODAY: Pregnant women in Gaza Strip face starvation, no anesthesia after 6 months of war

Pregnant women in Gaza Strip face starvation, no anesthesia after 6 months of war
Pregnant women are some of the most endangered people in any conflict zone. But in Gaza, the situation is worse because they have no safe place to go.

Read in USA TODAY: https://apple.news/A_hLig7aPQUCmiMnlM2yPyA

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

Yesterday I almost caught up. But today will slip

I was with in 8 notifications of totally clearing my notifications before I just had to quit.  This morning I will try to get caught up, but I have more spine shots this morning.  So the day might be a wash for me.  But there is always tomorrow.  I hate the spine shots, they are even more painful than the trigger point muscle shots I get.  Plus the position on the table is painful for me.  But it has to be done.   See ya all soon in the future.   Hugs.  Scottie

CNN: Israeli doctor says detained Palestinians are undergoing ‘routine’ amputations for hand cuff injuries, Haaretz reports

Israeli doctor says detained Palestinians are undergoing ‘routine’ amputations for handcuff injuries, Haaretz reports
A doctor at a field hospital for detained Gazans at Israel’s Sde Teiman army base has described “deplorable conditions” and “routine” amputations due to handcuff injuries, according to an exclusive report from the newspaper Haaretz.

Read in CNN: https://apple.news/ASzPvzgM9S2OyI9Aqx96e3g

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

They came for Florida’s sun and sand. They got soaring costs and a culture war.

*** Edit to include Ten Bears site I got the link from.  I was so tired I for got to include it.  Thank you Ten Bears. ***

Firstday Forage …

This is what is and has happened in Florida.   We moved to the state in 1994, a poor gay couple.  But the state was a blue state with an extremely progressive government.  I loved the idea of being so near amusement parks I never had seen before.  But over the years we have seen our state torn apart as hard right leaning people moved from other northern states to Florida, like we had done.  But those people changed the state.  They voted Republican, those republicans changed laws about voting, making it harder for people to vote.  I once had to give up voting because I showed up at the early voting place only to see a several hour long line.  There was no way I could stand that long, at the time I had only one hip joint.  But when Ron complained we were told that was the rules, stay in line and vote.   Republicans won the election.   That is what republicans are doing everywhere they control.   It is horrible.  We must do what ever we can to resist. 

Please read this article.   It is and has been our experience.  We have seen prices grow so high we struggle today to make ends meet and even buy groceries.  Our medical costs are out of sight and imagination.  And the republican hard right wants to make our existence as a gay couple a crime.  I have talked about how over the last tRump administration, how over the last three years maga thugs have moved in to our area, our mobile home park.  They put up pro-tRump posters, signs, and banners all which are against the rules but they are not made to take them down.   Our former open and welcoming community divided into with maga or be … shut down and made unwelcome.   These maga people have only one setting, they do not believe everyone has the right to their opinion or their political views, you either see it their way or you’re the enemy.  Ron and I have withdrawn from most of the community when after the hurricane we were walking around the park and just down the street from us a new move in from NY was offering coffee to people … he had a tRump sign and a slur for president Biden on his home before the hurricane.  They were not welcoming to Ron and I to say the least.  We had never had that happen in our neighborohood before.   Luckily, we had our own big generator that provided for all our needs and also was powering our ill neighbor’s oxygen machine and his refrigerator.  We did not need their coffee, we were able to power our own coffee maker and hot plates and a microwave along with our A/c units and Ron’s C-pap.  After hurricane Maria Ron insisted we buy a huge powerful generator.   After Ian tore up our home and we were without power for three weeks that generator saved us.  The name on the generator is The Beast.  It really is.  Hugs.  Scottie

———————————————————————————————————————–

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/economics/leaving-florida-rcna142316

Florida has seen a population boom in recent years, but many longtime residents and recent transplants say rising costs and divisive politics have them fleeing the Sunshine State.
Beachgoers in Cocoa Beach

Beachgoers in Cocoa Beach on July 29, 2023, when ocean temperatures reached 101 degrees around the Florida Keys.Paul Hennesy / Anadolu Agency via Getty Images file

 

One of the first signs Barb Carter’s move to Florida wasn’t the postcard life she’d envisioned was the armadillo infestation in her home that caused $9,000 in damages. Then came a hurricane, ever present feuding over politics, and an inability to find a doctor to remove a tumor from her liver.

After a year in the Sunshine State, Carter packed her car with whatever belongings she could fit and headed back to her home state of Kansas — selling her Florida home at a $40,000 loss and leaving behind the children and grandchildren she’d moved to be closer to.

