• Data to Ponder

    According to the websites of the State Compensation Board and the Department of Corrections, the starting salary for a correctional officer or deputy sheriff is $44,100.

    Based on information submitted to the Department of Education by local school divisions, the starting salary for teachers in 34 school divisions in school year 2022-2023 was lower than $44,100.


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From the Bull Elephant


  • Bacon Meme of the Week


  • Which Party?

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    I was at the Virginia State Fair this morning.

    The state Republican Party has this โ€œbooth.โ€ It is a good idea. I donโ€™t know if the Democrats have one because I did not walk around the whole area. The Republicans have a good locationโ€”right next to the main Commonwealth Pavilion, where there is a lot of foot traffic and there are bathrooms.

    I was struck by how many yard signs did not identify the candidate as a Republican. A few did say โ€œConservativeโ€ but left off any party affiliation.

    I chatted with the nice guy who was manning the booth. He is chairman of the Westmoreland County Republican Party. He said that he, too, had noticed the lack of party identification on the yard signs. He said he did not understand it and had no explanation for it.

    Of the scores of yard signs displayed, only four candidates were willing to admit they were Republicans.


  • Eternal Betting

    by Jon Baliles

    Two weeks ago, you probably heard the news about the vote promise scam from Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney ย and the casino advocates that they would put 2/3 of the annual casino tax revenue towards early childcare for kids in Southside. This week, you might have heard about the press conference that the unions held that said they reached an agreement with the casino advocates that would promise hundreds or thousands of new union jobs and โ€œpaths into the middle classโ€ for young people and families.

    While it is unconfirmed at this time, there are several rumors going around that in another few weeks that casino advocates will hold a press conference promising eternal life for seniors if they vote for the casino referendum on November 7th.

    Who knows, at this rate of promising anything and everything for your vote, the casino advocates might have Oprah in RVA by late October offering new cars for any remaining voters as long as they have a mail-in ballot marked Yes. So, don’t vote too early!

    The second casino referendum has become a leveraged buyout of the voters and there is no dollar amount or offer that wonโ€™t be matched by the casino advocates to get the referendum across the line the second time around. They have already raised and committed $8 million to buy your vote, and that total will almost certainly go up.

    But alas, these and the other yet-to-be-revealed voting scams are just a way to hoodwink voters into believing that the casino will exist to do more good for the community than it will for the owners and investors. Which is clearly not the case. It isnโ€™t the case in Bristol, or Danville, or Portsmouth or any casino in the country. (more…)


  • Glenn Youngkin. The GOPโ€™s Red Vest Savior?

    by Kerry Dougherty

    To properly judge the level of disillusionment after Wednesdayโ€™s GOP debate, get a load of this bright red headline on Drudge Thursday:

    That teases to a Washington Post opinion piece, โ€œGOP Donors Yearn For a Trump Alternative. They Think They May Have Found One.โ€

    According to Post reporter Robert Costa, high-roller Republican donors are meeting in two weeks at the Cavalier Hotel for a two-day closed meeting dubbed, โ€œRed Vest Retreat.โ€ The well-heeled donors assured the writer that the money is there, the only question is whether the governor is willing to jump in.

    Some of the biggest Republican donors in the country will converge next month at the historic Cavalier Hotel in Virginia Beach for a two-day meeting to rally behind Gov. Glenn Youngkin. The closed gathering, named the โ€œRed Vest Retreatโ€ after the fleece Youngkin wore during his 2021 campaign, will begin Oct. 17 and be focused, officially, on the Republican effort to win full control of the General Assembly in Virginiaโ€™s upcoming elections. But unofficially, several donors tell me, it will be an opportunity for them to try to push, if not shove, Youngkin into the Republican presidential race.

    Itโ€™s worth remembering that the Cavalier is Virginia Beach developer Bruce Thompsonโ€™s baby. In 2013, Thompson was Terry McAuliffeโ€™s Hampton Roads finance chair. In 2021 he switched sides, serving as Youngkinโ€™s state campaign finance chief.

    The choice of venue for this political retreat is no accident. (more…)


  • The Transgender Contagion

    *** Sponsored Content ***

    Abigail Shrier

    by James A. Bacon

    Abigail Shrier deserves a Pulitzer Prize for her 2019 work of journalism, “Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters.” She’ll never get the recognition she deserves from the literary establishment, though, because her conclusions transgress some of the holiest orthodoxies in the progressive canon. Despite the outcry that greeted her book, it became a best seller and transformed the way many people think about transgenderism. I am one of them.

    Anyone reading the book, as opposed to imbibing the mischaracterizations of her critics, will readily see that Shrier is no “transphobe.” She is highly empathetic to the struggles that transgender people undergo, and she respectfully refers to them by their transgendered names and pronouns. She also acknowledges that gender dysphoria is a real (but exceedingly rare) phenomenon that occurs mainly among boys as young as three or four who believe that their minds and bodies are mismatched.

    Shrier is reviled because she regards the unprecedented surge of transgender identity among adolescent girls as a cultural contagion, and she sees “affirmative” practices of hormonal treatment and breast removal as one step removed from medical malpractice. She criticizes teachers, psychiatrists and medical professionals who automatically “affirm” transgender identity rather than inquire about other potential explanations of emotional distress.

    One critic described her work as “a fear-filled screed, full of misinformation, biological and medical inaccuracies, logical fallacies, and propaganda.” Perhaps. I’m no expert. But I found her credible.

