But then the local news goes gothic. A Florida man was upset that his wife didn’t thaw the frozen pizza and
shoved her face into a dog bowl, police said. Another man
forced his wife to swallow her diamond engagement ring after she announced that she was leaving. In another bad pizza story, a man
punched the delivery boy after he forget garlic knots.
And
then comes cannibalism. Another man “chopped off his victim’s head,
removed part of the brain and an eyeball, put them in a plastic bag,
walked 12 blocks to this cemetery, Lakeview Cemetery, and then ate
them,” WTHH-TV reported. Other skin-eating
criminals also made national news, with details too gross to mention.
So
what is it? Is there something in the state’s character that delights
in proving—or telling the world again and again—that Floridian facts are
stranger than fiction?
“A Florida man is dead after competing in a bug eating contest at a reptile store,” another station
reported. Another cockroach-eating story starred a preacher
wanting to attract new parishioners. The state
sponsors python killing contests, though some Floridians keep them at
home as pets—until they are herded like cattle and confiscated.
The “weird Florida” list goes on and on—and then it moves into the political world.
Florida’s bad politics
startled the
nation in 2000, when the U.S. Supreme Court stopped a presidential
recount and gave the White House to George W. Bush. Its current
governor, Rick Scott, is one of America’s worst. He was elected after
touting his years as CEO of Columbia/HCA, a big hospital chain that paid
a
total of $1.7 billion in fines for taxpayer-bilking Medicaid fraud felonies that were mostly committed while he was in charge. He
spent $75 million of his money on his 2010 race. The fox now runs the henhouse.
At
times, Scott, a Tea Party Republican, seems like a buffoon. At other
times, he’s bent on destroying Florida government. He’s mistakenly given
out phone sex line numbers at press conferences and
signed a bill that unknowingly banned computers and smart phones at Internet cafes. He was
called one of the nation’s worst governors by the Chronicle of Higher Education for wanting to
phase out funding for the humanities. Scott
resurrected a
slew of Jim Crow-era voting tactics before the 2012 election, including
false claims that 180,000 aliens were on voter rolls and shutting down
voter registration drives.
Beyond Scott, Florida’s justice system cannot shake its inescapable racist
reputation.
It’s not just that the Trayvon Martin prosecution team could not
convict George Zimmerman. The same prosecutor sent a black women—a young
mother—to jail for 20 years for firing a warning shot after her
husband, a known domestic abuser, threatened her.
Florida is a state of extremes. It has the
most bugs, the highest identity theft
rate in the nation, the flattest roads and the worst
elderly drivers.
Two of
its cities, Pensacola and Jacksonville, rank in the top 10 nationally
for most toxic drinking water. More cities are among the nation’s top 10
with stickiest weather: Apalachicola and Gainesville. It has the fourth
most volatile
economy, with one quarter of its 19.3 million
residents losing one-fourth of their income in 2008 economic crash.
Why? Why? Why?
California has the
most poisonous snakes, but it does not have the Sunshine State’s snake obsessions. Nor does it have a detective’s daughter
displaying an ounce of cocaine from the police locker for a grade-school science project (involving sniffer dogs).
Native Floridians tend to blame everyone but native Floridians for the state’s reputation.
As
UrbanDictionary.com notes,
white Floridians with pre-Civil War roots are proud to be called
“crackers,” and are known for fishing and swimming in lakes and rivers;
knowing what swamp cabbage is and how to cook it; eating cane syrup on
biscuits and gravy on squirrel and rice; and knowing to take off one’s
hat when hearing Dixie or any Lynyrd Skynyrd song.
“This just makes me want to laugh,” replied Casey Schmidt, to CBS’s Miami affiliate when they
asked about Florida’s
weird reputation. “You say people down here only care about themselves,
well that may be true. Until we know who you are and what crazy ideas
you are bringing from some other crazy state, we are just going to take
care of ourselves. If you don’t like the way we’re living just leave
this long-haired country boy alone.”
Using boomer Southern rock lyrics to express “screw you” sentiments—
courtesy of the Charlie Daniels Band—is predictable enough. But other writers to the same
blog had more insightful comments.
