
From The Bull Elephant
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Jeanine’s Memes
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UVaโs “Community Crisis Resourcesโ for Israel/Hamas War Tensions on Campus Has Strange Players

UVaโs Interfaith Student Center. Courtesy UVa. by James C. Sherlock
The University of Virginia has not lost all sense of perspective. They know exactly what they have been doing.
For this they had to try to thread a needle. They missed.
From the University of Virginia Division of Student Affairs:
“Our Divisionโs focus remains on supporting and caring for our students and their well-being.
Our Division provides direct OUTREACH AND SUPPORT OF STUDENT LEADERS in the Jewish and Palestinian community, including the Jewish Leadership Council, Chabad at UVA, and Muslim Students Association.”
“The Division owns places and spaces across Grounds for students to meet in community:
โข REFLECTION ROOMS AND WELLNESS SUITE: two spaces in Student Health and Wellness are open for students to drop-in and relax, meditate, pray, do yoga, and/or reflect.
โข THE INTERFAITH STUDENT CENTER: maintained by Multicultural Student Services is available for daily prayers, and as a place for community connection.”The effort is built on quicksand and hosted in an empty room.
Note no mention of the DEI Division as an honest broker. Good decision. (more…)
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Bacon Meme of the Week
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Poor Test Results No Problem If You Ignore Them
There is no doubt that the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns had a real and persistent impact on our childrenโs education. Learning loss continues to be the subject of daily news reports, with SAT and ACT test scores at an all-time low. Overall, math and reading scores on standardized tests are at their lowest level in decades and the college admissions process was thrown into a tailspin when lockdown regulations made taking the traditional SAT and ACT tests difficult. (more…)
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Republican Problems in Virginia
by Shaun Kenney
There was an angrier version of this analysis I had prepared. One that placed the blame squarely on the shoulders of those who would have reaped the rewards had Tuesday gone differently.
Iโm not going to do that.
โฆ because thereโs a bigger problem in front of us.
Virginia Democrats have a lot more strength than Virginia Republicans care to consider, and it will take all of us โ all of us โ and not just some of us to put up a resistance in 2024 and 2025.
I donโt know what it will require to fix it. Yet I think many Republicans are tired of being used for temporary gain only to watch the Democrats run circles around us as they invest in the necessary ecosystem โ activists, news outlets, think tanks, polling firms โ to capture hearts and minds. Republicans are a consultancy-driven party; Democrats are built around coalitions. With differing definitions of success and reward, victory comes much more cheaply for Republicans than for Democrats.
When it comes, that is.
The Democrats can point back to 20 years of progress. Can we name a single Republican victory in Virginia on a policy issue of note over the last 20 years? That we were proud to run on and champion in front of voters? (more…)
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Excess Profits Squeezed Out From Dominion Rates
The long struggle to prevent Dominion Energy Virginia from earning excess profits in its base rates year after year appears to be over and consumers finally won.ย That is the main takeaway as the first general review of its base rates since the 2023 regulatory re-write is moving toward a quick settlement.
The complicated changes in the regulatory structure included wins and losses for consumers, but the impact on this first rate case review is proving to be net positive for the 2.6 million customer accounts.ย Most of the various parties who have been dissecting the companyโs accounts and forward projections are now willing to end the case with a settlement. (more…)
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Just Wondering

U.S. Rep. George Santos (R-NY) Photo credit: NBC News by Dick Hall-Sizemore
Four Republican Congressmen from Virginia, Wittman (1st District), Good (5th District),ย Cline (6th District), andย Griffith (9th Distict), recently voted against the continuing resolution, introduced by the Republican leadership of the House of Representatives, to fund the government.ย In effect, they would have shut down the government.
I wonder how they will vote. when they come back from the Thanksgiving recess, on the resolution to expel Rep. George Santos (R-NY) following the release of a unanimous, scathing report by the bipartisan Ethics Committee recommending that he be expelled.
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Yes, Virginia, There is a TikTok, and Itโs Chinese

Credit Tamara Beckwith, NY Post by James C. Sherlock
From the NY Post:
“TikTok shredded as influencers promote Osama bin Ladenโs โterrorist propagandaโ tirade dubbed โLetter to Americaโ after 9/11 attacks”
Virginia bans porno sites.
How did we miss our kidsโ favorite (Chinese) app TikTok?
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Virginia Must Investigate and Control the Relationships of Its State Institutions of Higher Learning With the Government of China
by James C. Sherlock
The title of this article seems at first glance axiomatic.
After all, the power “to conduct … all intercourse with other and foreign states” is granted in the state constitutionย to the Governor.
Yet that power has been assumed by some Virginia state institutions of higher education (IHEs) with the apparent approval of their state-appointed Counsels.
They need better lawyers.

