Governor Ron DeSantis wants the world to know that he’s a tough guy. He may wear white boots in heavy rain, but he is very, very tough. To demonstrate how tough he is, he’s made a very big deal out of cracking down on street art. It may be pretty, but it WON’T be tolerated!
So, he had the Florida State Department of Transportation paint over the rainbow-colored stripes on the crosswalks in front of the Pulse nightclub, where 49 people were massacred in 2016. The Pulse is a gay nightclub, and the stripes were intended as a memorial to those who died.
Nine years later, DeSantis had the memorial painted over and restored the original black and white stripes. To prove that he wasn’t picking on gays, he had the Department paint over other street art.
Some admirers of the Pulse memorial were nonetheless outraged, and a few of them restored the rainbow colors with chalk. They were arrested for criminal activity. Their lawyer said the charges were extreme because the rain washed the chalk away. No evidence, no crime. The state wants the makefactors to pay $1562 for the “damage” they inflicted on the street.
If you live in Florida, don’t let your children use chalk to create hopscotch games. It’s dangerous to them, to your pocketbook and to DeSantis’ peace of mind.
The Orlando Sentinel reported:
Gov. Ron DeSantis defended Tuesday the arrest of protesters accused of using chalk to color a crosswalk near the Pulse memorial in defiance of the state’s crackdown on street art.
“You don’t have a First Amendment right to commandeer someone else’s property,” DeSantis said at an Orlando event. “You have a First Amendment right to paint your own property. Knock yourself out if that’s what you want to do. But when you have a state crosswalk or a state road, the law in the state of Florida is now that there’s not markings.”
Tensions have reached a boiling point over the state’s decision to remove a pro-LGBTQ rainbow crosswalk near the former gay nightclub where 49 people were shot and killed in 2016. Four people were arrested over the Labor Day weekend and accused of interfering with a traffic control device.
The Florida Highway Patrol has been stationed near the crosswalk for days. Troopers were sent there after protesters used colored chalk to return the crosswalk back to its rainbow pattern. A back-and-forth battle emerged with protesters coloring the crosswalk and then state crews restoring it to its standard black-and-white pattern.
Late last week, the state put signs at the intersection instructing visitors that defacing the roadway or sidewalk was prohibited
State Attorney Monique Worrell’s office did not immediately comment Tuesday on whether she will prosecute the cases against those arrested over the weekend.
Asked about the arrests, DeSantis said state transportation officials have a duty to ensure the “roads remain clean.”
“Hang up a flag,” he said. “Do what you want on your building, your house, however you want to do it. We’re not going to be doing that on our state roadways.”
Blake Simons, an attorney representing the protesters, said the markings didn’t damage the crosswalks. He argues chalk drawings on a crosswalk are protected by the First Amendment.
“The chalk washes away,” he said. “It is not graffiti.”
Maryjane East, 25, Donavon Short, 26, and Zane Aparicio, 39, were arrested and booked by Florida Highway Patrol on Sunday night outside the Pulse memorial. The trio is accused of applying “unauthorized chalk markings to the crosswalk,” according to arrest affidavits.
The Florida Department of Transportation estimated it cost $1,562 to return the crosswalk to its “original state,” according to police records.
Simons called the state’s cost estimate to wash away water-soluble chalk an exaggeration.
Those arrests came after Orestes Sebastian Suarez was arrested Friday night by FHP on the same charge. Suarez was also released shortly after he was booked after the judge found no probable cause that he committed a crime. He was accused of putting chalk on his shoes to make markings on the crosswalk.
The Florida Department of Transportation approved the Pulse crosswalk in 2017. But earlier this summer, it launched a crackdown on street art, painting over the Pulse crosswalk late Aug. 20.
Since then, the state has removed everything from checkered-flag crosswalks near the Daytona International Speedway to swan-patterned crossings near Lake Eola Park in Orlando. It also has ordered other cities, including Delray Beach and Fort Lauderdale, to remove rainbow street art and said colorful bike lanes designed by school children as part of state-sponsored contests need to go too.
The removals came in the wake of a July 1 directive from Sean Duffy, President Donald Trump’s transportation secretary, introducing a “safety initiative” seeking consistent markings on roads.
Opponents of colorful crosswalks argue they could pose a safety hazard. But an Orlando Sentinel analysis of city traffic data shows the opposite. City data shows that decorative crosswalks and murals, such as the one near Pulse, helped reduce crashes with pedestrians despite increased foot traffic.
Simons said he views the removal of the Pulse crosswalk an attack on the LGBTQ community, and he is representing the protesters at no charge.
“I am not going to stand for our civil rights to be trampled upon,” he said.

I want to know how tough Deranged DeSantis really is. Send him through Special Forces or SEAL training to find out how long he lasts.
Those who make it prove they are tough by doing it instead of bluster and bully tactics from a desk while being guarded 24/7 by a platoon of armed bodyguards.
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“Tough guy” DeSantis is a petty tyrant, control-freak. He has tried to polish his “law and order” image, but it is simply a veneer. He has been recently caught in too many scandals to explain away, and lots of Floridians are tired of his micromanaging, nitpicking and endless whining. His latest faux pas is that he bankrolled “Alligator Alcatraz” with Florida’s public money, and has been ordered to dismantle it. However, like his idol, the orange menace, fanboy DeSantis is ignoring the rule of law.
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We can’t have city residents expressing any positive sense of community or character on city streets, even if it doesn’t interfere with use of the property. Everything has to be uniform & stylistically indistinguishable from any other location. Oh, wait — monuments to a declared wartime enemy of the USA are OK. The State controls all. I thought that was a feature of communism, which De S et al. claim to oppose. Sounds pretty totalitarian to me.
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It seemed dramatic over the past 25 years comparing the state of politics, governance, and leadership to historical and literary extremes. That is no longer the case. It’s that bad!
This daily bombardment of the president’s attempt to make America WWII – 1953 Again is beyond out of control – – it is unchecked out of control. And, that’s just him. State by State – there are others’ “in control” the president denied knowing anything about!
The blogs are about criminalizing art, a university writing assignment to gain perspective on one’s evil point of view, requiring local testing on political/religious and historical lies (to avoid statewide endorsement of these perspectives), removing historical and artistic artifacts from museums.
5 topics in one day added to the dozens from previous columns (book bans…). It is no longer a stretch of the imagination or over-reaction to current events – and AI. Just a sampling of the obvious that offers the full story, not just one event.
1984, Fahrenheit 451, Coded Justice (Stacey Abrams’ latest novel), 2001, “A Sound of Thunder” (Ray Bradbury short story)
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