Each and every year here in Florida, parents spend our hard-earned money building public education for our children. We pay our property taxes to fund our schools only to see billions cut from education budgets. Wanting the best for our children, we send in hundreds of millions of dollars in cra
yons and paper. We sell enough wrapping paper to cover the earth three times. We use that money to pay for direct classroom needs like books, smart-boards and computers.
This asset belongs to us.
Despite these facts, Florida politicians continue to make high art out of subverting the will of the people. They do not value our state constitution as the purest expression of the peoples’ will. Article IX, section 1 of the