 

“So many people ask, ‘Why would you move back to Kansas?’ I tell them all the same thing — you’ve got to take your vacation goggles off,” Carter said. “For me, it was very falsely promoted. Once living there, I thought, you know, this isn’t all you guys have cracked this up to be, at all.”

Florida has had a population boom over the past several years, with more than 700,000 people moving there in 2022, and it was the second-fastest-growing state as of July 2023, according to Census Bureau data. While there are some indications that migration to the state has slowed from its pandemic highs, only Texas saw more one-way U-Haul moves into the state than Florida last year. Mortgage application data indicated there were nearly two homebuyers moving to Florida in 2023 for every one leaving, according to data analytics firm CoreLogic.

But while hundreds of thousands of new residents have flocked to the state on the promise of beautiful weather, no income tax and lower costs, nearly 500,000 left in 2022, according to the most recent census data. Contributing to their move was a perfect storm of soaring insurance costs, a hostile political environment, worsening traffic and extreme weather, according to interviews with more than a dozen recent transplants and longtime residents who left the state in the past two years.

 
 
A demonstrator holds a placard reading "Ban Hate" during a 'Walkout 2 Learn' rally
Young people in Miami demonstrate in 2023 in response to Florida’s crackdown on lessons surrounding race and Black history, and against a string of anti-LGBTQ laws that are affecting students.Eva Marie Uzcategui / Bloomberg via Getty Images
 
 

“It wasn’t the utopia on any level that I thought it would be,” said Jodi Cummings, who moved to Florida from Connecticut in 2021. “I thought Florida would be an easier lifestyle, I thought the pace would be a little bit quieter, I thought it would be warmer. I didn’t expect it to be literally 100 degrees at night. It was incredibly difficult to make friends, and it was expensive, very expensive.”

Cummings expected she’d have extra money in her paycheck working as a private chef in the Palm Beach area since the state doesn’t have an income tax. But the high costs of car insurance, rent and food cut into that additional take-home pay. After six months of dealing with South Florida’s heat and traffic, she began planning a move back to the Northeast.

“I had been so disenchanted with Florida so quickly,” Cummings said. “There was this feeling of confusion and guilt about wanting to leave, of moving there then realizing this is not anything like I thought it would be.”

 
 
A window air conditioning unit during a heat wave in Miami

A window air conditioning unit during a heat wave in Miami in 2023.Eva Marie Uzcategui / Bloomberg via Getty Images
 
 

While costs have been rising across the country, some areas of Florida have been hit particularly hard. In the South Florida region, which includes Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach, consumer prices in February were up nearly 5% over the prior year, compared to 3.2% nationally, according to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Homeowners insurance rates in Florida rose 42% last year to an average of $6,000 annually, driven by hurricanes and climate change, and car insurance in Florida is more than 50% higher than the national average, according to the Insurance Information Institute. While once seen as an affordable housing market, Florida is now among the more expensive states to buy a home in, with prices up 60% since 2020 to an average of $388,500, according to Zillow.

For Carter, who made the move in 2022 from Kansas to a suburb of Orlando for the weather, beaches and to be closer to her grandchildren, the costs began to quickly pile up. She purchased a manufactured home and initially expected the lot rent in her community to be $580 a month. But when she arrived she learned her monthly bill was actually $750, and by the time she left it had jumped to $875 a month. Along with the $9,000 in repairs from the armadillos, her car insurance doubled and Hurricane Ian destroyed her home’s roof on her 62nd birthday.

 
 
A aerial view of a man wading through a flooded street.

A flooded street in Orlando, Fla., following Hurricane Ian in 2022.Bryan R. Smith / AFP via Getty Images
 
 

There were also the ever-present conversations and disagreements over politics that started to wear on her. Carter, who describes herself as a “middle of the road” Republican, said she learned to keep her opinions to herself.

“You cannot engage in a conversation there without politics coming up, it is just crazy. We’re retired, we’re supposed to be in our fun time of life,” she said. “I learned quickly, just keep your mouth shut, because I saw people in my own community break up their friendships over it. I don’t like losing friends, and especially over politics.”

 
 
A supporter of President Joe Biden faces supporters of Donald Trump outside of the courthouse in Fort Pierce, Fla., where Trump attended a hearing in his classified records case on March 14.