Courtesy U.S. โ China Economic and Security Review Commission The story of Communist Chinese influence in America’s IHEs is the story of left-wing faculty. The same ones that march in Hamas rallies.
They divide the world into oppressed and oppressors, with no room for individuals. They offer a narrative, not discussions.
Somehow, in their admiration for Chinese Marxism, they have missed the fact that the Chinese government is one of the most oppressive regimes on earth. ย Straight out of Animal Farm.
It does not bother them that Xi Jinping and his government wish America harm. Or that America is on the brink of war with that country over Taiwan.
The campus radical leftists, and many of the schools they dominate, have their own threat assessments and foreign policies that do not align with those of the United States. (more…)
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Itโs Not Trump; Our Coalitions Matter
Stop me if youโve seen this one before.
Virginia Republicans either get absolutely shellacked in an election, or the margins are super close and we eitherย loseย โ in which case, the Western Experiment is over and America should pack it in โ or we miraculouslyย winย and have set the new conservative standard for the next 20 years with Virginia in the vanguard.
We do this to ourselves every year, folks.
Hope everyone loves their non-partisan (sic) redistricting courtesy of the State of California. Fact of the matter is that Virginia Democrats outspent Republicans by $7.5 million and nearly lost the whole thing.
Now with one seat margins, they will have to work with three statewide Republicans without any clear mandate other than a strong desire from the electorate to quit being crazy and start applying common sense. (more…)
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Here and There Around the Commonwealth
Virginia History

For those interested in Virginia history, here are two great sources.ย One is new; one is not new, but I just discovered it.
Cardinal News has started a three-year projectย โto tell the little-known stories of Virginiaโs role in the march to independence in advance of the nationโs observation of its 250th anniversary, or Semi-quincentennial.โย In addition to a story about the chosen topic, Dwight Yancey, editor of Cardinal News, has promised โoccasional columns about the politics of the era, written the same way Iโd write them today.โย The project is called Cardinal 250. The first monthly article, about the โProclamation Line of 1763,โ and Yanceyโs political analysis, which is a lot of fun, can be found here.
The other item is the website Virginia Places.ย This is the brainchild of Manassas resident Charles Grymes, who first created it in 1998 for a geography class he was teaching at George Mason University. He has lovingly nurtured it ever since.ย It now consists of 1,000 pages on topics ranging from agriculture to Virginia journeys. ย Grymes describes the website as โan exploration into what makes Virginia special. It is an interdisciplinary journey through the history, economics, geology, biology, sociology, and other -ologies that can help explain how Virginia has evolved in the past, and what the state may look like in the future.โย It is a work in progress which he describes as โfar from complete.โย He is constantly adding to it and updating content added earlier.ย I have run across items from this website in my search for sources for articles for this blog and I did not realize what it was.ย Now I know; it is a delightful treasure trove of information about the Commonwealth.
Perpetual Election Machine
Ah, to live in Virginia where there is always an election campaign in progress.ย It is not enough that, right after we have finished a heated campaign for General Assembly seats, we have U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger announcing that she is not going to run for reelection to Congress, but will be running for governor in 2025, thereby ensuring that, before the present governor is through half his term, we will be talking about who is going to replace him.ย Now we have Del. John McGuire (R-Goochland), recently elected to the Virginia Senate, announcing he will challenge Republican Fifth District Congressman Bob Good in a primary next year.
As reported by Cardinal News, McGuire, in an email to his supporters (at least it was not on X), declared that Good โhas failed us time and time again.โย He declared that Good had โabandonedโ Donald Trump by endorsing Ron DeSantis in next yearโs Presidential primaries.ย He went on to assert that Good voted for Kevin McCarthy for Speaker, then โthrew a temper tantrum, reversed himself, and allowed the party to fall into chaos, costing us the 2023 elections.โย ย As a result of those elections, โMarxist Democrats now control the Virginia General Assembly, which is going to hurt the people of Virginia badly.โย That last comment should endear him to his fellow legislators and encourage smooth inter-party relations.
RWH
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Dominion Wind May Be Sued, Hikes Customer Bills

