• Waiting for NAEP

    Photo credit: Governor Youngkin’s Facebook account

    by Charles B. Pyle

    On December 18, the governing board of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NEAP) -โ€“ the battery of fourth- and eighth-grade exams in reading and math known as the Nationโ€™s Report Card -โ€“ announced that the results of the 2024 tests will be released January 29, 2025.

    State-by-state NAEP results are typically published in the fall, but during presidential election years the governing board delays reporting to keep the assessment program from becoming ensnared in national politics.

    But state politics donโ€™t factor into the NAEP governing boardโ€™s timetable. And in Virginia, the results of the national tests students took at the beginning of 2024 will land in the middle of a contentious General Assembly session and in what promises to be a bruising election year as Republicans seek to retain the top three statewide offices and Democrats battle to hold their narrow majority in the House of Delegates.

    The 2024 NAEP results will be as much of a report card on the educational policies and initiatives of Governor Glenn Youngkin as a measure of the reading and math skills of Virginia elementary and middle school students.

    As discussed in an earlier column on this site, Youngkin seized on the disastrous performance of Virginia students on the 2019 NAEP during his 2021 campaign for governor. The former Carlyle Group executive tied the sharp declines in the performance of Virginia students on the national reading and math tests with the low bars set for corresponding state Standards of Learning tests during the Northam administration.

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  • Covid Actors Are Back: Now It’s Bird Flu

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Question of the day: Will you fall for it again?

    This is directed only at those who dutifully wore face diapers, who cancelled family get togethers or who left sick children alone in their rooms as ordered by public health authorities during the covid pandemic. Oh, and those who took vaccine after vaccine, thanking Pfizer that they didnโ€™t die every time they caught the virus.

    Will you stay home if ordered? Cover your face in public? Let them close your kidsโ€™ schools? Roll up your sleeves for another experimental shot?

    It appears the CDC – with just 22 days left to inflict hysteria on the American people – has begun ginning up the panic about bird flu.

    And guess who reappeared just in time to fan the flames: Deborah Birx, the scarf-wearing vampiress who admitted that 14 days to slow the spread was a lie intended to shutdown the country indefinitely.

    She ought to be under indictment, not making appearances on cable news.

    According to hysterics in the media, a strain of the bird flu virus – detected in a single patient in Louisiana –  shows signs of โ€œconcerningโ€ mutations. An outbreak in chickens and cows has caused California (of course) to declare a state of emergency.

    Could other blue states be far behind? Continue reading.


  • Save Us from Well-Meaning Meddlers

    by James A. Bacon

    When credit card companies, hospitals and other debt collectors try to collect the money they’re owed, they often target the bank accounts “of people who are already in crisis,” Radio IQ informs us.

    “When a creditor garnishes a bank account, it can really be devastating,” Jay Speer at the Virginia Poverty Law Center tells public radio. “The account holder is notified that their funds are frozen, and then you can’t pay your rent and you can’t pay your utilities. And so for some people it becomes a downward spiral.”

    Del. Phil Hernandez, D-Norfolk

    That’s why Delegate Phil Hernandez, D-Norfolk, is introducing a bill that would preserve the last $5,000 in a bank account.

    Why does Hernandez hate poor people?

    Forgive my hyperbole. Hernandez doesn’t really hate poor people. He just seems ignorant of economics and heedless of unintended consequences. The predictable result of his bill, should it pass: Lenders will curtail credit to the lower-income people he wants to help.

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  • A Warning to the Rest of the State

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney

    The editorial page of the Richmond Times-Dispatch today has a blistering critique of outgoing Mayor Levar Stoney. Stoney has spent the last few weeks in office in a โ€œFaring Wellโ€ tour touting โ€œthe remarkable strides Richmond has made over the past 8 yearsโ€ under his leadership. There is little doubt that this idea will occupy a prominent place in his campaign for the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor. At this point, according to the Virginia Public Access Project, Stoney has a significant lead in fundraising over his opponents in the Democratic primary election.

