• Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant


  • Militants to Ryan Administration: “Bullshit”

    Source: UVA Encampment for Gaza Instagram post

    by James A. Bacon

    Pro-Palestinian militants erected tents last night at their “liberation zone for Gaza” near the University of Virginia chapel in defiance of orders to take them down. The administration’s immediate response: engage in dialogue.

    “We are writing to acknowledge the document you shared with us early this morning outlining the interests of your group,” wrote Kenyon Bonner, vice president and chief student affairs officer, and Brie Gertler, vice provost for academic affairs, to the Gaza zone participants.

    “We thought it would be most productive to respond in writing, with the hope of scheduling a time to discuss your goals in greater detail with the appropriate representatives from your group,” they said.

    The protesters posted their response, written in bold letters over a copy of the letter, on Instagram: “Bullshit.” (more…)


  • Fairness + Accountability = Thriving City


    by Jon Baliles

    The city of Richmond seems to be trying to plug all of the holes in its boat, also known as the U.S.S. Meals Tax Fiasco, that has been taking on water for months. It seems that the city is finally wiping out the erroneous meals tax payments and interest they had charged numerous restaurant accounts in recent years, often amounting to tens of thousands of dollars, without ever telling them the bills were so enormous.

    Tyler Layne at CBS6 reported last week that Matt Mullett, the owner of Richbrau Brewing, recently got a call from the cityโ€™s Finance Director, who said the city would clear his $50,000 bill that accrued due to bad advice he received four years ago from the Finance Department when they told him he did not need to collect meals taxes on draft beer, even though the department had lost a case just a few years prior.

    In addition, Mulletโ€™s business was now finally eligible to receive Enterprise Zone grant money to improve his business. This money had already been approved several years ago, but was not released because the city said they owed all the back meals tax money. Which he didnโ€™t. Nevertheless, Mullet took the high road and was thankful the unnecessary drama and delays were behind him so he can move forward with his business. (more…)


  • A Question for Some Supreme Court Justices

    I have a question for the originalists on the U.S. Supreme Court (Thomas and Alito) and textualists (Gorsuch):ย  where in the Constitution does it say that the president is immune from prosecution (partial or full immunity)?–RWH


  • At UVA, One Pro-Palestinian Protest Disperses, a Second Persists

    by James A. Bacon

    One of two pro-Palestinian demonstrations at the University of Virginia wound down around 5 p.m. yesterday without incident. Although the rally was marked by all-too-familiar anti-Israel chants and sloganeering, protesters dispersed at the scheduled time. A parallel demonstration, a tent-free “encampment,” continues this morning.

    University officials set clear expectations from the beginning that university rules would be enforced. When a pro-Palestinian group erected tents Tuesday near the University Chapel in imitation of encampments at other campuses, university authorities quickly told them to take down the structures, for which they had not obtained permits. In other interactions, Police Chief Tim Longo personally engaged with protesters to inform them about university policy regarding trespassing and amplified sound.

    “The protest activity near the University Chapel has continued peacefully and in compliance with University policy since it began Tuesday afternoon,” said University spokesperson Brian Coy. “Organizers have complied with requests to remove tents and other prohibited materials.” (more…)


  • Congress Values Names More Than Housing for Service Members

    Congresswoman Jen Kiggans

    by Donald Smith

    โ€œRemoving the last vestiges of Confederate history from the U.S. military, includingย renaming nine Army posts, will cost more than $62 million, a congressional commission said Tuesday.โ€ย 

    That quote is fromย Alex Hortonโ€™sย Washington Postย article on the recommendations of the Naming Commission, dated September 13th, 2022. โ€œFor the base names,โ€ wrote Horton, โ€œthe changes will require a complete overhaul for items big and small, from signs outside the main gates to the stamps used to process paperwork for new and departing soldiers.โ€

    One year later, it was crystal-clear that the โ€œNamingโ€ Commissionโ€™s recommendations went far, far beyond changing some base names. (Recommendations which, apparently, Congress let pass unchallenged). By September of 2023, cranes had removed statues of Grant and Lee from Reconciliation Plaza, a memorial park gifted to the U.S. Military Academy by the West Point Class of 1961 to commemorate the reconciliation of Union and Confederate West Pointers after the Civil War. Cranes would soon show up in Arlington National Cemetery to remove the Reconciliation Memorial from the center of the Confederate cemetery in Arlington. And, across the nation, street signs were being pulled down, memorial bricks were being pulled out of monuments, software was being rewritten on classified and unclassified computer networks to reflect the new base names, etc. Undoubtedly, little-to-none of this was cheap.ย 

