• Hazing Revisited

    Five young men sitting around a table adorned with a white lace tablecloth, casually sipping tea from small cups. The table is filled with various pastries and snacks, and the background features a warm and cozy room with decorative items and a 'PARTY' banner.
    Image credit: Chat GPT

    by Buddy Weber

    Last week, the Free Press published an article by Catherine Morrissette, “Why Hazing Makes Better Men.” The impetus for the article was the release of some police body cam footage of an initiation ritual in the basement of a fraternity at the University of Iowa. The footage went viral and the responses on social media were uniformly negative.

    She wrote:

    In less than a week, it has accumulated over a million views on YouTube, and over 50 million on X. โ€œCrazy what men will do for the validation of other men,โ€ reads one X post with almost 500,000views. โ€œItโ€™s really a grooming ritualโ€”training members to normalize exploitation, hierarchy, and silence,โ€ reads another. The New York Post called the incident โ€œdisturbing.โ€

    The university suspended the fraternity for violating its policy on hazing.

    Although her headline characterized the incident as hazing, she likened it to historic rites of initiation for young men. She wrote:

    As uncomfortable as the video appears, these young men are going through something togetherโ€”and the disgust and discomfort are exactly the point. (more…)


  • What Do You Want In Your Neighborhood (and City)?

    by Jon Baliles

    For some time now, the city has been engaged in an effort to update the cityโ€™s zoning ordinance which was written in 1976. Richmond has come a loooong way in that time in many ways and in other waysโ€ฆnot so much. The latest zoning effort, known as Code Refresh, has generated much discussion and debate about how to grow the city in the decades ahead. Richmond is landlocked and cannot annex any of the surrounding counties (which Iโ€™m sure theyโ€™re thankful for); nevertheless, in order for Richmond to grow, it needs to grow up (literally and figuratively) and it needs to spur growth and development vacant and undeveloped properties, of which there are plenty.

    The Code Refresh effort has held numerous public sessions over the last year plus and the process has drawn much discussion and debate, sometimes intensely so. There is a school of thought that the city needs to maximize density on just about every single property no matter where it is, and there is a school at the other end of the spectrum that wants little to no change or rewriting the zoning code. As usual, the truth and the solution are usually found somewhere in the middle.

    The second phase of the cityโ€™s public comment period on Code Refresh is coming to a close on March 1st (Sunday), so you have a chance to weigh in if you have not already done so. The city created a helpful, interactive map where you look at your neighborhood and see what changes are proposed and participate and add comments and register your support, concern or displeasure. The goal is to have City Council approve parts or all of Code Refresh sometime later this year, so this weekend might be your last chance before Council considers it.

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  • Criminal with Long History of Arrests Allegedly Stabs Woman to Death in Fairfax County

    by Hans Bader

    On Monday, Stephanie Minter was stabbed to death at a bus shelter in Fairfax Countyโ€™s Hybla Valley. Convicted criminal Abdul Jalloh was arrested for the killing. He was out of jail and free to allegedly commit this crime, despite having a long record of arrests for violent felonies such as rape and malicious woundings, and despite having been convicted in a 2023 case.

    Close-up portrait of a smiling woman with wavy hair, wearing a striped shirt, in a well-lit indoor setting.
    No second chances for Stephanie Minter

    He exited the bus with her moments before the stabbing. Police arrested him the next day after he allegedly engaged in shoplifting at a liquor store. Police also โ€œconnected him to a larceny that occurred earlier in the dayโ€ in Woodlawn, reports WJLA.

    โ€œFairfax County arrest records show Jalloh has more than 30 prior arrests, including five malicious wounding cases filed between 2023 and 2025. Other charges included assault, battery and theft-related offenses. Court records indicate the Fairfax County Commonwealthโ€™s Attorneyโ€™s Office dismissed the violent charges in each case, resulting in his release,โ€ reports The Fairfax Times. Critics blame those dismissals by Commonwealthโ€™s Attorney Steve Descano for the tragedy.

