If the Everglades are really disappearing, then why arenât they called the Sometimesglades?!
Checkmate

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If the Everglades are really disappearing, then why arenât they called the Sometimesglades?!
Checkmate

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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for the aging ask list!
what's the coolest place you've visited?
what's your living arrangement? (who do you live with, in what kind of building, do you own or rent or other?)
Thanks for the ask!
Coolest place I've visited is really hard! I don't travel all that much. I think the Everglades in Florida. We got a really cheesey tour guide and it was completely worth it, he made it so much fun.
Iiiiiii live with my in-laws! They help with our daughter a ton and we cook and clean for them. I get along with them really well so it's nice for the most part.
Everglades near Miami
Walked this trail.
Groups cite detainee maltreatment and degradation of surrounding land as reasons to close facility permanently
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a statement late on Tuesday that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and authorities in Florida âhave moved illegal aliens from the soft sided facility [and] transferred them to other facilitiesâ for their safety, citing this monthâs beginning of the Atlantic hurricane season.
But despite reports last month that the closure of the detention facility was imminent, neither the DHS nor state officials have confirmed any plans. An observer at the remote site on Wednesday said buses apparently carrying detainees continued to come and go, while supplies, including jet fuel, were still being delivered.
About 22,000 undocumented immigrants have passed through the jail since it opened last July, Ron DeSantis, Floridaâs Republican governor, said last month.
At a press conference on Wednesday, plaintiffs in a lawsuit seeking the jailâs closure and full restoration of the site say they will return to district court in Miami this month in pursuit of their goals, citing the âlack of transparencyâ by the DHS.
âWe donât know what theyâre doing, but we think the judge is going to get to the bottom of it and get definitive answers about what their long-term plans are,â said Paul Schwiep, an attorney representing groups including Friends of the Everglades, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians.
âWeâre not going to be done until the lights are off, the fences are down, the tents are gone and thereâs a commitment that it will not be rebuilt.â
Eve Samples, executive director of the Friends of the Everglades, said she was skeptical of the DHS statement.
âIf weâve learned anything over the past year, itâs that we canât take the government officials involved in this project at their word,â she said.
âIf this is indeed true, it is welcome news, but the harm is continuing.â
Elise Bennett, Florida and Caribbean director and attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said continued judicial scrutiny of the detention center was crucial. DeSantis, she said, bore responsibility for environmental damage caused when the jail was hastily constructed by the state and pressed into service as a government detention and deportation facility last summer.
âWeâre not going to let the Trump and DeSantis administrations quietly distance themselves from Alligator Alcatraz and pretend it never happened. Diesel generators are running around the clock, spewing air pollution into [the] Big Cypress [national preserve], surrounding communities and the Everglades.
âA number of these generators are running lights 24/7 that continue to blaze into the night sky, degrading and destroying night-time foraging habitat for endangered Florida bonneted bats and Florida panthers. And we know 20 or more acres of new paving is contributing to unmitigated polluted storm runoff into the surrounding wetlands.
âWe are committed to ensuring the full and final closure of the detention camp and a complete restoration of Big Cypress for the people and the rare and endangered species who depend on this place.â
The lawsuit is set to resume later this month before Miami district court judge Kathleen Williams, who issued a preliminary injunction ordering the closure of the detention center last year. Her ruling was reversed by a three-judge appeals panel that included the wife of a lawyer whose company earned millions of dollars working for the DeSantis administration.
Schwiep said the alliance would press ahead with its demand for a permanent order for closure of the jail, to which DeSantis committed hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayersâ money, much of it taken from state emergency preparedness and response budgets.
âThey built a secret gulag in the Everglades without even pulling one permit, without conducting any environmental review, without complying with environmental law, and now they hope that they can slink away in the middle of the night without explaining to anyone what they did, why they did it or how they proposed to clean up the messes theyâve made,â he said.
âWe donât intend to let them get away with it.â
Separately, an immigration advocacy group that has hosted vigils at the jail every Sunday since it opened last summer criticized the DHS for claiming the 1 June start of hurricane season was the reason for moving the detainees.
âAs Floridians will remember, Alligator Alcatraz was opened during hurricane season last year, so their belated concern for the welfare of people detained there, people they have shackled and put in torture boxes, denied medical treatment, pepper-bombed, given rotten food, strains credulity,â said Noelle Damico, director of social justice for the Workers Circle.
âThrough 47 consecutive weeks of public protest, testimony in Congress, conscience-shocking press coverage and pressure on lawmakers, thousands upon thousands of people have made it politically toxic to continue operations; its moral and financial cost are too high.
âWe will verify their claim that all people have been moved and through our legal partner, Sanctuary of the South, we will provide free legal counsel to people wherever they land, and keep the pressure on until Alligator Alcatraz is shut down for good.â

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The Times of India brings the Latest & Top Breaking News on Politics and Current Affairs in India & around the World, Cricket, Sports, Busin
So the long and short of it is that viable seeds are making it through invasive Burmese pythons' digestive tracts in the Florida Everglades, meaning that the pythons are acting as seed dispersers. Defenders of invasive species might answer that this means the pythons are just taking on the seed disperser role. However, there are two main ecological problems with that:
--Pythons can often reach places where the seeds' native dispersers do not or can not go, which alters the distribution of plant species, and potentially upsetting the balance of plant communities.
--What happens when the pythons have eaten all the native seed dispersers? They're certainly not going to continue spread the seeds around out of concern.
Burmese pythons are a prime example of how invasive species can have multiple negative impacts on ecosystems in which they're introduced. In some parts of the Everglades they have been the direct cause of a 99% decrease in small and medium mammal numbers. Now we're seeing how they may have cascading effects on plants as well.
Alligators on an airboat ride near Fort Lauderdale
Stuart Forster spots wild alligators in the Everglades at Sawgrass Recreation Park, while experiencing an airboat ride near Fort Lauderdale in Florida. Disclosure: Some of the links below and banners are affiliate links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. An airboat ride in the Everglades is both an adrenaline-fuellingâŚ
Everglades by Effi Gorrin