    The Virginia Council, a Virginia heritage defense group created and led by WRVA talk show host John Reid, has filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the Department of the Army, to see what the total cost of implementing all of the Naming Commissionโ€™s sweeping recommendations actually was. Some people I spoke with in the Army, who wish to remain anonymous out of fear of retaliation, think that the total costs could far exceed $62 million.ย 

    Also in September of 2023, the U.S. Government Accounting Office (GAO) released aย report on the quality of housing in military barracks. โ€œIn recent years,โ€ the GAO wrote, โ€œthere have been concerns about health and safety risks in military housing and DOD’s management of its housing programs. Poor housing conditions negatively affect quality of life.โ€ (more…)


  • CRT Critic Carol Swain to Speak May 15

    Dr. Carol Swain speaking May 15 at the Cultural Arts Center in Glenn Allen. Purchase tickets here.

    —– Sponsored Content —–

    Imagine a world where civil discourse triumphs over the divisive rhetoric saturating our daily lives. It seems this reality is slipping away, but amidst the chaos, one visionary offers a solution to the schism pervading our culture: Dr. Carol Swain.

    Dr. Swain embodies the American dream. Born into abject poverty in rural Southwest Virginia, she grew up in a one-room house with twelve siblings, surrounded by chaos and hopelessness. Despite dropping out of high school, marrying, and becoming a young parent, her destiny took a remarkable turn with the encouragement of a few key individuals.

    Dr. Swain’s journey saw her earning five degrees, starting from community college. With a Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and an M.S.L. from Yale, she attained early tenure at Princeton and eventually a full professorship at Vanderbilt, excelling as both a political scientist and law professor. Today, she’s a sought-after cable news contributor, best-selling author, and national speaker, renowned for her expertise in critical race theory and higher education, cited three times by the U.S. Supreme Court. (more…)


  • Unmask the Death-To-America Rioters

    by Kerry Doughertyย 

    Itโ€™s time.

    Time to burn the last foul-smelling remnant of the Ralph Northam regime.

    Actually, itโ€™s long past time to once again enforce an important part of the Code of Virginia: 18.2-422. โ€œProhibition of wearing masks inโ€ฆany public place.

    This law was active from 1950 until Northam the Awful – the doctor who forced Virginians to wear cloth bandanas on their faces in 2020 (he idiotically demonstrated how to tie a rag around oneโ€™s face) because he apparently didnโ€™t know that homemade masks would literally do nothing to stop a virus.

    Once the useless mask mandate ended in May 2021 there seemed to be some sort of agreement that law enforcement wouldnโ€™t arrest the hypochondriacs who continued to wear them.

    I realize that masks are de rigueur for rioters. Combined with an oversized keffiyeh they offer anonymity to the Hamas and Hezbollah wannabes. Take a gander at any footage from the nationwide campus protests and most of the anti-semites are wearing masks.

    Look, the pandemic is over. There is no need for anyone to be wearing a mask in public. Especially not the Death-to-America crowd thatโ€™s rioting and trespassing on the grounds of Virginia Tech and Virginia Commonwealth University. (more…)


  • UNC’s Lee Roberts Gets My Vote for Best University President in America

    At UNC-Chapel Hill the Palestinian flag comes down, the American flag goes up.

    Hear the chants of “USA! USA!” I haven’t heard anything like that on a Virginia campus in quite a while. Maybe it’s time to become a Tar Heel.


  • Amid Arrests on Other Campuses, Tensions Mount at UVA

    by James A. Bacon

    As a wave of pro-Palestinian demonstrations and encampments rolled across Virginia college campuses yesterday, university presidents held firm in enforcing rules governing the orderly conduct of protests. The day after Virginia Tech shut down an unpermitted “liberation zone” Sunday, arresting 82, Virginia Commonwealth University closed an encampment last night, arresting 13. At the University of Virginia, pro-Palestinian groups were ordered to take down their tents, erected before the main event today called for by protest organizers, but were allowed to continue their vigil.

    Media reports indicated, however, that protests spread yesterday to Mary Washington University, where they had died down from a previous eruption, and to Christopher Newport University.

    The Virginia protests were overshadowed in national mediaย Tuesday night by resolution of the standoff at Columbia University, where New York police broke up a liberation zone and evicted students who had barricaded themselves inside a building.

    If university presidents in the Old Dominion needed any stiffening of resolve, they got it from Governor Glenn Youngkin who, appearing on CNN Sunday, said, “Weโ€™re not going to have encampments and tents put up and yes, we will protect the ability to peacefully express yourself, but weโ€™re not going to have the kind of hate speech and intimidation weโ€™re seeing across the country in Virginia.”