    News4 notes that โ€œJalloh has a lengthy criminal history, according to Virginia criminal case records, which includes multiple assault larceny, assault and felony malicious wounding charges in May and August 2025.โ€ โ€œFOX 5 looked into Jallohโ€™s criminal history,โ€ and found that although he has been arrested many times, โ€œIn most of those cases, prosecutors chose to drop charges.โ€

    Descanoโ€™s office also allows an abnormally high fraction of killers to escape conviction by agreeing to their insanity pleas.

    (more…)

  • Bacon Meme of the Day

    Close-up of cooked bacon strips on a wooden surface with a humorous text overlay about bacon being 73% fat and salty.

  • Expanded PIPP Pulls $360 Million from Power Bill Piggy Bank

    by Steve Haner

    The expansion of an existing state electricity-bill subsidy program under legislation pending at the 2026 General Assembly could add up to $360 million to the annual cost during its first full year of implementation.ย 

    The Department of Planning and Budget (DPB) has produced a detailed fiscal impact analysis for House Bill 884, which revamps the Percentage of Income Payment Program (PIPP), first authorized in 2020. The bill would raise the eligibility threshold to bring in more participants and increase the financial benefit they would receive.

    The Department of Planning and Budget left out one little detail in its five-page report. PIPP is funded by ratepayers, not taxpayers. All the money for higher benefits and the administrative overhead would come from the ratepayers of Dominion Energy Virginia and Appalachian Power Company. PIPP is not available to the rural cooperatives’ customers. ย 

    House Bill 884 (that link is to the current bill text) has passed the House of Delegates 63-34 and is pending in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee. The final House vote happened February 17 and the financial estimate is dated February 21, so it may not have been part of the record before the House voted, even though it shows up with the vote on the legislative tracking page.

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  • 191 UVA Faculty Materially Mislead the UVA Community

    by The Jefferson Council

    Prejudiced professors fail to do their homework

    A letter signed by 191 University of Virginia faculty membersย accuses the Board of Visitors of running a “sham” process, engaging in โ€œhastyโ€ behavior, and conducting a โ€œsecretive” search in selecting Scott Beardsley as UVA’s next President. These are serious charges leveled against serious people. They deserve serious scrutiny.

    They don’t survive it.

    The letter is a case study in what happens when predetermined conclusions go looking for evidence rather than the other way around. It is riddled with unsubstantiated accusations, embarrassing omissions, and at least one central claim that is provably, demonstrably false, as anyone who bothered to read both Beardsleyโ€™s and Jim Ryanโ€™s presidential employment contracts would immediately know.

    The UVA community (students, alumni, donors, administrators and faculty who did not sign) deserves to know what this letter actually is: advocacy dressed as scholarship, and sloppy advocacy at that.

    The “poison pill” that isn’t — the letter’s most damning error

    Let’s start with the claim that should disqualify the letter’s authors from being taken seriously on contract matters: the assertion that Scott Beardsley’s employment agreement contains a presidential “poison pill” making it financially catastrophic to remove him.

    This is false. Itโ€™s not debatable and not a matter of interpretation.

    (more…)

  • Fairfax International Teachers Program Costs More…

    … but, hey, it reduces whiteness!

    by Stephanie Arora-Lundquist
    Republished with permission fromย IWFeatures

    Itโ€™s no secret that Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) is trying to socially engineer its hiring practices to reduce the number of white teachers and administrators with the aim of increasing racial diversity. In a December 2025 report, senior leadership proudlyย displayedย pie charts showing a 20% reduction in hiring white teachers from fiscal year 2019 to fiscal year 2026.ย 

    Pie charts showing racial representation among teachers and students for the years 2018-2019, current teachers, and projected hires and student body for 2025-2026, with a breakdown of percentages for various racial categories.

    The leadershipโ€™s objective of reducing whiteness among administrators and teachers is particularly ironic given that the superintendent, the school board chair, vice chair, and the majority of the school boardโ€™s members are themselves white. If they truly practiced what they preach, they would all step down.