    The headline of the editorial neatly summarizes its thesis: โ€œYes, Richmond is faring well. But not because of Stoney.โ€ Since 2016, when Stoney took office, real estate tax revenues have doubled, from $230 million to $460 million. That is thanks to an influx of new residents, mostly young professionals, all of whom have led โ€œto a stronger retail base and overall economy, fueled RVAโ€™s growing rep as foodie town, an arts and cultural destination on the East Coast.โ€

    Like his predecessors, instead of trying to deal with the โ€œdysfunction and incompetenceโ€ that Richmond city government has come to be known for, he got distracted by the โ€œshiny object.โ€ First, he โ€œcarried water for the business communityโ€ for the proposed $1.4 billion Navy Hill project that would have diverted city tax revenues. As the RTD put it, before the city council killed the project, โ€œNavy Hill angered just about everyone who didnโ€™t stand to profit from it.โ€ Then it was a casino. Unwilling to let it go after being narrowly defeated in a referendum, Stoney succeeded in getting a โ€œdo-over.โ€ It was defeated by a larger margin in a second referendum.

    In the meantime, Stoneyโ€™s finance department was screwing restaurants, one of the bright points in the recent economic recovery of the city, over the collection of meals tax revenue. (That is a long, complicated story that Jon Baliles has documented on this blog. See, here, for example.) His staff was running up large, questionable credit card charges. Hiring in the top echelons of the city administration reeked of cronyism.

    So, Richmond is a significantly different city than it was eight years ago. From July 1, 2016 to July 1, 2023, its population increased by almost 12 percent. There is a lot of construction underway. Whole commercial areas, such as Scottโ€™s Addition, have undergone a significant transformation. In Manchester, south of the river, high-rise apartment buildings and condominiums have taken the place of warehouses. There are lots of high-end restaurants that are busy. But, most of this is in spite of Stoney and his administration, not because of it.

    The editorial is another example of the value of local journalism. Despite its shortcomings, the Richmond Times Dispatch has been diligent in covering city hall. It provided extensive coverage of the Navy Hill proposal. See here for example. The newspaper and its reporters have been so persistent that Stoney was reduced to complaining about their coverage.


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant


  • Bacon Meme of the Week


  • Virginia Democrat Wants SOLs Offered in Foreign Languages

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Image credit: ChatGPT

    Hey Virginians, remember that $1.2 billion surplus in the state budget that Gov. Glenn Youngkin has been trying to return to taxpayers?

    Unsurprisingly, Democrats in Richmond are finding ways to spend it. All of it.

    Take State Sen. Barbara Favola, for instance. Please.

    Sheโ€™s introduced SB753, a measure guaranteed to cost a bundle.

    The bill would require Virginia to administer the statewide standardized tests known as SOLs in languages other than English, despite the fact the ENGLISH is the official language of the commonwealth.

    โ€œRequires (i) the Board of Education to develop Standards of Learning assessments in native languages other than English that are most commonly spoken in the Commonwealth; (ii) each school board to make available any such native language assessment to any English language learner student who speaks any such language natively and is identified as having limited English proficiency; (iii) the English language learner faculty at any such student’s school to make the final determination as to whether administration of any such native language assessment is appropriate; and (iv) the provisions of the bill to be implemented by the beginning of the 2025-2026 school year. Finally, the bill directs the Department of Education to submit to the U.S. Department of Education by August 1, 2025 any amendments to its consolidated plan under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, as amended by the Every Student Succeeds Act, that are necessary to implement its provisions.โ€

    Good Lord. Do you suppose the Democrat from Arlington knows just how many languages are spoken by students in Virginia schools?

    I do.

    According to the Virginia Department of Education there are 117,000 students enrolled in English as a Second Language programs in public schools. There is no data on how many of these students are in the country illegally. Continue reading.


