• Arlington National Cemetery

    U.S. Army photo by Elizabeth Fraser / Arlington National Cemetery

    by Robin Beres

    Virginia is brimming with famous and consequential landmarks and tourist sites. From the Historic Triangle to St. Johnโ€™s Church in Richmond, to great beaches, mountains, and countless old plantation homes, vineyards, and breweries, there is a lot to see and do in the commonwealth. Itโ€™s little wonder that Virginia is ranked No. 6 in most visited states in the U.S. according to the World Atlas.

    While there is much to see in Virginia that is upbeat and fun, there are also solemn and sobering experiences to take in as well. Some of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War took place in Spotsylvania Court House, the Wilderness, and Chancellorsville. Both Revolutionary War and Civil War victories happened in our beloved state.

    It is important that we all take time to appreciate the sacrifices so many Americans serving in uniform have made to ensure our freedoms. That is the very reason we have this Memorial Day weekend.

    While by no means a tourist site, Arlington National Cemetery (ANC) is one of the most visited places in Virginia. Located just across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C. The national cemetery is built on the grounds of a plantation that once belonged to Mary Anna Custis Lee, wife of Confederate General Robert E. Lee. The family vacated the home shortly after the Civil War began. (more…)


  • Is Dominion Campaigning Behind a Front Again?

    By Steve Haner

    An electric power industry lobbying and public relations group which has been financially supported by Dominion Energy Virginia is mailing out flyers to voters praising legislative incumbents who helped Dominion pass favorable legislation this year.

    A mailer supporting incumbent Fairfax Democratic Senator George Barker caused the Democrat blog Blue Virginia to respond with anger Friday. What appeared to be the same message appeared in mailboxes in the district of Henrico Republican Senator Siobhan Dunnavant. How many other incumbents received the mailer may not be known until the group reports its campaign spending. (more…)


  • Every Day is Memorial Day in Normandy

    by Kerry Dougherty

    My most memorable Memorial Day did not take place on Memorial Day at all, but a few weeks earlier. In May of 1982.

    But then again, every day is Memorial Day when you stand on those beaches at Normandy. It was a glorious spring morning on the coast of France. The sky was the deepest shade of blue. A gentle wind made the American flags flutter. And I was there with 52 Irish boys. Bad boys.

    I’m getting ahead of myself.

    Forty-one years ago, I lived in Dublin, where I attempted to eke out a living as a freelance writer in the dingy offices of the now-defunct Irish Press. While back home, American newsrooms were swapping their IBM Selectrics for computers, this one was stuck in another era. Manual typewriters created a chattering cacophony, cigarette smoke turned the air blue, greasy chip wrappers littered the floors. Everyone was known by their last name.

    Except me. I was The Yank.

    I was toiling away on some forgettable story, dutifully reminding myself to spell gray as “grey” and harbor as “harbour,”ย when I overheard two of my editors talking.

    “Ask the Yank,” Muldowney said. “She’ll go anywhere.”

    “Hey, Yank,”ย O’Kane shouted. “How’d you like to go to France for the weekend?”

    “Yes, please,”ย I begged.

    I’d never been to France. I was weary of the endless Irish gloom. The unexpected offer of a weekend in sunny France was so seductive I never asked if there was a catch.

    There was, of course. (more…)


  • Retail Politics and the Social Compact

    by Richard Tangard

    While I waited in the grocery store checkout line, a scowling, angry-looking man walked in through the automatic door. As I placed my items on the conveyor, his purposeful stride took him into a nearby aisle. Moments later he emerged carrying two cases of beer, snarled at several employees, and stomped out without paying.

    None of them said anything or lifted a finger to stop him, and I canโ€™t really blame them. He telegraphed that interference would be met with violence. I donโ€™t think anyone called the police, although that may have happened later.

    Not long ago, a social compact was generally accepted in this country. Stealing is wrong. Initiating or threatening violence is wrong. Follow the rules and you will be treated fairly. Those who break the rules will be sought out, prosecuted and tried. If convicted, especially in the case of a repeat offender, the perpetrator will be removed from society both to teach a lesson and for public safety.