    Of course, they will notโ€”equity for thee, but not for me.

    Nevertheless, these leaders employ a variety of institutional mechanisms and targeted recruitment strategies to increase racial diversity in hiring. In June 2023, FCPS adopted a strategic plan that placed โ€œequityโ€ as its central component, and the school board passed an โ€œequity policyโ€ aimed at addressing โ€œdisproportionate outcomes.โ€ 

    (more…)

  • A Plea to Save Capitol Square Statues

    Portrait of a smiling older man with short white hair, wearing a blue suit with a checked pattern and a light blue shirt, standing in front of a bookshelf.
    Delegate Lee Ware, R-Powhatan

    Delegate Lee Ware, R-Powhatan, delivered the following speech on the floor of the House of Delegates yesterday. — JAB

    Mr. Speaker, I rise to speak to a bill that will shortly come before us.

    Ladies and Gentlemen of the House, please allow me to meditate with you as a student of history and, for over thirty years, a teacher of History to high school students of every complexion. I offer the following observations as a contribution to Black History Month.

    My great-great grandfather was a Colonel in the 44th Massachusetts. He led troops in the War of 1861 in both North and South Carolina. After his service in the field, he became Military Advisor to the legislature of his home state.

    That Union officerโ€™s comrade and friend was Charles Francis Adams, Jr., who was the grandson and great-grandson of U.S. Presidents John Quincy Adams and John Adams, respectively. Charles Jr. served with distinction at Gettysburg, then was named Colonel of the fabled 5th Massachusetts Colored Volunteer Cavalry.

    To add to the drama, Col. Adamsโ€™s father was Mr. Lincolnโ€™s United States Minister to the United Kingdom, and he was instrumental in preventing Britain from siding with the Confederacy.

    You see, then, that these men were opposed to Virginia in 1861.

    Yet it was Charles Adams, Jr., who in 1907 was asked to give the Centennial Address of the birth of none other than Robert E. Lee at Washington & Lee University here in Lexington, Virginia.

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  • Sanctuary Virginia: How Our Leaders Are Undermining Law, Borders, and Justice

    Map of Virginia showing areas with current sanctuary policies and those at risk under 2026 legislation, with regions highlighted in red and light pink.

    by Jeff Bayard

    A question every Virginian should ask

    Is Virginia becoming a sanctuary state? The honest answer is yesโ€”and it is happening faster than most citizens realize.

    Since January 2026, Governor Abigail Spanberger has signed executive actions terminating Virginiaโ€™s cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. Meanwhile, the General Assembly is advancing bills that would prohibit local police and sheriffs from assisting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in any meaningful way. Furthermore, across Northern Virginia, local governments have adopted โ€œtrust policiesโ€ that shield illegal immigrants from federal authorities.

    This is not merely an abstract policy debate. Instead, it raises concrete questions that affect every Virginia taxpayer, every community, and every family: What happens when state and local government refuses to cooperate with federal law enforcement? Who bears the costโ€”financial and otherwiseโ€”when authorities release criminal illegal immigrants back into our communities instead of handing them to ICE? And what lessons should Virginia learn from states like Minnesota, California, and Illinois that have gone further down this road?

    This analysis examines the facts. We will look at Virginiaโ€™s statewide laws, local sanctuary policies, the 2026 legislative push, what the data actually shows about costs and consequences, and what other statesโ€™ experiences tell us about Virginiaโ€™s likely future.

    (more…)

  • A Portrait of Suicidal Empathy

    by the Liberty Unyielding Staff

    Group of prisoners in striped uniforms running through a large open gate, with a guard tower in the background and a figure lying on the ground.
    Prison break. Image credit: Grok

    โ€œIn 1996, Travis Lewis broke into the Snowden family home in Arkansas during a burglary and murdered 75-year-old Sally Snowden McKay and her cousin. He was convicted and imprisoned. Years later, Sallyโ€™s daughter Martha McKay chose radical forgiveness. She visited Lewis in prison, advocated for his parole, and after his 2018 release, hired him to work at the same historic house she had converted into a bed and breakfast. In March 2020, after being confronted over suspected theft, Lewis attacked and killed Martha inside that very home.โ€

    Criminals often commit more crimes after being released. Nationally, 81.9% of all state prisoners released in 2008 were subsequently arrested within a decade, including 74.5% of those 40 or older at the time of their release. (See Bureau of Justice Statistics, Recidivism of Prisoners in 24 States Released in 2008: A 10-Year Follow-Up Period (2008-2018)pg. 4, Table 4)).