A supporter of President Joe Biden faces supporters of Donald Trump outside of the courthouse in Fort Pierce, Fla., where Trump attended a hearing in his classified records case on March 14.Joe Raedle / Getty Images
 
 

But she said the final straw was when she couldn’t find a surgeon to remove a 6-inch tumor from her liver that doctors warned could burst at any moment and lead to life-threatening sepsis. After being passed among doctors, she finally found one willing to remove the tumor. But when she called to schedule the surgery, her calls went unanswered and her messages weren’t returned. After months of trying and fearing for her life, she returned to Kansas to have the procedure done.“It just seemed like one challenge after another, but I kept with it until there was literally a lifesaving event that I needed to get handled and I wasn’t able to do it there,” she said. “I think it was the most difficult year of my life.”

No state has had more residents relocate to Florida in recent years than New York, with 90,000 New Yorkers moving there in 2022, according to census data. Among all out-of-state mortgage applicants, nearly 9% were from New York in 2023, slightly lower than the previous two years but similar to 2019, according to CoreLogic. One of those New York transplants was Louis Rotkowitz. He lasted less than two years in Florida.

“Like every good New Yorker, this is where you want to go,” he said by phone while driving the last of his belongings out of the state to his new home in Charlotte, North Carolina. “It’s a complete fallacy.”

After years working in emergency medicine, and nearly dying from a Covid-19 infection he contracted at work, Rotkowitz said he and his wife were looking for a more pleasant, affordable lifestyle and warmer weather when they decided to buy a house in the West Palm Beach area in 2022. He got a job there as a primary care physician and his wife took a teaching position.

But he said he quickly found the Florida he’d moved to wasn’t the one he’d experienced on regular visits there over the years. His commute to work often took more than an hour each way, he struggled to get basic services like a dishwasher repair, and the cost of his homeowners association fees doubled.

“I had a good salary, but we were barely making ends meet. We had zero quality of life,” said Rotkowitz.

Along with the rising costs, Rotkowitz said he generally felt unsafe in the state between the erratic traffic — which resulted in a number of his patients being injured by vehicles — and a state law passed in 2023 that allowed people to carry a concealed weapon without a license.

 
 
A handgun is inventoried at store that sells guns in Delray Beach

A handgun is inventoried at store that sells guns in Delray Beach, Fla., in 2023.Joe Raedle / Getty Images file
 
 

“Everyone is walking around with guns there,” he said. “I consider myself a conservative guy, but if you want to carry a gun you should be licensed, there should be some sort of process.”

Veronica Blaski, who moved to Florida from Connecticut, said rising costs drove her out of the state after less than three years. When at the start of the pandemic her husband was offered a job in Florida making more money as a manager for a landscaping company, Blaski envisioned warm weather and a more comfortable lifestyle.

The couple, both in their 40s, sold their home in Connecticut and were starting to settle into their new community when Blaski said they were hit with a “bulldozer” of costs at the start of 2023.

Her homeowners insurance company threatened to drop her coverage if she didn’t replace her home’s 9-year-old roof, a $16,000 to $30,000 project, and even with a new roof, she was expecting her home insurance rates to double — one neighbor saw their insurance go from $600 a month to $1,200 a month.

She was also facing rising property taxes as the value of her home increased, her homeowners association fees went from $326 a month to $480, and her insurance agent warned that her car insurance would likely double when it was time to renew her policy. Her husband had to get a second job on weekends to cover the higher costs.

While Florida has an unemployment rate below the national average, Blaski and others said wages weren’t enough to keep up with their expenses. The median salary in Florida is among the lowest in the country, according to payroll processor ADP. To afford a home in one of Florida’s more affordable metro areas, like Jacksonville, a homebuyer would need to earn $109,000 a year, around twice as much income as a buyer would have needed just four years ago, according to an analysis by Zillow.

“My little part-time job making $600, $700 a month went to paying either car insurance or homeowners insurance, and forget about groceries,” said Blaski, who was working in retail. “There are all these hidden things that people don’t know about. Make sure you have extra money saved somewhere because you will need it.”

 
 
A woman looks at bottle of juice.

A person shops in a grocery store on July 13, 2022, in Miami as the consumer price index soared to 9.1%, marking the fastest pace for inflation since November 1981.Joe Raedle / Getty Images file
 
 

When her husband’s former boss in Connecticut reached out to see if he’d be willing to return, the couple leaped at the chance.

The reverse migration out of Florida isn’t just among newcomers, but also among longtime residents who said they can no longer afford to live there and are uncomfortable with the state’s increasingly conservative policies, which in recent years have included a crackdown on undocumented immigrants, a ban on transgender care for minors, state interventions in how race, slavery and sexuality are taught in schools, and a six-week ban on abortions.