  • Bacon Bits: Lonely and Creepy

    The loneliest Metro stop. The Loudoun County Gateway Metro averages 317 riders daily, according to The Washington Post. It’s the least busy of the Metro rail system’s 98 stations. Opened to much fanfare as part of the $3 billion Phase 2 of the Silver Line in Northern Virginia, it is a sad reminder of broken promises. Not only was Phase 2 four years late and $250 million over budget, it’s not generating the hoped-for traffic or stimulating the hoped-for development around the Gateway station. Writes the Post: “From the platform, there are no buildings visible other than the stationโ€™s five-story mostly empty parking garage and a boxy internet data center a short walk away. On several recent visits to the station, the eight bus shelters in its sprawling parking lot were empty. Often the only person there is the station manager sitting behind a window in a booth.”

    Amazon delivers. Maybe the Gateway Metro station will get a few more riders when Amazon resume working in the office five days a week effective January 2. Between Amazon HQ2, Amazon Web Services, and Amazon fulfillment, the Seattle-based corporation has leaped out nowhere over the past decade to become one of Northern Virginia’s largest employers, according to The Washington Business Journal.

    Creepy beyond words. Virginia Commonwealth University has introduced an Artificial Intelligence-powered chatbot names Ramona (in homage to the school’s mascot, Rodney the Ram…. except Ramona is a she/her) to help with alumni fundraising. Ramona contacted 1,000 alumni last month and received a “better-than-normal” response rate, according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Click on the link and check it out. The chatbot has entered the “uncanny valley,” in which it falls just shy of appearing indistinguishable from a real human, which real humans find vaguely disconcerting. For me, the giveaway is the failure of Ramona’s mouth and lips to precisely synch up with the speech — Ramona does better than any animation I’ve seen before, but she’s not… quite… there. I see no harm in this particular application of AI. It’s kind of cool, actually. But only God knows where the technology will take us when the “pig butchering” fraud farms in Southeast Asia learn how to mimic real people.


  • Healthcare’s Tangled Ball of Confusion

    by James A. Bacon

    The cold-blooded killing of United Health CEO Brian Thompson has unleashed a wave of invective against health insurance companies. There is widespread sentiment that insurance companies (along with their much-detested brethren, the pharmaceutical companies) are the root of all evil in American healthcare. They make profits, goes the claim, by denying healthcare to people. They cause immeasurable human suffering. Medicare-for-all, they suggest, is the answer.

    The U.S. healthcare system is indubitably a hideous mess. Health insurance companies contribute to that mess, but they are hardly the root cause of it. A single-payer healthcare system is no answer at all, just an invitation to more of the over-regulation, rent-seeking, and dysfunction that plagues the American political system.

    The problem starts with the idea that Americans see “healthcare” as an entitlement. Denial of any healthcare procedure, regardless of cost or circumstance, is regarded as an affront to justice. The problem, given peoples’ unquenchable desire for health and longevity, is that demand for healthcare is effectively infinite. New pharmaceuticals and medical procedures have been introduced with great regularity, and they will continue to be. Ozembic. Artificial organs. Gene therapy. CAR-T cell therapy. Transgender therapy. Designer babies. It is a fundamental law of economics regardless of how a healthcare system is structured: Society cannot pay for all the healthcare that everyone wants. Healthcare must be rationed. The only question is how.

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  • News Update: Santa Returns Safely to North Pole

    News flash: Bacon’s Rebellion has learned that Santa Claus has returned safely to the North Pole after experiencing the most hazardous flying conditions since forever.


  • The Struggles of the Lumpenprofessoriate

    by James A. Bacon

    David Austin Walsh

    David Austin Walsh is a leftist lecturer at the University of Virginia who specializes in the history of conservative and far-right politics. He is also something of a social-media influencer. He has 36,600 followers on his X account. So, when he xeeted (the new verb for tweeting) about the cold-blooded shooting of an insurance industry CEO on the streets of New York City earlier this month, he attracted attention.

    “It’s actually kind of touching,” he wrote, “that the one thing that can bring together our fractious and disunited country is celebrating the assassination of a health insurance CEO.”

