• Some Homeless Deserve Compassion, Others Don’t

    by James A. Bacon

    The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule this week on a case that will determine if local governments can criminalize the homeless for sleeping in public, even when shelters are unavailable, reports The Virginian-Pilot. Citing National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH) figures, the newspaper notes that there were nearly 6,000 homeless people in Virginia on any given night in 2018, including nearly 1,500 in Hampton Roads.

    Bing image creator: homeless encampment in the style of Hogarth

    Unsurprisingly, the Pilot devotes much of its story to quoting advocates of compassion for the homeless.

    โ€œWe cannot arrest and punish our way out of homelessness,โ€ said Isabel McLain, director of policy and advocacy for the Virginia Housing Alliance. โ€œWe have to provide affordable housing and support services for people to be healthy and stable. Housing someone in a jail does nothing for improving their life and it cost the state a lot of money as well.โ€

    โ€œI think itโ€™s a tragedy that we have gotten to the point in this country that we want to criminalize people who are unable to pay for housing,โ€ said Antipas Harris, chief executive director of the Urban Renewal Center in Norfolk. โ€œIt is a travesty for humanity.โ€

    Utter nonsense. It’s worth making two points regarding indiscriminate compassion for the homeless.

    (more…)


  • A Curious Appointment

    Banci Tewolde, newly-appointed director of the Dept. of General Services Photo credit: Richmond Times Dispatch

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Governor Youngkin has appointed Banci Tewolde as director of the Dept. of General Services (DGS).ย She will fill the vacancy created by the sudden departure last December of Joe Damico, who had served as deputy director for 16 years and as director for the last six years.ย It is a curious appointment for a complex agency that is in the middle of a turf battle between the governor and the legislature.

    DGS does not have a high public profile, but, within state government, it is well-known and its operations affect every state agency in some way. 

    Tewolde is an attorney.ย Her career in Virginia includes serving on the staff of the Norfolk sheriff.ย From there, she joined the state Attorney Generalโ€™s office as an Assistant Attorney General.ย Her duties included providing legal advice to agencies in the public sector, particularly the Dept. of Corrections, and representing them in court.ย She became a protรฉgรฉ of Marla Decker, the Deputy Attorney General for criminal issues.

    After Bob McDonnell, the Attorney General for whom Tewolde was working, was elected Governor, he appointed Decker as Secretary of Public Safety.  Tewolde soon followed as McDonnell appointed her to coordinate the development of his statewide re-entry initiative and she was assigned to Deckerโ€™s office.

    Toward the end of McDonnellโ€™s term, Tewolde transferred to the Dept. of Planning and Budget (DPB) and was named the manager of the section that oversees the budget development of agencies in the public safety area.ย [Disclosure:ย  For the last several years in which I was a budget analyst in DPBโ€™s Public Safety Section, Tewolde was the manager.]

    (more…)

  • Youngkin Tackles Maternal Health Disparities the Right Way

    by James A. Bacon

    Governor Glenn Youngkin has launched an initiative to address disparities in maternal healthcare outcomes, and he’s doing it right. Rather than presupposing what the problem is and what the solutions are, he is resurrecting the Task Force on Maternal Health Data Quality Measures to do a deep dive into the data to find out how outcomes can be improved.

    African-American, indigenous and Hispanic women, as well as women in rural and underserved communities, suffer higher mortality rates during pregnancy and in post-childbirth. The question is why. It is commonly said that “systemic racism” is to blame. If so, then part of the solution logically entails subjecting doctors and nurses to bias training, finding physicians for pregnant women who “look like them,” and pursuing other race-based remedies.

    But what if the different outcomes are more closely tied to socioeconomic status, distance from medical offices, or the patients’ own behavior?

    (more…)


  • Virginia Dems Find Enemies to the Left

    by James A. Bacon

    At Virginia’s Democratic Party convention three days ago, Senator Tim Kaine wrapped up the proceedings with a good old-fashioned bashing of the party’s political opponents.

    โ€œDemocrats like building. Republicans like to tear down,โ€ he told the party faithful, as reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch.

    โ€œThere is a battle between those who stand up and stand together and those who would tear us apart, and we are faced with the greatest teardown artist in the history of American politics,โ€ he said, referring to former President Trump.

    The irony of Kaine’s remarks, at least as reported by the RTD, is that he had nothing to say about the pro-Palestinian demonstrators who had disrupted the convention earlier in the day. A group of banner-carrying protesters had walked down the main aisle as a woman screeched — and I mean screeched — “Democrats, Democrats, can’t you see? Gen-o-cide is your legacy!”