    The social compact had value because nearly everyone followed it. That near-universality seems to be gone. I suspect it will take decades to re-establish.

    Richard Tangard isย an avid cyclist, three-time Ironman triathlete, and a mostly retired CPA. He says his wayward youth was spent in Connecticut but he has lived in the Richmond area for 28 years.


  • First Lawsuit Over Whales and Wind Dismissed

    Vineyard Wind 1, Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard. Click for larger view.

    By Steve Haner

    A federal district judge in Massachusetts has rejected an effort to stop an offshore wind project near Nantucket Island on the basis of danger to whales, apparently the first court test of similar claims being raised against wind turbine proposals along the U.S. eastern seaboard, including here in Virginia.

    On May 17, U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani granted a motion for summaryย judgement to the federal agency that approved the Vineyard Wind One project. With a planned 84 turbines, the project is about half the size of Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s planned project off Virginia Beach. Both are just the first phases of larger planned buildouts. (more…)


  • Martin Brown Is Absolutely Correct: To Achieve Real Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, โ€œDEIโ€ Must Die

    by J. Kennerly Davis

    Martin Brown, a senior aide to Governor Glenn Youngkin, created quite a stir when he told an audience at the Virginia Military Institute that โ€œDEI is dead.โ€ Democrats in politics and the media jumped on the remark, and the Governorโ€™s support of Brown, to assert that the Youngkin administration is hostile to policies and programs that foster diversity, equity, and inclusion. The partisan criticism is baseless. Martin Brown is correct. For Virginia to effectively foster diversity, equity, and inclusion, DEI must die. ย 

    Every system of government is based upon an idea, a fundamental concept for its organization and operation, a proposition. Most times, the idea has been small, shabby, uninspiring, and authoritarian. Ultimate authority has been held by a ruling class. The rights of individuals have been understood to be nothing more than malleable artifacts, with their scope and substance and tenure entirely dependent upon the changeable determinations and dispensations of the ruling class.

    But sometimes, the idea for a system of government is a grand one, exceptional, inspiring, revolutionary. The idea of America is a grand idea: the revolutionary proposition that all persons are created equal, endowed by their Creator with inherent dignity and unalienable rights; the revolutionary proposition that the only rightful purpose of government, the legitimizing purpose, is to recognize, respect, and protect the shared sacred humanity, inherent dignity, and natural rights of the people;ย  the revolutionary proposition that the people shall rule, and each shall be able to think and speak and worship and associate freely; the revolutionary proposition that a richly diverse people can form a strongly united nation, e pluribus unum. That is a grand idea!

    For more than a hundred years, the regressive authoritarians who wrongly style themselves โ€œprogressiveโ€ have worked to undermine the grand idea of America and replace it with their own very small idea: the counterrevolutionary proposition that an elitist ruling class of credentialed technocrats, infallible โ€œexperts,โ€ should exercise unrestrained administrative power to define the rights, allocate the resources, and direct the affairs of the supposedly unenlightened masses under their paternalistic supervision. (more…)


  • Reagan Republican AG Miyares Put on Russiaโ€™s List of ‘Banned Americans’

    by Shaun Kenney

    Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares was included in an elite list of American leaders and political figures as being sanctioned by Russian President Vladimir Putin, according to a press release from the Russian Foreign Ministry.

    Miyares, who had recently completed visits to Poland and Israel, is the sole Virginia statewide political figure targeted by the Russian government, outpacing both Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Virginia) and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Virginia), who serves on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
    (more…)


  • The Subversive Power of Doughnuts

    Clever Republicans have found a new tool for destroying our schools.

    by Steve Haner

    Let me get this straight. An elected member of the General Assembly comes to school buildings to give doughnuts to teachers in honor of Teacher Appreciation Week and the leftist Democrat agitators of the teachersโ€™ union are โ€œtriggeredโ€? They whine about her generosity to the gutless school management, which then caves to the weak-minded and bans any future acts of kindness?