    Virginians can hear Shrier speak for herself when she appears at the University of Virginia October 11, Room 125 of Minor Hall, at 7:00 p.m. The event is sponsored by The Jefferson Council and the Common Sense Society. Register here. (more…)


  • Miyares Seeks Dismissal of Suit to Save RGGI

    The states currently in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative tax compact.

    By Steve Haner

    Attorney General Jason Miyares (R) is defending the Virginia Air Pollution Control Boardโ€™s decision to exit a multi-state carbon cap and tax compact as within the regulatory agencyโ€™s authority. He has also claimed to the circuit court hearing an appeal of that decision that the plaintiffs were not affected by the action directly and thus have no standing to sue.

    The four plaintiffs, all associations, filed a 138-page petition in the Circuit Court of Fairfax County in late August. Miyaresโ€™ office used just ten pages total for two responses dated September 13. (more…)


  • DOE Response to Average Teacher Salary Issues

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    My article on average teacher salaries must have struck a nerve. This morning I received an answer to my inquiry from the Department of Education (DOE).

    In short, DOE disavows any responsibility for the accuracy of the data in the report it submitted to the General Assembly.

    The Office of Communications declares, โ€œAll data in the teacher salary survey report is based on data certified by school division superintendents. VDOE staff tries to identify as many of the variances as possible and obtain corrections from school divisions within the time-frame available each fall.โ€ (more…)


  • Principles for Virginia’s Energy Future

    NOAA data for Virginia, 1900-2020, showing no rising pattern in the number of days with an average high above 95 degrees F.

    By Steve Haner

    First published this morning by the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy.

    Energy is our economy. Energy is the basis of wealth and a comfortable life. As Virginia chooses a new set of legislators to wrestle with the old and new energy issues facing the Commonwealth, here is a review of some of the key points the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy has been stressing and writing about over recent years.

    Candidates in either party would do well to adopt them. (more…)


  • LaRock Launches Senate Write-In Campaign

    by Jeanine Martin

    A message from Republican Del. Dave LaRock:

    “I believe people are tired of Democrats destroying our Country and our communities and trying to run our lives. The people of Senate District 1, me included, deserve to be represented by a reliable conservative, someone who shares their values and can be trusted to represent them well, to serve the people, not the special interests.

    “Iโ€™m extremely honored to have served the Northern Shenandoah Valley in the House of Delegates for ten years. SD-1 is already losing the influence and experience of Senators Jill Vogel and Mark Obenshain and Delegate Webert.

    “If we go forward without the strong conservative voice I bring to the legislature, many conservative leaders are convinced that we are going to miss out on meaningful reforms and see our rights further eroded. (more…)


  • Doesn’t Anyone Read These Things To See If They Make Sense?

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    In preparing my recent article on tax cuts, I was going to include a section on the need for increases in teacher salaries. In researching the issue, I discovered that the Department of Education (DOE) submits to the General Assembly a survey of teacher salaries in Virginia.

    I was delighted because that was exactly the type of data I needed. However, as I went through the numbers, I came to the conclusion that I could not use them. There were so many anomalies that I could not trust the numbers. (more…)


  • Virginia Conservatives Need Political Infrastructure

    By Chris Braunlich

    Governor Glenn Youngkin can take satisfaction from passage of the long-delayed Virginia budget.

    As my colleague Steve Haner points out, during his term of office Youngkinโ€™s fight to increase the standard deduction will save the average Virginia couple up to $1,265 over three years, provide $900 in tax rebates, and eliminate the state share of the grocery tax (another $115 million in savings last year). (more…)


  • Whose Water Is It?

    The Rappahannock River. Photo credit: Va. Dept. of Conservation and Recreation

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    There are some issues that seem to be baked into public policy and, because they affect sensitive and important areas, tend to lead to controversies periodically.

    Many years ago, one of the hottest controversies was the โ€œinter-basin transfer of water.โ€ Because Virginia is a โ€œriparian rightsโ€ state, folks who live next to rivers can withdraw water from the river, but are not supposed to divert it to use by other people who do not live on the river. To do so would diminish the water available for those other riparian landowners. The Virginia Supreme Court in the 1942 case of Town of Purcellville v. Potts declared a per se prohibition against inter-basin transfer:

    While a riparian owner is entitled to a reasonable use of the water, he has no right to divert it for use beyond his riparian land, and any such diversion and use is an infringement on the rights of the lower riparian proprietors who are thereby deprived of the flow. Such a diversion is an extraordinary and not a reasonable use.

    The field of water law is a very complex one and that is as far as I am willing to dip my toe into it. Suffice it to say that inter-basin transfer of water is an important concept. For a more in-depth discussion, see here. (more…)


  • Universities as Incubators of Nervous Breakdowns

    by James A. Bacon

    I’ve been arguing for some time that the United States — and Virginia is no exception — is experiencing a collective nervous breakdown. Mental illness is surging. Disorder is spreading. Rhetoric is becoming increasingly histrionic. Bizarre behavior once limited to the fringe is going mainstream. You can’t measure the accelerating social breakdown just by the number of murders and violent crimes. The big picture includes suicides, drug overdoses, learning loss in schools, anonymous death threats, the collapse of decorum, and the spread of aberrant behavior, from Colorado congresswomen groping their lovers in public to Virginia candidates for office livestreaming sex acts for tips.

    What’s going on? Writing in The City Journal, Christopher F. Rufo argues that psychological dysfunction is going mainstream. He sees the emergence of a new national American character based on what he calls the Cluster B personality types: the narcissist, the borderline, the histrionic, and the antisocial. (more…)