    (more…)


  • VCEA Fans and Foes Both See Failure Looming

    By Steve Haner

    There is a growing recognition that the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) as written is going to fail. Both those who strongly believe in its goal of ending the use of hydrocarbon fuels, and those who consider that idea nothing but foolโ€™s gold, see major problems on the horizon.ย 

    There is also a large middle group that would like to see less reliance on hydrocarbons, and greater reliance on wind and solar for generating needed electricity but see danger in totally abandoning reliable natural gas. Sadly, most Virginians are not paying any attention at all. They should. ย  (more…)


  • The Battle Over African-American History

    “Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.” — George Orwell

    by James A. Bacon

    One version of “unwhitewashed” history.

    The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) is working on revisions to an advanced-placement course on African-American history, and the forces of wokeness are agitating to preserve the ideological framework they wrote into the course description four years ago. In short, they seek to ensure that the full four centuries of the African-American experience in Virginia is interpreted through the prism of systemic racism.

    That’s not the spin on the story you’ll read in The Washington Post, of course. In an article published today the Post accuses the Youngkin administration of foisting its worldview on K-12 school students by, among other things, “striking some references to ‘white supremacy’ and ‘systemic racism.’”

    There was plenty of racism and oppression in Virginia’s past, to be sure, and the course doesn’t shy away from any of that, according to evidence in the Post’s own article. What’s at issue is the conceptual framework for thinking about race, slavery, Jim Crow, civil rights, and contemporary race relations. The wokesters, who approach history as the playing out of intersecting forms of oppression, aren’t content to have teachers present their ideology as one way to think about race relations. They want the course to reflect their viewpoint throughout.

    (more…)

  • A Taste of His Own Medicine or Hypocrisy at its Greatest

    State Sen. John McGuire and Donald Trump

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    State Sen. John McGuire (R-Goochland) is an ardent and vocal supporter of Donald Trump, who constantly questions the integrity of the electoral process and still peddles the lie that the 2020 Presidential election was stolen. McGuire attended the Jan.6 โ€œStop the Stealโ€ rally in Washington, D.C.

    McGuire challenged incumbent U.S. Rep. Bob Good in the Republican primary for Fifth Congressional District. According to the latest unofficial results reported by the Virginia Department of Elections, McGuire leads Good by 346 votes out of more than 62,000 votes cast.

    U.S. Rep. Bob Good (R-Fifth District)

    As reported by the Virginia Political Newsletter, Good is not accepting the results. In an e-mail to his supporters, Good, without citing specifics, said, โ€œUnfortunately, we are finding much to question and challenge during this canvassing process — This election must not be certified. โ€ฆ We must prevent this election from being certified, due to the many concerns about its integrity.โ€

    McGuireโ€™s response: โ€œRather than accept his fate and the will of the people, Bob Good has chosen to undermine the integrity of Virginia voters,โ€ said Sean Brown, a consultant for McGuireโ€™s campaign.ย  โ€œHis antics now are beneath the dignity of a soon to be former elected official.โ€


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From the Bull Elephant


  • Another Learning Skill Abandoned

    Can your grandkids read this?
    Courtesy of National Archives

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Recently, I was listening to a story on NPR about the cyberattack of a company that provides software to auto dealerships across the country for managing sales and other services. This incident had significantly slowed activity in approximately 15,000 dealerships.

    Besides contemplating the implications of businesses in all parts of the country relying on the same software platform, thereby increasing their vulnerability, I was struck by the comment made by one dealer being interviewed. He said that they were relying on handwritten notes for sales, repair instructions, etc. However, they had to be particular about how they prepared those notes because none of the employees under the age of 30 could read cursive.

    Based on my experiences with my grandchildren, this did not come as a great revelation. But it underscored the fact that we are raising generations, including future historians, who will not be able to read the originals of the journals, personal letters, and official documents that comprise so much of the basis our past. There will likely be a need for persons trained in reading and โ€œtranslatingโ€ cursive writing.

    Some will dismiss this as the nostalgic longing of an old fart for the past.ย  Most of the important documents have been transcribed digitally and more are being done so every day. Besides, hardly anyone can read that fancy handwriting from the past now, anyway. (more…)


  • Venture Global: Virginia’s Unknown Energy Giant

    Venture Global’s CP2 facility in Lousiana, if approved, will be capable of liquefying 20 million metric tons a year of natural gas. Image source: Global Venture

    by James A. Bacon

    An Arlington-based company that most Virginians have never heard of could well alter the global energy balance of power — if the Biden administration doesn’t get in the way.