    Was Walsh joining in the celebration of the assassination? Another xeet implied that United CEO Brian Thompson deserved his fate: “Anyway try to live your life in such a way that if you’re murdered the entire internet doesn’t think that you had it coming.”

    In reply to a query from Bacon’s Rebellion, Walsh said he does not condone the deeds of accused killer Luigi Mangione. “Let me be emphatic: I do not, for both moral and pragmatic reasons, approve of Mr. Mangioneโ€™s actions โ€“ the former because I cannot endorse assassination as a legitimate political tactic; the latter because the likely consequence of such actions will be an increase in the repressive apparatuses of both corporations and the state.”

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  • Save Data Centers from the Luddites

    Image credit: ChatGPT

    by James A. Bacon

    Luddites, unite! You have nothing to lose but your fossil fuels!

    Concern among environmentalists is growing in Virginia as it dawns upon them that Artificial Intelligence creates demand for data centers, which in turn boosts demand for electricity… which in turn emits carbon dioxide… which in turn drives global warming.

    A case in point can be seen in an op-ed, published today in the Daily Progress, by Eric Bonds, a sociologist who teaches human rights, climate change and environmental justice at the University of Mary Washington. Writes Bonds:

    There are limits to how much electricity we can produce for data centers without also shattering our commitment to shift away from fossil fuels. Ultimately, a transition to renewable energy will require that we slow or stop the current data center boom in order to get there.

    Bonds is absolutely correct that there are limits to the amount of energy that can be economically produced in a Net Zero electricity regime. But has it occurred to him that AI can be part of the solution?

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  • Bacon’s Rebellion Goes Global!

    We’re not ones to obsess over our readership statistics. We create the best content we can, and if people choose to read and share, we love it. If people don’t, well, we’ll keep cranking out the blog posts anyway because we don’t have anything better to do with our lives! But as the year winds down, I couldn’t help but notice that Bacon’s Rebellion — a blog dedicated to inherently local content — is viewed around the world. See the number of page views above.

    We’re not exactly altering the global conversation, but I couldn’t help but notice that we get a remarkable amount of readership in Iceland. So, here’s a shout-out to our Nordic friends! I don’t know what you get out of Bacon’s Rebellion, but if you’re reading this, please log in to the comments and let us know why on earth you read this blog.

    Year-End Pitch

    To faithful American readers, this is the only year-end donation pitch I’ll make. We’re profoundly grateful to those who contributed financially this year — you made it possible for us to transition to a more secure, stable, and up-to-date blogging platform. We’re also thankful to those who contribute on a monthly basis, allowing us to pay our recurring bills. If you find value in our mission of maintaining a platform where a civil exchange of views on Virginia public affairs can take place, please visit our “Fund the Rebellion” feature in the left-hand column and throw a few coins into our tin cup.


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant


  • In Defense of Mark Warner

    by Paul Goldman

    Senator Mark Warner

    I find the attacks against Senator Mark Warner on this site most hypocritically amusing. It seems you are all afraid to appropriately criticize President-elect Trump, Elon Musk, and the GOP House majority. Despite you all claiming to be such great defenders of fiscal responsibility. Let’s review some facts.ย 

    (1) Under his watch,ย President Trump accumulated more national G.O. debt than all previous one-term Presidents combined. He ran in 2016 saying the national debt is way too high. Then ballooned the national debt even further. Becoming the King of Debt. Despite saying as a candidate he would cut the debt. He repeated his anti-debt rhetoric this year. Letโ€™s see how he compares to all two-term presidents by the end of this second term.ย 

    Itโ€™s not all on him of course. A bipartisan majority in both chambers has long backed all the new red ink year after year. Senator Warner included. But at least Mark is not pretending like you all on this site to be fiscal conservative Southerners. Heโ€™s voted for more deficit spending than any Senator in state history. But again: heโ€™s not denying it. He has voted to raise the debt ceiling. You can debate the wisdom. Accumulating debt for infrastructure needs can be smart. Using debt to cover annual expenses usually dumb. But at least credit his honesty.

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