• Bacon Meme of the Day


  • Capitol Fortress

    Virginia General Assembly Building (new)

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    With the opening of the new General Assembly Building this month came other reminders of how the world has changed.

    It was not that long ago that staff and tourists could walk unimpeded into the Capitol building. One could drive into the circle beyond the gate fronting on Grace Street to pick someone up or drop off a passenger. One could drive on the street between Capitol Square and Old City Hall and even park there on weekends (so long as one did not park in Senate Clerk Susan Scharโ€™s space).

    First, it was the Capitol. Visitors without a State ID now have to trek down the hill and enter through an underground entrance and then walk back up several flights of stairs to get to the interior of the Capitol.

    Now, the area has the look of a fortress. There is a large gatehouse at the Grace Street entrance along with a large iron gate. The street entrances off Broad St. have gates manned by Capitol Police.

    This is not meant to be a criticism. It is a lamentation over the realities of the present era.

    Capitol Square, main entrance fronting Grace St.
    Capitol Square, street entrance off Broad St., next to General Assembly Building
    Capitol Square, street exit onto Broad St.

  • Deep Dive: Casinos, Highways, and Ignoring RVA Voters

    Downtown Richmond

    by Jon Baliles

    Republished with permission from RVA 5×5.

    They say the past is prologue and that if you don’t learn from history, you are doomed to repeat it, among other famous quotes that have stood the test of time. And they have a factor of truth and lesson in them. And so is the case with next monthโ€™s casino referendum, the second one we have had the chance to vote for because the first one was ignored by city leaders in 2021.

    This Deep Dive is a look back at the last time Richmond faced two referendums on one topic in short succession โ€” the people were asked to vote to register their voice and they said no to the city leaders, planners, and business leaders. Both times, the peopleโ€™s voice was ignored, and both times the city leaders overruled their vote and their voice and pursued their plans irrespective of the results โ€” with disastrous and long-lasting consequences.

    This may be starting to sound familiar. (more…)


  • “Seeking a Better World” by Defending the Beheaders of Babies

    by James A. Bacon

    A week ago the Students for Justice in Palestine at UVA created a furor by publishing a statement defending Hamas’ attack on Israel. “Yesterday’s rebellion was not ‘unprovoked,’ as many have claimed, but is the consequence of years of mass killings, ethnic cleansing, and oppression from Israel,” the group wrote. “The events that took place yesterday [October 7] are a step towards a free Palestine…. We stand in solidarity with Palestinian resistance fighters and all oppressed people around the world seeking freedom and a better world.”

    The same group organized a demonstration yesterday at the steps of the Rotunda in the shadow of the statue of Thomas Jefferson. I made a point of attending to hear what the protesters had to say and observe what transpired. I had one major question: who were these people? What kind of person living in a free society could defend the atrocities perpetrated upon Israeli civilians of all ages? What could they possibly be thinking?

    As executive director of The Jefferson Council, which is dedicated among other things to free speech and free inquiry at UVa, I supported the right of the pro-Palestinians to hold their rally and make their case. But the Council also stands for viewpoint diversity, which is under threat from the steady leftward drift of the faculty and staff and the slow extinction of professors openly professing conservative, libertarian and independent views. While the far left is a distinct minority at UVa, it is a highly vocal and influential one. How representative, I wanted to know, were the Students for Justice in Palestine at UVA? (more…)


  • “Completely Ignored by Our School”: Roanoke College Swimmers, Part 4

    Roanoke College swimmer Susanna Price (screenshot/WSLS on YouTube)

    by Scott Dreyer

    At Hotel Roanoke on October 5, members of the Roanoke College womenโ€™s swim team calmly and clearly delivered blistering indictments of what they described as failed, unresponsive leadership at their school, the NCAA, and USA Swimming. Some of their gut-wrenching stories about being forced to train, compete, and share facilities with a biological male are recorded in Parts One, Two, and Three.

    Roanoke College team captain and swimmer Kate Pearson (screenshot/WSLS on YouTube)

    At times choking back tears, team captain Kate Pearson painfully described the sense of emotional abandonment the girls felt, as they realized the school they had loved for years [and sent lots of tuition money to] was led by people who were turning both a blind eye and deaf ear to their concerns.

    Pearson: โ€œWe tried numerous times to ask the school for support, but each and every time we were told to deal with it ourselves, or told nothing at all. The school refused to send out any information to our parents, and we were informed that even if our entire womenโ€™s team decided to stand together and not swim, and emphasized the unfairness that was happening, our coach would be allowed to have a โ€˜one-athleteโ€™ swim team. (more…)


  • Democrats for Crime Witnesses and Victims

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    For those readers of this blog who contend that Democrats and โ€œprogressiveโ€ prosecutors are fixated on not prosecuting violent criminals and ignoring the needs of witnesses and victims, I have some good news for you.

    Witness Protection

    Since 1994 Virginia has had a statute authorizing the Virginia State Police to establish a witness protection program. However, because it has never been specifically funded, it has been seldom, if ever, used. (Never mind that the Department of State Police had GF balances at the end of FY 2022 of $32 million and $10 million in FY 2021.)

