Category Archives: 2024 Articles

Elections preview

There will be a lot of local races on the ballot, this is a preview of what’s coming, but incomplete because the filing deadline has not been reached. The Iguana leans pro-Democratic because, well, history … Other candidates may still file, so that may force some primaries for August. Following are the probable ones for August. 

If you are travelling this summer (or just don’t want to or can’t leave the house), it’s important to have an absentee ballot so your voice is heard. 

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Book bans undermine principles of equality, freedom

by Sarah Rockwell

In the ongoing battle for civil rights and social justice, a new front has emerged in Florida: the fight against book bans. 

Across the state, a small but vocal group is attempting to control the narrative in our schools, dictating which books children can access and what histories they are taught. These efforts threaten to undermine the principles of equality and freedom that are the bedrock of our society.

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New student movement: Veterans’ perspective

by Nick Smith

Dozens of protests and campus occupations erupted at the end of the 2023-24 spring semester and many are still ongoing in solidarity with the Palestinian people as Israel continues its bombardment of Gaza. Columbia University’s students acted as the epicenter of this movement with its students demanding divestment from companies that profit off of the war in Palestine. These demands from protestors are modeled after the Anti-Apartheid movement of the 1980s and the protest tactics resemble the sit-ins of the Anti-Vietnam protests of the 60s.

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Amy Trask proposes legislation to protect women’s health

by C. Gordon

With Florida’s recent acquiescence to the six-week abortion ban, and with elected officials from other red states threatening to “monitor” women’s fertility and possible pregnancies, it is not surprising that women’s health and reproductive rights are driving progressive voter turnout this election cycle. 

It is a welcome surprise that a first-time candidate for public office has, more than two months before the August Primary, proactively crafted legislation that addresses a key part of these abuses.

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From the publisher… 1968 state of mind

by Joe Courter

Some say, as a counterpoint to the oft-heard cliché, that “history doesn’t always repeat itself, but at times it does rhyme.” 

I just read a book that took me back to those times of dynamic change, Doris Kearns Goodwin’s “An Unfinished Love Story.” It is a book with first hand observations about trying to bring the idealism of the 60’s into reality through the core of young speech writers and advisors to JFK, LBJ and RFK in the period from 1959 to 1968. 

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Vote to save our Gainesville Regional Utilities

by Robert “Hutch” Hutchinson

What is it about Gainesville Regional Utilities that makes it worth fighting over? Every decade or so, GRU faces a new existential crisis, yet our community has frequently played an outsized role in national utility policy as a result of decisions made in our little petri dish.

Gainesville’s utilities became “owned by the people it serves” over a hundred years ago when the private electric utility turned off the power to the streetlights over a billing dispute — so the City took over. Gainesville’s willingness to entice the University of Florida with free water in perpetuity is credited with swaying the decision to locate UF here. In the 1960s, little old Gainesville won Supreme Court cases against Florida’s investor-owned utilities which required these large private companies to inter-connect their lines with the smaller public utilities — forever changing the reliability and the marketing of electricity across the nation’s electric grid.

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Student activism over Gaza

Since October, university students have been escalating campaigns for divestment from genocide, many culminating with encampments springing up nationwide

by Aron Ali-McClory, National Co-Chair of the Young Democratic Socialists of America

“Intifada, Intifada — Globalize the Intifada!” is a chant which has been heard across the country since October, when student protestors first rose up across the country to demand an end to the genocide and ethnic cleansing in Gaza, part of the broader Nakba (lit. The Catastrophe) which has been perpetrated against Palestinians since 1948. While the chant might be alienating to many, the word originated in the Palestinian context to describe mass student protests in the early 1990s, while in the Arabic language the word intifada (lit. shaking off) it used simply to describe resistance against oppression. 

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August 2024 Gainesville Iguana

The August issue of the Iguana is now available, and you can access it here! If you want to get your hands on a hard copy, check out our distro locations here.

Editors’ Picks

Biden to pardon vets discharged for same-sex relationships
by Ashley Murray ~ Florida Phoenix ~ June 26 ~ tinyurl.com/Iguana2005
President Joe Biden will pardon U.S. military veterans who were discharged or convicted under military law for consensual same-sex relations, the administration announced. They estimate thousands were convicted over several decades and may be eligible. The convictions were enforced under a military law that prohibited certain types of sex from May 1951 to December 2013. 

‘Challenges our authority’: School board in Florida bans book about book bans
by Douglas Soule ~ USA Today Network – Florida ~ June 11 ~ tinyurl.com/Iguana2030
School officials in Indian River County have banned a book about book banning.  The book, “Ban this Book” by Alan Gratz, is a children’s novel about a fourth grader who creates a secret banned books locker library after her school board pulled a multitude of titles off the shelves. Board members said they disliked how it referenced other books that already had been removed from schools and accused it of “teaching rebellion of school board authority.”

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June-July 2024 Gainesville Iguana

The June-July issue of the Iguana is now available, and you can access it here! If you want to get your hands on a hard copy, check out our distro locations here.

Editors’ picks: News that didn’t fit

Florida ‘callously’ strips healthcare from thousands of children despite new law
Gov. Ron De Santis’s challenging of a ‘continuous eligibility’ rule has booted over 22,500 children off insurance since January
by Richard Luscombe ~ The Guardian ~ April 29 ~ tinyurl.com/Iguana1988
The DeSantis administration has stripped Medicaid “KidCare” coverage from at least 22,000 needy Florida children — probably illegally. 