    In Virginia? (more…)


  • The Folly of Electrification

    by Bill O’Keefe

    Although Dominion Energy seems to be hedging on its 2040 goal, Virginia is still stuck with the Virginia Clean Economy Act net zero mandate and its participation in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which seeks to achieve an 80 percent reduction in emissions by 2050. However, neither the General Assembly nor Dominion appear to have done the comprehensive and realistic life-cycle analysis needed to determine the realism of thoseย commitments and their consequences.

    Noted e historian and analyst Daniel Yergin has written about the challenges of meeting the demand for the essential materials needed for electrification — lithium, copper, and other minerals. As time moves on, it is becoming more clear how difficult it will be to obtain these minerals and also constrain the emissionsย  associated with their production.ย The IMF has concluded that pursuing net zero will โ€œspur an unprecedented demand for some of the most crucial metals, leading to price spikes that could derail or delay the energy transition.โ€

    Electrification of vehicles, charging stations, wind power, solar panels, and battery storage could lead to a doubling of demand for copper within a decade. This conclusion comes from a study of copper by S&P Global.ย Since copper is the โ€œmetal of electrification,โ€ the implications are staggering. ย 

    For decades, the world worried about the concentration of oil in the Middle East. Are any of the electrification proponents worried about the greater concentration of copper supplies โ€” 40% from Peru and Chile? And, what about the concentration of other essential minerals like cobalt and lithium for electric car batteries โ€” 70% in the Congo and 60% in China? Diversifying the sources of these minerals is not an easy task. Negotiating with host governments and developing a new mine can take 15 to 20 years and cost several billions of dollars. How many new mines will be needed and how accommodating will host governments be? (more…)


  • Oh Look! Itโ€™s Mock Jesus Night at the Ballpark.

    by Kerry Dougherty

    During a freak heat wave in April of 2022 I went to a Tides game. To our surprise, it was also โ€œbark in the parkโ€ or bring-your-dog-to-the ballpark day.

    The experience was Gothic.

    It was so hot and blindingly bright that all of the dogs and their owners huddled in the shade on the concourse. The dogless had to weave their way through a herd of panting, miserable mutts just to get a hotdog.

    Have you ever been in a ballpark, your feet resting on the seat in front of you, your scorecard on your lap and found yourself thinking that the only way the experience could be more sublime would be if you had your dog with you?

    Me neither.

    Dogs and baseball donโ€™t go together.

    Neither do drag queen nuns and baseball. But thatโ€™s what fans of the Dodgers are going to get if theyโ€™re foolish enough to buy tickets to the annual Pride game on June 16th.

    A week ago the management of the Los Angeles team disinvited the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a group of drag queens who dress up like nuns and then mock Catholicism and Christianity to the game. Part of their show includes a โ€œhunky Jesusโ€ a guy in a loincloth who prances around parodying our Lord.

    After the LGBTQ+ community howled in protest Dodger management backtracked. They issued an abject apology to the โ€œsistersโ€ this week and reinvited them.

    Appparently, they were more worried about offending the drag community than the legions of Catholics who buy tickets or who suit up for the team. I went through the 40-man roster and found about 10 players with Hispanic surnames who were born in Mexico and Venezuela. Iโ€™d be willing to bet theyโ€™re all Catholics. Probably practicing. Does management care about offending them?

    Nope. Theyโ€™re on their knees offering mea culpas and begging for the forgiveness of drag queens. (more…)


  • The Virginia NAACP Has Proven Itself an Obstacle to Improving the Educations of Black Children in Virginia Public Schools

    Courtesy Northern Virginia Black Chamber of Commerce

    by James C. Sherlock

    I just read that the NAACP has issued a warning against traveling to Florida.

    Which must have come as a surprise to the 3.5 million Black citizens of that state.

    It did not surprise the NAACP board of directors chairman Leon W. Russell, who lives in the Tampa area. His defense: โ€œWe havenโ€™t told anybody to leave.”