After more than three decades in the Tampa Bay area, Donna Smith left the state for Pennsylvania in December, with politics and rising insurance costs playing a major role in her decision to leave.

“It breaks my heart, it really does, because Florida was really a pretty great place when I first moved there,” Smith said.

Having grown up in Oklahoma, Smith considered herself a Republican, but as Florida’s politics shifted to the right, she said she began to consider herself a Democrat. It wasn’t until the past several years, though, that politics started to encroach on her daily life — from feuds between neighbors and friends to neo-Nazis showing up at a Black Lives Matter rally in her small town.

“When I first moved to Florida, it was a live-and-let-live sort of beach feel. You met people from all over, everybody was relaxed. That’s just gone now, and it’s shocking. It’s just gone,” said Smith, 61, who works as a graphic designer and illustrator. “Instead, it’s just a constant stressful atmosphere. I feel as though it could ignite at any point, and I’m not a fearmonger. It’s just the atmosphere, the feeling there.”

She was already considering a move out of the state when she was told by her homeowners insurance company that she would need to replace her home’s roof because it was older than four years or her insurance premium would be going up to $12,000 a year from $3,600, which was already double what she had been paying. Even with a new roof, she was told her premium would be $6,900 a year. Before she could make a decision about what to do, her insurance policy was canceled.

Shortly after, Smith ended up moving to the Lancaster, Pennsylvania, area, where she is closer to her adult children. While the majority of voters in her new county chose Donald Trump in the last election, she said politics is no longer such a heavy presence in her everyday life.

“I don’t feel it is as oppressive. People don’t wear it on their sleeve like they did in Florida,” she said. “When you walk in a room, you don’t overhear a conversation all the time where people are saying ‘Trump is the best’ or ‘I went to that last rally,’ and they’re telling total strangers while you’re just waiting for your car or something. It was just everywhere.”

 
 
A supporter of Donald Trump wears a Trump bust jewelry.

A supporter of Donald Trump at a Super Tuesday election-night watch party at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., on March 5.Chandan Khanna / AFP – Getty Images
 
 

Costs and politics were also enough to cause Noelle Schmitz to leave the state after more than 30 years, despite her son having a year left in high school, and relocate to Winchester, Virginia. She said the politics became ever-present in her daily life — one former neighbor had a massive Trump banner in front of their house for years, and another had Trump written in big letters across their yard. When she put out a Hillary Clinton sign in 2016, it was stolen and her house was egged.“I saw my neighbors and co-workers become more radicalized, more aggressive and more angry about politics. I’m thinking, where is this coming from? These are not the people I remember,” Schmitz said. “I was finally like, we need to get the hell out of here, things are not going well.”

For some Florida newcomers though, politics is the main draw to the state, said John Desautels, who has sold real estate in Florida for decades. While politics never used to be a topic for homebuyers, Desautels said it is now a regular subject his clients bring up. Rather than asking about schools or amenities in a community, prospective buyers are asking him about the political affiliations of a certain neighborhood.

“One of the first things they say is, ‘I don’t want to be in one of them X or Y political party neighborhoods,’” Desautels said. “I spend hours listening to people vent to me about fleeing the communist government of XYZ and they want to come to freedom or whatever. So the politics have been the biggest issue when we get the call.”

Even home showings have become a politically sensitive issue. He recalled showing an elderly woman one property where there were Confederate flags at the gate and swastikas on the fish tank.

But while politics are a lure to people arriving in the state, he said they’re also among the reasons sellers tell him they’re leaving, and the state’s politics have deterred some of his gay or nonwhite clients from moving there.

“The problem is, when we alienate protected classes, it sounds like a good sound bite, but you’ve got to remember those are people who spend money in our community,” he said. “For this pro-business, free state, I’m feeling it in the wallet, bad.”

In Kansas, Carter says it’s good to be home. She moved into a 55-plus community in a small town about 10 miles from Wichita. While in Florida she was paying nearly $900 in lot rent for her manufactured home, she now pays just $520 in rent for a cottage-style apartment — a place she estimates would have cost her $1,800 a month in Florida.

With the money she’s saving in Kansas, she can afford to visit Florida.

“People call me the modern-day Dorothy,” she said. “There’s no place like home.”

 
 
An aerial view of a vehicle driving along a flooded street.

A flooded street in New Port Richey, Fla., after Hurricane Idalia made landfall in 2023.Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo / AFP via Getty Images

Better Off …

The video that Ten Bears posted is incredibly important.   Seriously it takes the entire wind out of the tRump campaign sails.   If this doesn’t convince people, then their only driving force is racism and bigotry.   Hugs.  Scottie

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