    In March 2021, Steve Descano, the Commonwealthโ€™s attorney for Fairfax County and Ramin Fatehi, then the deputy Commonwealthโ€™s attorney for Norfolk, published an op-ed in The Virginian-Pilot calling on the General Assembly to fully fund the Witness Protection Program. They pointed out the problems that police and prosecutors have in getting witnesses to come forward due to their being threatened or otherwise intimidated. โ€œWitness protection programs โ€” which provide for the security or relocation of witnesses away from those who might wish them harm โ€” are among the most effective means of counteracting witness intimidation,โ€ they contended. (more…)


  • Dumb and Getting Dumber

    Two years after the COVID school lockdowns, the collapse in K-12 learning still has significant downward momentum. Of the 1.4 million high school seniors who took the ACT college preparedness test in 2023, the percentage meeting all four benchmarks — English, math, reading, and science — was 20.8% — down 1.3 percentage points from the previous year, according to ACT.

    That’s not 21% of all high school graduates, it’s 21% of students who took the exam, which varied from 2% in Maine to 100% in Alabama.

    โ€œThis is the sixth consecutive year of declines in average scores, with average scores declining in every academic subject,โ€ ACT CEO Janet Godwin said in a press release. โ€œWe are also continuing to see a rise in the number of seniors leaving high school without meeting any of the college readiness benchmarks, even as student GPAs continue to rise and students report that they feel prepared to be successful in college.”

    In Virginia, a mere 8% of high school graduates took the ACT exams, meaning only a highly self-selected group of college-bound students participated. Here is the percentage of Virginia students meeting ACT benchmarks of having “a high probability of success in credit-bearing first-year college courses”:

    English — 83%
    Math — 72%
    Reading — 61%
    Scienceย  — 63%

    — JAB


  • National Academy of Sciences Offers Superb Recommendations for Fixing Virginiaโ€™s Nursing Home Crisis

    by James C. Sherlock

    Sometimes, we need to listen.

    I just finished the 806-page 2022 report The National Imperative to Improve Nursing Home Quality: Honoring Our Commitment to Residents, Families, and Staffโ€ by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). It is downloadable at the link.

    That study and report were utterly professional and thorough, as scientific as you expect, remarkably staffed and bipartisan in recommendations.

    I have compiled from Appendix D of that report those remedies recommended for execution by states and nursing homes. They deserve to be the centerpiece of Virginia law and regulation going forward.

    All of them. (more…)


  • The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of UVa’s Transgender Movement

    by James A. Bacon

    I learned a lot about transgender activists and advocates at the Abigail Shrier event at the University of Virginia last night. Some are bitter, angry people who hurl non-stop invective. Some are close-minded but willing to engage in rational conversation. But at least one is courteous, friendly and willing to engage in a thoughtful, one-on-one exchange. I look forward to having lunch with her next week.

    Shrier, the author of “”Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters,” was herself polite, charming and attentive. Even as more than 100 protesters were chanting and demonstrating outside Minor Hall, she remained unflappableย inside the auditorium under questioning that ranged from skeptical to hostile.

    Shrier is the object of venom in the transgender community because her book dared to ask questions that many do not want to be asked. While acknowledging the gender dysphoria is real and those who suffer from it deserve compassion, she argues that much of the transgender “craze” is a social contagion mainly affecting teenage girls, that “affirmative” treatment such as testosterone shots and top surgery are fraught with ill-understood risks and dangers, and that a legion of affirming educators, counselors, and even medical doctors have abandoned science in favor of ideology. She elaborated on those themes in a Q&A session hosted by the Jefferson Council in partnership with the Young Americans for Freedom and the Common Sense Society. (more…)


  • Jew-Hating Student Groups Crop Up Like Cockroaches. Virginia Is No Exception.

    by Kerry Dougherty

    As the world gapes in horror at the atrocities committed against the people of Israel malignant clots of the perpetually disgruntled appear, like cockroaches.

    These brainwashed fans of Hamas cheer the murder of Jewish babies, the rape of Jewish women and the taking of Jewish hostages. They wave the Palestinian flag. They spew anti-semitism cloaked in something they call decolonization.

    And where are these ghoulish fans of Islamic death cults found? College campuses, where else?

    Many are oblivious to the fact that their nose rings, purple hair and non-binary existence would get them tossed off a tall building by the Islamists in the Middle East.

    First out of the box were 31 student organizations at Harvard voicing support for the Palestinians. Not wanting to be outdone by the Cambridge brain trust, chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine at Stanford, Georgetown, Columbia, Swarthmore and George Washington University joined in the bloodthirsty, morally bankrupt cacophony. Then knots of nuts at the state schools jumped in: Florida State, University of Michigan, and the University of Illinois.

    It didnโ€™t take long for this nasty virus to infect Virginia. Misfits at William and Mary showed their solidarity with the Islamic rapists after the weekend bloodletting in Israel by harassing Jewish students who were raising relief funds for terror victims. And deranged hatred of the Jewish people crawled out of its hole at the commonwealthโ€™s flagship: The University of Virginia.

    In Charlottesville of all places!