    I decided to check the Virginia NAACP agenda for education.

    I checked to see what they advocate to change the lives of the tens of thousands of Virginia Black public school students who can neither read nor perform math at grade level. Some of these public schools in inner cities have not provided a basic education to Black students for generations.

    Certainly the NAACP must be pushing hard for basic changes. Not just pressing for more funding, but also for measures to ensure that children go to school and giving parents alternatives to schools that have failed them and their children.

    Right?

    Wrong. (more…)


  • Dominion Seeks Permit to Harass 100s of Whales

    Click for larger view. BOEM map of Right Whale density noting offshore wind lease areas. Dominion’s CVOW and Avangrid’s Kitty Hawk Wind are the southernmost mapped.

    By David Wojick

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is taking public comments on a massive proposal to harass large numbers of whales and other marine mammals off Virginia by building a huge offshore wind complex. There is supposed to be an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the proposed harassment, but it is not there with the proposal.

    We are told it is elsewhere, but after searching we find that it simply does not exist. Like a shell game where the pea has been palmed, there is nothing to be found. (more…)


  • The Song’s Not New Just Because You Haven’t Heard It Before

    by Joe Fitzgerald

    When I was a younger man and indulged in that lowdown southern whiskey, I would sometimes sum up the next day by saying, โ€œI donโ€™t remember church bells.โ€

    Astute observers will immediately recognize literary allusions to Little Feat’s โ€œDixie Chicken,โ€ one of the great rock-and-roll story songs.

    Now, 41 years sober, I hear the song differently. Itโ€™s the story of someone finding out that an experience may have been unique to him, but wasnโ€™t unique.

    Which leads me back, to the surprise of no regular reader, to Bluestone Town Center. BTC is an ill-advised development based on empty promises, misguided good intentions, and governmental obtuseness. Those wishing to know the other side of the story are welcome to Google it.

    I was struck during the discussions of the project by how often supporters of the project fell back on baseless accusations of racism and privilege or answered objections that hadnโ€™t been raised. I also noticed things in the cityโ€™s deeply flawed housing report that had little to do with building or selling housing.

    Come to find out, any discussion of housing faces an underlying set of assumptions. And as any student of left-leaning politics knows, many of those assumptions lead to the expectation that anyone opposing any housing issue must prove their motivations and intentions are not racist, classicist, ageist, or ableist. (more…)


  • Renewables? Fossil Fuels? Americans Want Both.

    by Steve Haner

    Given a choice between an energy future that is dependent on a) generation using sun, wind or falling water; or b) thermal generation sources using fossil fuels or uranium; or c) a combination of both, which do Americans prefer? Should it surprise anybody that the answer is both?

    Reliance on both, the need for at least a substantial amount of electricity not depending on weather, is at the heart of the recommendations coming at Virginians from many directions. It came recently from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, including the Virginian on that panel, Mark Christie. It is the premise for both Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin’s (R) 2022 Energy Plan and Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s new integrated resource plan. (more…)


  • UVa Takes on A Daunting Task – Reforming Its Own Management and Administrative Structure

    By James C. Sherlock

    A favorite topic of mine is management and administrative overhead in state government institutions of higher learning.

    While a major university is a very large business with significant management and administrative needs, the overhead numbers seem higher than necessary.

    Overhead has certainly grown over the last few decades at a rate far in excess of the increases in tenured instructional and research faculty and students.

    This excessive overhead is expensive in multiple ways including:

    • very high dollar costs;
    • the time that line academics consume for meetings with and reports to the leaders, managers and administrators; and
    • general slowness of decision cycles.

    To investigate, I singled out the flagship University of Virginia for an informal audit.

    The University, to its credit, has decided to take on the task of streamlining and rationalizing its management and administrative structure.

    That castle will prove very difficult to storm. ย Yet a siege may take literally forever. ย The defenders are powerful, well-entrenched and well-provisioned.

    (more…)