    In 2023 and 2024 alone Venture Global LNG., Inc., has announced long-term deals to supply 3 million tons of LNG to the United Kingdom (equivalent to about 5% of the U.K.’s demand), 2.25 million tons to Germany, and 1 million tons per year to Japan from its LNG facilities in Louisiana. In March the company announced that it was ordering six giant LNG vessels from shipyards in Korea to transport the hydrocarbons.

    Now it appears that Venture Global, whose corporate headquarters is in Rosslyn, has struck a deal with DTEK, Ukraine’s largest private energy company, according to the Wall Street Journal. DTEK would buy up to 2 million tons yearly of LNG from a proposed export facility in Plaquemines Parish — CP2 — to resell in Ukraine and Eastern Europe. The deal would reduce dependence of the eastern European nations from Russian gas supplied through a pipeline through Ukraine, the transit agreement for which expires at the end of the year.

    But a Biden moratorium on LNG exports, ordered at the behest of environmental groups, could scuttle the deal.

    (more…)


  • Rambling: Guess Who He is Voting For

    There is no doubt as to whom the residents in this house perched on the edge of Rt. 58 in Grayson County are supporting!


  • Bacon Bits: Encampments and Memorials

    Globalize this! Nearly two-thirds (65%) of Americans recently polled by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) responded that setting up pro-Palestinian tent compounds was “never” or “rarely” justified. Nearly half (47%) said that students participating in college encampment protests should be expelled, suspended, or put on probation. Only 23% thought the demonstrators should not be punished at all.

    But breaking university rules against round-the-clock camping on college campuses and chanting, “Globalize the intifada,” pales in comparison to burning the American flag. Eighty percent responded that flag burning is never or rarely justified.

    FIRE did not ask about protesters who erected an encampment and burned the flag. View the detailed survey results here.

    Explain again, please, why so many statues came down. The Public Religion Research Institute has released polling results for questions on a wide array of issues relating to race relations that are worth examining. What caught our attention were a series of questions about Confederate memorials and statues. While 45% of the 5,500 respondents from around the country view the Confederate flag as a symbol of racism (and 54% say it reflects Southern pride), only 33% regard statues to Confederate soldiers that way (and 63% say they reflect Southern pride).

    (more…)

  • Bacon Meme of the Week


  • Honey, I Shrunk the Newspaper

    Newspapers are dying slow deaths of a thousand small cuts. Here’s the latest from the Richmond Times-Dispatch…

    According to Executive Editor Chris Coates, beginning July 4, the RTD will switch to a “digital-only format” on the following holidays: Independence Day, Labor Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Yearโ€™s Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Presidentsโ€™ Day and Memorial Day.

    Translation, the RTD will stop publishing its print newspaper on nine major holidays.

    I’m surprised he left off Juneteenth.

    Coates could have mentioned that the RTD will be in good company. The Wall Street Journal doesn’t publish on holidays either. Not even Juneteenth. It doesn’t publish Sundays either. I wonder if that’s the next step for the RTD. (more…)


  • Senator Lucas’ “Big Gamble”

    by Kayla Owen

    Senator Louise Lucas

    Virginia state Senator and Chair of the powerful Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee, Louise Lucas, is known for her love of casinos, skill games, and other gambling enterprises. Her greatest political gamble may be unfolding before our eyes this week.

    When Virginiaโ€™s biennial 2024-2026 budget was signed on May 13, 2024, just two-weeks before Memorial Day, Virginiaโ€™s veteran community discovered language hidden within the budget bill (SB/HB 6001) that gutted the Virginia Military Survivors and Dependents Education Program or VMSDEP. VMSDEP is a longstanding state tuition waiver program for the surviving family members of soldiers killed or missing in action and military veterans left severely disabled from their service. The recent cuts to VMSDEP constitute the largest rollback of Veterans Benefits in Virginiaโ€™s history — a state that supposedly is committed to being the most Veteran-friendly in the country.

    Facing public outrage over the surprise cuts, Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin and House Speaker Don Scott, D-Portsmouth, publicly announced their commitment to a full repeal and restoration of VMSDEP to its pre-March 13th language. Standing in the way of righting this wrong is Louise Lucas.

    The Senate finance chair flat out refused Tuesday to entertain a bipartisan bill that would reverse the cuts. She appears hellbent on betting her political future as well as the democratsโ€™ razor-thin majority in the House and Senate on this latest political stunt. Virginiaโ€™s over 700,000 veterans, Gold Star survivors, and First Responders are monitoring her every move.

    (more…)