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  1. #11
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    NO MORE than two units under any trees please!!!!!! 😂😁

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Unfortunately its the perfect storm and Tony will live to see another term. Black thugs love him because, well, Tony is a black thug. Regular blacks either love him or accept him simply because he is black. That usually is the only reason they need. White liberals will vote for him because he is black and they have to bow down, literally and figuratively, in front of a "proud" black man. This way they can assuage their liberal white guilt and "check" their privilege. Leaving a small minority of good G-d fearing Conservatives, white and even a few black, who will seek out someone better. And who do they have to choose from, one buffoon after another. But even if there is a competent candidate, maybe like Cazi?, the minority vote will be spread out amongst the other morons leaving Tony with more overall votes. Even if the majority dont want Tony, he will get more overall votes than the rest of the cast of characters. The only hope is lightning from the heavens where DeSantis removes him, or he has enough humility to resign...neither of which are likely. Dark times for South Florida ahead. But on the bright side, non deputies can smoke a guy and smoke some crack and not worry about arrest/prosecution. Deputies will be fired, hanged and destroyed if they even look at a black guy crosseyed. So beware.
    That just about says it ALL!! Message received loud and CLEAR.

  2. #12
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    HUH? Are you incapable of coming up with your own words or thoughts??

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
    nounPSYCHIATRY
    noun: obsessive-compulsive disorder
    a personality disorder characterized by excessive orderliness, perfectionism, attention to details, and a need for control in relating to others.
    And............Who's "they". Who's "others"? Unoriginal Childish post without any context . 😅😧😬😧😤

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    I was thinking the same thing. The Republican candidate will have a shot this time as people who don’t want to see our country destroyed and a race war happen will be coming out in record numbers to vote for Trump. For maybe the first time ever a Republican candidate has a chance at winning in Broward.

    Like I've been saying. If Israel will wins the primary, we will have a republican sheriff in Jan 2021.
    Worse case scenario for Israel and his ego, the primary votes will be split between Israel, Tony, and Pollock and we'll get a 'nobody' democratic candidate. Come election time, society wants law and order and the republican candidate will win.

  4. #14
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    Toney donates $1,000,000.00 to #BLM & Dream Defenders to #DefundThePolice

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Sheriff Tony sparks the #DefundThePolice #BLM #DD movement with the $500,000.00 racial donation to Mayor Holness.
    Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony says he’s increasing the funding for exactly that kind of training.

    “I was compelled to make sure that we put not just half a million dollars but now I am dedicating a million dollars to make sure sure that this program gets off,” Tony said.

    https://www.nbcmiami.com/news/local/...ments/2244691/

    Broward Sheriff Gregory Tony echoed that sentiment,

    “We hate corrupt and dirty cops, abusive cops, more than anyone else because it tarnishes the badge and we have to do the rebuilding for that mistrust and abuse time and time again,” he said.


    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/e2...an/ar-BB155MmQ

  5. #15
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    Dump Dale Holness

    Quote Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
    Sheriff Tony sparks the #DefundThePolice #BLM #DD movement with the $500,000.00 racial donation to Mayor Holness.
    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/opinion...sk4-story.html

    Let Broward voters create a real county mayor, for a change | Editorial

    By Sun Sentinel Editorial Board 6/15/2020


    At the county, by contrast, it was hard to tell who was in charge. Nine county commissioners are elected by the voters, but power is in the hands of County Administrator Bertha Henry, whose authority expanded under a management plan adopted for emergencies. When Henry dawdled over a re-opening plan, commissioners were powerless to do much more than ask questions and plead for answers.

    The consequences of Henry’s indecision were evident at a May 19 meeting as commissioners darted in all directions. Michael Udine wanted to know why hair salons could open but pet groomers could not. Steve Geller said opening gyms was too risky. Lamar Fisher asked when beaches in his district would open. “The public needs to know," he said.

    Meanwhile, Miami-Dade, under the leadership of Mayor Carlos Gimenez, produced a detailed, decisive plan to move the state’s largest county to a Phase 2 reopening.


    Broward, a county carved out of Miami-Dade and Palm Beach swampland more than a century ago, is now the 17th most populous county in the U.S. With a population of 2 million and growing, it’s larger than a dozen states. It’s long past time for Broward to have strong, executive-style leadership.


    Instead, power is shared and zealously guarded by nine commissioners elected from separate geographic areas. Every year they decide among themselves who’ll be called “mayor” for the next 12 months. Voters have no say. No one is elected by all voters, so no one speaks for Broward as a whole.
    Henry, who’s nearing retirement, has done an admirable job overall, but she’s accountable only to commissioners. Commissioner Dale Holness is mayor for the moment, in name only. He has no more power than any commissioner and the title rotates among them each year as styles and priorities change. By the time a CEO scouting Broward as a business site figures out who the mayor is, the gavel is in somebody else’s hands.
    Broward lacks a political center of gravity. The county is a collection of cities and towns competing for attention — 31 in all. The buck stops everywhere.
    Chronic problems persist: gridlock, homelessness, income inequality. Stronger accountability and more cohesive leadership would help.
    Broward needs an elected mayor to articulate a vision, build coalitions across cultural, racial, political and geographic lines and tackle long-range problems such as sea-level rise.
    Civic and political activists have fiercely argued this question for decades. The debate will continue Tuesday when commissioners will vote on whether to give voters the choice in a November referendum to create a full-time county mayor at a salary of $220,000 a year. The mayor would be a partisan office, limited to two four-year terms and elected for the first time in 2022.
    According to the county charter, at least six of nine commissioners must vote yes for the question to reach the November ballot. We urge the commission to let the people vote on how their government should be structured.
    As proposed by Commissioner Tim Ryan, the mayor would have limited powers. He or she would not hire and fire department heads or veto commission decisions, and the county administrator would still exist. But the mayor would be in charge for four years and vote last on every issue.
    The mayor would be barred from outside employment, such as a law practice, and could not serve as an officer of a business, such as a bank or real estate company. These are needed safeguards to prohibit conflicts of interest. Besides, being a real mayor is more than a full-time job.

    On the county's website, Commissioner Beam Furr emphasizes the three cities in his district. (broward.org)
    This is not a critique of the commissioners. They strongly advocate for the needs of their districts. They must, if they want to get reelected. Rather, it’s a critique of a system that breeds parochialism. No one speaks for the whole county.


    “You don’t have a vision right now in this county,” says former Florida Attorney General Bob Butterworth, who began his career as a Broward judge and sheriff in the ’70s. He was around in 1974 when voters adopted the first county charter with a full-time administrator reporting to seven commissioners. That may have been adequate a half-century ago, but not now. Miami-Dade created an elected county mayor more than 20 years ago.

    Broward’s creaky, antiquated system perpetuates the status quo. Three times since the 1980s, charter review boards, dominated by political insiders, have refused to advance the proposal for a mayor. That’s not surprising. The current system works for those with power and money to gain access to decision-makers. Systemic change will never happen from within.


    Some of those in power don’t see a problem. “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, and it ain’t broke,” says Geller, who plans to vote against Ryan’s modest proposal.

    Twenty years ago, Geller, as a state legislator, voted to give Broward voters a choice. The times were different: Geller’s ally, Ken Jenne, was sheriff and longed to be the county’s first elected mayor. But voters were skeptical. In a countywide referendum in March 2000, they said no.

    Two decades is more than enough time to revisit the question. An elected mayor would provide leadership and accountability. Let all voters — not a few politicians — decide who speaks for us.

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