The first eight monopile bases for Dominion Energy’s CVOW project arrive on the Portsmouth waterfront. But a planned German-owned wind turbine blade factory nearby ist kaput. by Steve Haner
Two national activist groups on energy and environmental issues, both with connections to Virginia, have taken the first legal steps to challenge the recent federal approvals for Virginiaโs planned offshore wind complex.ย Most of what follows is directly from their announcement dated November 14.
The Heartland Instituteย and the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT) are filing with the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) and the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) aย 60 Day Notice of Intent to Sue letterย for a violation of the Endangered Species Act. The violation is contained in a defective โbiological opinion,โ which authorizes the construction of Dominion Energy Virginiaโs Virginia Offshore Wind Project (VOW). (more…)
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Legacy Media Play Catch-Up in Hashmi Case
by Kerry Dougherty
The Daily Wireโs Luke Rosiak – the best reporter in Virginia – broke the story last weekend. The Richmond Times-Dispatch followed up on Tuesday.
That Senate race was won in a landslide last week by Ghazala Hashmi, a Democrat. Trouble is, it appears she actually lives in the 12th District – a GOP stronghold – and rented an apartment in the Democrat-friendly 15th to have an address there.
If thatโs what happened, Hashmi wouldnโt be the first candidate to rent a little pied-a-terre to use occasionally and claim as a dwelling place to meet residency requirements. This sort of chicanery has happened before.
Of course it deprives citizens of having a representative who actually lives in their district, but no one cares about the peons. Itโs all about winning.
But on her official forms – which Hashmi signed – she did not declare the home sheโs owned in Midlothian since 1999. The form said a primary residence didnโt have to be declared.
So which is it, Senator? Is the Midlothian house your residence or do you actually live in the apartment you rented? (more…)
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William and Mary and the Chinese Communist Party โ Dangerous Allies โ Part 3
by James C. Sherlock
Chinese fighter and U.S. jet over South China Sea. ย Courtesy CNN and YouTube.
William and Maryโs superb AidData program makes major contributions to Americaโs understanding of the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). The school is justly proud of it.
AidData published in December of 2021 a study Corridors of Power – How Beijing uses economic, social and network ties to exert influence along the Silk Road.
Chapter 3 is “Social ties: How does Beijing leverage education, culture, and
exchange to amplify its foreign influence strategy?”I recommend it to the President and the Board of the College.
I promised in this Part to look at:
- the William and Mary/Chinese Foreign Ministry Chinese Students and Scholars Association (CSSA);
- Chinese student recruiting and admissions;
- the courses they take, and their internships and the applicability of their skills to the Peopleโs Revolutionary Army and Navy;
- what happens when those โstudents and scholarsโ return home; and
- the money.
Weโll do that, and weโll look at the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) to see if it possibly applies. (more…)
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Three Ideas for Protecting Civil Dialogue at UVa
On Oct. 11, 2023, journalist Abigail Shrier engaged in a Q&A session at the University of Virginia discussing the transgender movement in the United States. Offended by her views, transgender militants and their allies sabotaged attendance of the event, abrogated an agreement with university authorities restricting where to hold their protest, crowded the entrance to the venue at Minor Hall, berated attendees entering the event, and harassed attendees leaving the event.
Responding to a letter from Jefferson Council President Tom Neale, the administration characterized some of the behavior as โdisappointing,โ but noted that there were โno arrests or injuries, and no property damage.โ The administration found no grounds for follow-up action.
The Jefferson Council vigorously takes issue with the administrationโs spin. We believe that protesters should be held to a higher standard than not causing injury or property damage. We have published a report detailing the events surrounding the Shrier event and offer three tangible recommendations for upholding the right of members of the UVa community to hear speakers free from disruption and intimidation. (more…)