“I
live here in Pinellas County and I believe it’s a combination of
extreme poverty from low paying jobs, heat, and no access to
mental-health care (unaffordable health insurance and very hard to
qualify for Medicaid),” another said. “You get desperate, depressed,
angry, and eventually just don’t care about anything.”
What do other Florida watchers say? There are a half-dozen good theories accounting for the beat-on-Florida bandwagon.
1. Florida cops don’t keep quiet.
NPR’s Brooke Gladstone, the New Yorker who co-hosts “On The Media,” last year
interviewed Florida newspaper
reporter Will Greenlee about the state’s off-the-charts crime stories.
The police reporter said Florida’s permissive open-records laws gives
the media inordinate access to detailed police files, where they find
the lurid tales.
2. The curious mix of people drawn there.
Allison Ford,
theorizing at DivineCaroline.com,
said Florida is one of those states that is more populated by people
who come from elsewhere than by natives. This includes old people,
immigrants, the very religious, “carpetbaggers and the nouveau riche
from the rest of the country,” rednecks and tourists, as she said.
“Florida has about 19 million residents. Is it any surprise that you
have more weird news than Wyoming?”
Ford does not even mention
that Miami has long been the destination of choice for Latin America’s
exiles, most notably from Cuba. Vanquished
military dictators also
favor the region, as well as impoverished Haitians. Ex-New Yorkers
linger on the Atlantic coast. Midwesterners go to the Gulf coast. And
that’s just the southland.
3. The law—if you can call it that!
Somerset Maugham’s
quote about
the French Riviera has become Florida’s unofficial tag line—a “sunny
place for shady people.” Roger Stone, one of Richard Nixon’s henchmen,
told the
New Yorker that he moved to Miami in the 1990s “because I fit right
in.” To say that Florida has a loose regulatory environment barely
states it. People move there to buy homes that can’t be seized in
bankruptcy proceedings. There are loose gun laws, of which the Stand
Your Ground
law is
but one example. Ford noted the state has “no system to monitor the
distribution of prescription drugs” and there’s no state income tax.
“While
plenty of people come to Florida looking for simply a better life or
better weather, the state attracts a contingent of people who come for
more illicit or opportunistic reasons, and these people tend to make the
news,” she
said, citing its loose laws and frontier mentality.
4. The land and the weather.
It’s
not just the lack of four distinct seasons, but the mix of heat,
humidity, hurricanes and native flora and fauna that’s not found in the
rest of America. As
Swamplandia! author and Miami-Dade native
Karen Russell told “On The Media,” it all starts with the weather.
“You’re just bathed in this unchanging summer like all the time,” she
said.
“The shape of it [the state] too, it’s like a lot of strangeness just
travels the spine of the country and seems to land there… I think
there’s some physics to it.”
Scientists—not just writers—have found there are a range of mental and physical health issues that arise when people live above
80 degrees Fahrenheit. One
paper,
based on 13 years of Australian data, “observed a positive association
between ambient temperature and hospital admissions for mental and
behavioral disorders.”
5. The media likes Florida-bashing.
Other southern states, such as Louisiana and Mississippi, score worse on many
shameful socio-economic
indices. But people in general, and especially the media, don’t delight
in pointing out those states’ failings or oddities, Ford
noted.
The endless parade of Florida buffoonery or repugnant political deeds
rises to top of the news, she said, especially in the snootier and more
closeted states.
“Northerners love to portray Florida as a land
full of drug dealers, corrupt politicians, deranged old people, and
immigrants all snarling traffic in their Hummers while releasing pet
pythons into the Everglades. And to some extent, that might be true,”
Ford
concluded. “We love to laugh at Florida, but we also love to go there and give them our money.”
The Weirdest State
Perhaps
if Florida were not the fourth most populous state, didn’t have so many
Electoral College votes, weren’t run by rabidly libertarian
politicians, didn’t produce racist court decisions, and didn’t have
endless bad crime stories on local TV, the rest of America could treat
it like Alaska—which only forced the country to deal with Sarah Palin.
But Florida is the strangest state for lots of reasons, which
websites like to
count and
recount and
ponder and keep
pondering.
And until climate change floods the peninsula discovered 500 years ago
by Ponce de Leon, the rest of American has to live with its weirdness.
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