House GOP committee pits young against old
Mainstream media often gets it wrong these days when covering Social Security
by Tia Maria ~ Gainesville Iguana ~ June 1 ~ tinyurl.com/Iguana2002
It’s not just seniors who should be concerned about cutting social security — young people will need their earned Social Security benefits perhaps even more than their parents and grandparents. Let’s change the conversation from cutting benefits to increasing revenue sources.

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House GOP committee pits young against old

By Tia Maria

Mainstream media often gets it wrong these days when covering Social Security. Details from current Democratic proposals to strengthen the program and Republican proposals for cuts, such as raising the retirement age, usually are lost in the verbiage of the overly confident, or are just ignored completely.

But young people will need their earned Social Security benefits perhaps even moreso than their parents and grandparents. One main reason is that previous generations relied on income from pensions in their retirement years. Today, pensions are rare and 401(k)s depend on Wall Street in a market subject to extreme volatilities. Think of 2000, 2008 and 2015. Add to this decades of tax cuts for the wealthy resulting in the inequality, poverty and homelessness we see today. 

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It is time to … WAKE UP!

by Bill Gilbert

We are being overwhelmed by our failure to keep up with change. Forty-six percent of the American population, according to recent studies, experience stress, anxiety and/or depression.

The United States has the worst social record of any developed country in the world and many developing countries. The character of a society depends on how it treats its most vulnerable members: the poor, minorities, children, elders, and immigrants, LGBTQ, and migrants. We are: number one in prison population with 2.3 million people incarcerated, first in teen birth rates, and some of the highest rates of STD’s, first in illiteracy, poverty, racism, homelessness, income disparity, child hunger, child poverty, drug use and drug related deaths, use of antidepressants, violence, firearms deaths, not providing access to health care for all of its citizens, not providing child care for working parents, never-ending inflation, the most military spending, hazardous waste production, recorded rapes, and the poor quality of its public schools, and lowest in life expectancy. This is warp-speed decline.  Some political observers call the inability of government to solve these problems, ‘constitutional rot,’ that has contributed to wrong decisions in the past.

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In the face of state attacks on abortion … Generation Action UF initiative offers reproductive health resources via the The Brown Bag Project <3

by Ashley Sanguino

There is little doubt that abortion has become a key issue in this year’s election.

Florida has become a prime battleground for legislatures to target reproductive rights and attack abortion.

On Monday, April 1, the State Supreme Court announced two key decisions regarding abortion rights. In one case, the 15-week ban was deemed constitutional, allowing for the 6-week ban to go into effect on  May 1, which will bar access and threaten the health and safety of Floridians across the state.

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Home Rule for Gainesville Regional Utilities

by Janice Garry and Nancy Daren, with support from Bobby Mermer, Roberta Gastmyer and Jason Fultz

Since House Bill 1645 (Energy Resources) was introduced during the 2023 legislative session, the League of Women Voters (LWV) of Alachua County has stood in vocal opposition. 

Without local notification or meaningful input, the bill went straight to the state legislature. It passed the legislature and was signed by Governor Ron DeSantis and became law 2023-348, creating a new section, Article VII, in the city charter.  

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S.O.S. (Save Our Station), Keep the magic alive!

by Fred Sowder, WGOT Volunteer

It was the summer of 1989. I had just started classes at the University of Miami in Coral Gables. The truth of the matter was that I was really there to be a part of its college radio station, WVUM. It was a magical time for music. Nirvana had yet to hit it big and local Miami bands like Nuclear Valdez and The Mavericks showed great promise. The radio station there had wall-to-wall live hosts 24 hours a day. To the point, in fact, that I wasn’t able to get a show on my own until November of that year.

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Roller Rebels home bouts April 13, 27

Looking for a unique weekend activity you can bring the whole family to? The Gainesville Roller Rebels are playing two home games this month on April 13 and April 27. 

On Saturday, April 13, the Swamp City Sirens and the Millhopper Devils home teams, both made up of GRR skaters, will face off for GRR’s first game of the season! And on Saturday, April 27, GRR will take on longtime rivals Tallahassee Roller Derby! You won’t want to miss these hard-hitting games.

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Florida’s rich history of Black cowboys, cowgirls

by Carol Mosley

I’m still angry at my formal education when I learn the untold stories of American history. At 72 years old, I’m only now learning about the prevalence and importance of Black cowboys and cowgirls in the history of the American west and of my own state of Florida.

Though not known for being a major cattle state, Florida had, and still has, its own Black cowboys who tend to everything on the ranch from herding cows to training horses. In 2022, Florida produced 3 percent of the nation’s beef cows. 

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Yes you vote

by Joe Courter

There will be primaries in August, and then the final election in November. Many things will play out between now and then. Please, just know you need to vote.

Message to students: Change your voter registration to Gainesville, you are representing future students coming to town. Better city and county Commissioners is a good legacy to leave. Also, if you have moved, update your registration with the Supervisor of Elections office.

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Festival blends the arts into environmental stewardship, science and African American culture

by Carol Mosley

For more than 40 years the Cultural Arts Coalition has been a voice for presenting African American history and culture through arts, environmental stewardship and science programs.

CAC is based out of, and manages, the Wilhelmina Johnson Community Center. The WJRC is rented by local groups for events, meetings and classes. This community resource is in a precarious position, with the City of Gainesville facing severe budget cuts that will result in loss of funding for many non-profit programs.

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