    Anyone else remember the national disgust over the white nationalist marchers in 2017 who carried torches and chanted โ€œJews will not replace usโ€ and other Nazi slogans on the vaunted grounds of the university? (more…)


  • “We Were Silenced”: Roanoke Swimmers, Part 3

    Roanoke College Swim Captain Bailey Gallagher, explaining the emotional manipulation she endured at the hands of school administrators. (screenshot/WSLS YouTube page)

    by Scott Dreyer

    As reported in Parts One and Two, ten members of the Roanoke College womenโ€™s swim team held an โ€œNCAA โ€” Save Womenโ€™s Sports!โ€ press conference on October 5 at Hotel Roanoke, to draw attention to what they described as โ€œemotional blackmailโ€ and โ€œneglectโ€ at the hands of their school administrators, NCAA, and Swim USA.

    Although huge headlines seldom spring from our corner of Southwest Virginia, this story has made national and international news. The New York Post, established in 1801 by Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, described the significance of the swimmersโ€™ actions this way: โ€œThe very public aspect of Thursdayโ€™s event was in sharp contrast to the culture of fear and silence surrounding the issue of trans women in womenโ€™s sports.

    โ€œWhen The Post interviewed female swimmers who had to compete against Lia Thomas for an April 2022 story,ย the majority of parents and their daughters would not allow their names to be used in the story for fear of being shunned, shamed or even retaliated against.

    โ€œโ€™This was a historic day,โ€™ activist Kara Dansky, president of the US chapter of Womenโ€™s Declaration International, told The Post after speaking at Thursdayโ€™s press conference.โ€

    Roanoke College womenโ€™s swim team (front row) and supporters at press conference at Hotel Roanoke, Oct. 5, 2023 (photo/Scott Dreyer)

    Senior Team Captain Bailey Gallagher, 20, summarized the lifelong love of the sport all the girls alluded to but how they all felt blindsided. โ€œIโ€™ve been a swimmer my entire life, when my parents enrolled me in a โ€˜learn to swimโ€™ program as an infant, and I have been swimming ever since. My first competition was at age 5, and now at almost 21, I see my journey coming to a close.

    โ€œThis is my senior year, my final year to practice, race, and celebrate with teammates that I now consider to be some of my best friends. Swimming is more than just a sport for me. Itโ€™s a part of who I am. It has given me discipline, the ability to multitask, a great work ethic, a healthy lifestyle, and some of the very best people to call friends. (more…)


  • A Day in Court

    Henrico County Courthouse

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    I spent some time today observing proceedings in Henrico County District Court. (No, I was not a defendant.) I recommend the experience to anyone interested in seeing how the criminal justice system works in real life.

    District court is the venue for hearing traffic offenses and misdemeanors. It also hears more serious cases for probable cause to be sent to circuit court.

    I sat in on two different courtrooms. The atmosphere in both was somewhat reminiscent of that depicted in the old TV series, Night Court. The Henrico judges, of course, were not as unorthodox as Judge Harry Anderson in that series nor were there the slapstick and irreverent humor prevalent there. However, there was an informal feeling with lots of friendly interaction among the defense attorneys, prosecutors, police, and judges. The judges were respectful and, sometimes, friendly toward the defendants, while at the same time admonishing them for their misdeeds. (more…)


  • Abigail Shrier Will Be Livestreamed Tonight

    *** Sponsored Content ***

    Abigail Shrier, author of โ€œIrreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters,โ€ will be speaking tonight (Oct. 11) at 7:00 p.m. at the University of Virginia. Register here.

    If you can’t make it to Charlottesville, you can livestream the event by clicking here.


  • Another Race Institute at UVa

    Kimberly J. Robinson, UVa Professor of Law. Official Photo

    by James C. Sherlock

    Fund it and they will come.

    The Daily Progress reports that thanks to a $4.9 million gift from an anonymous philanthropist, a new โ€œInstituteโ€ has been launched at UVaโ€™s School of Law.

    The new organization, the Education Rights Institute, plans to

    “find ways to improve K-12 education and help educators address the obstacles that face disadvantaged students.”

    Staff have been hired and the instituteโ€™s first projects are already in development. There will be a star-studded roll out on October 16th.

    Excited?

    Hold that thought while you read about the Institute’s leadership, goals and intentions. (more…)


  • Youngkin Orders Flags at Half-Mast to Honor the Dead in Israel

    by The Republican Standard

    Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin issued an order Sunday to fly flags around the state at half-staff.

    This was the statement issued by his office:

    โ€œIn accordance with the authority vested in me as Governor, I hereby order that the flags of the United States of America and the Commonwealth of Virginia be flown at half-staff on all state and local buildings and grounds to honor the lives lost in the horrific terror attack committed against Israel and to hold those injured and held hostage in our thoughts.

    I hereby order that the flags shall be lowered immediately on Sunday, October 8, 2023, and remain at half-staff until sunset on Saturday, October 14, 2023.โ€

    Iranian-funded Hamas terrorists attacked Israeli citizens on Saturday morning, a day that totaled the single largest loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust. The attacks were also carried out on the 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur War.