    After the knock-down of the encampment at VCU Tuesday, the main action in Virginia shifted to UVA. (more…)


  • Beach College Weekend Was a Dud: The Good News & The Bad.

    by Kerry Doughertyย 

    Talk about spinning until youโ€™re dizzy, get a load of the local coverage of last weekendโ€™s taxpayer-subsidized Audacity Oceanfront Concerts:

    Describing the anemic โ€œcrowdsโ€ as โ€œsmaller-than-expectedโ€ The Virginian-Pilot added โ€œThatโ€™s not to say those who attended didnโ€™t have a good time.โ€

    Oh please.

    We, the taxpayers, gave the organizers of this dud $750,000 to bring the show to the oceanfront, plus an untold number of โ€œin-kind-city servicesโ€ in return for an advertising campaign showcasing Virginia Beach.

    Judging from the virtually empty resort area last weekend even that p.r. offensive fell flat.

    The organizers blamed the weather for the poor turnout, but there wasnโ€™t a drop of rain, just chilly late April temperatures.

    What happened was actually good news: it appears that Beach College Weekend, an annual headache for the Resort City, may have moved on. (more…)


  • A Creative New Way to Use Children as Human Shields

    Stu Smith, producer of StuStuStudios, captured this video yesterday from the Virginia Tech encampment. University police were threatening to shut down the event for violating various university rules and protocols, and the pro-Palestinian demonstrators trotted out this precocious young militant to lead the mindless chanting.

    “I’m not leaving,” sing-sang the tyke into a loudspeaker.

    “We’re not leaving!” responded the crowd.

    Undeterred by the pint-sized protester, Virginia Tech police shut down the event anyway, arresting 82 in the process, according to numbers released by the university. Fifty-three were students, according to the statement. It’s not clear if any were faculty. But it is a reasonable supposition that the vast majority of the 29 others were outside agitators.

    Which raises warning flags for Virginia Commonwealth University, where protesters have set up a “liberation zone” and issued demands to the administration, and the University of Virginia, where pro-Palestinians have announced their intention to set up a liberation zone Wednesday, the day before exams. President Rao and President Ryan: how many outside agitators are heading for your campus? (more…)


  • Give Me this Kind of Accountability

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Frequently, some commenters on this blog complain about politicians not being accountable and hold up the private sector as a model for accountability.ย  (For purposes of this discussion, we will ignore the fact that politicians have to go before the voters periodically and get reelected.)

    Here is a recent example of accountability in the private sector, as reported in The New York Times. Over the last year the stock of Paramount has fallen 48 percent. The CEO did not pursue a possible deal that would have been lucrative for Paramount. The owner of a controlling share of the company is reported to feel that the CEO has not moved with enough urgency to get Paramount on firmer footing. She was unhappy with a long-range plan he had prepared and gave approval to three other senior executives to address the board of directors and express their misgivings about the direction of the company.

    Today, Paramount announced that the CEO was stepping down effective immediately. In other words, he was fired.

    But there is no need to shed any tears for him. He won’t need to file for unemployment benefits. Reportedly, “he is entitled to a severance package of $50.6 million, with $31 million of that in the form of cash for the two years after his employment is terminated.” Yep, that is some accountability.


  • Virginia Tech Cleans up Encampment. UVA Faces Similar Test.

    by James A. Bacon

    Virginia Tech arrested two dozen or more students Sunday night while dispersing an “encampment” similar to other anti-Israeli protests spreading around the country, according to media reports.

    The gathering of several hundred people on the lawn of the Graduate Life Center was โ€œnot a registered event consistent with university policy,โ€ Tech officials stated in explaining its actions.

    โ€œGiven these actions by protesters, the university recognized that the situation had the increasing potential to become unsafe,” the university statement said. First, protesters were asked to disperse voluntarily. Then university police approached those who did not comply, warned them that they would be charged with trespassing, and asked them again to leave. At 10:15 p.m., police gave protesters five minutes to disperse. Those who remained were subject to arrest.

    Tech President Timothy Sands deserves kudos for handling a difficult situation in a firm but restrained manner.

    University of Virginia President Jim Ryan likely will face a similar test. Left-wing groups at UVA have announced a May Day event Tuesday (April 30, the day before May Day) on the Lawn to show commitment to “Palestinian Liberation.” (more…)


  • Souped Up on the Mountain

    En route from visiting my grandson in college in Kentucky, I stopped at Breaks Interstate Park.ย ย  I will save a discussion of the park for another post, but, in the meantime, this vehicle was parked at one of the overlooks.ย  I immediately thought that WayneS, one of the active BR participants, would appreciate it.