    Yet, the Virginia legislature is passing legislation to make it hard for the parole board to keep some dangerous inmates in prison, by telling the parole board not to deny parole based on factors outside an inmateโ€™s โ€œdemonstrated ability to changeโ€ if the inmate committed his crime as a juvenile. But what if an inmate remains dangerous due to a personality disorder, and claims he lacks the ability to change that? How does the parole board โ€œdemonstrateโ€ that the inmate has the ability to change the dangerous personality trait?

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  • Before Deeds and Zillow

    The Arlington-Culpeper Grant Sparked Bacon’s Rebellion and Redefined Virginia Real Estate

    A 1736 map of the Northern Neck Proprietary in Virginia, showing land boundaries and rivers, with decorative elements and compass rose.

    Virginia real estate history does not begin with subdivisions or courthouse deed books. It begins in political exile. In 1649, after the execution of King Charles I during the English Civil War, Englandโ€™s monarchy collapsed. His son, Charles II, fled Europe and depended on loyal aristocrats for financial survival.

    With no treasury and no functioning government, Charles II used land in the American colonies as compensation. In September 1649, he granted a massive tract in Virginia to seven royalist supporters. This territory stretched between the Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers, from the Chesapeake Bay westward into unmapped Appalachian terrain. The grant would become known as the Northern Neck Proprietary.

    The scale was extraordinary. More than 5.28 million acres of fertile river valleys, timberland, and frontier wilderness were transferred into private control. The proprietors were given authority not only to sell land but to collect quitrents, establish counties, and manage economic development within the territory.

    This was not simply a land deal. It created a privately controlled real estate jurisdiction operating alongside colonial Virginia.

    The Restoration and colonial resistance

    For more than a decade, the 1649 patent held little practical force. Parliament controlled England and its colonies. Virginiaโ€™s colonial government continued issuing its own land patents and organizing counties inside proprietary boundaries.

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  • Cost of Undergrounding Program is Mostly Profit to Lenders, Stockholders

    by Steve Haner

    And the winner is….

    Dominion Energy Virginiaโ€™s ongoing program to place selected neighborhood service lines underground, spreading the bill for the upgrades onto all its 2.7 million customers, will cost another $3.8 billion if the General Assembly blesses its extension for another ten years.

    Of that, about $1.6 billion is the cost of the construction work and $2.2 billion (58 percent) will be to pay interest to the lenders or profit to the stockholders who put up the working capital. Those numbers are from an analysis provided to a curious legislator by the State Corporation Commissionโ€™s staff in a letter earlier this week.

    Almost a third of the money will come from the utilityโ€™s commercial and industrial customers (yes, including the scapegoated data centers), the SCC reported. But the upgrades being financed will benefit few if any business customers. An earlier report on Baconโ€™s Rebellion extrapolating data from an SCC case file had some similar cost projections.

    When it is the business customers subsidizing electricity for homeowners, nobody in the legislature squawks at all. Politicians only feign outrage if homeowners think they are subsidizing businesses. And none of them dares admit how much profit their favorite political donor is making from all this. (If half the financing is equity, not debt, more than a billion dollars in profit is a pretty good payoff for $20 million in campaign donations. And this is hardly the only 2026 bill enriching the utility.)

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  • New Democratic Districts Invite Republicans to Vote

    by Chris Saxman

    Proverb

    If you canโ€™t beat them, join them

    and as George Bailey said in Itโ€™s a Wonderful Life:

    This is a very interesting situation

    Having seen three different polls (one public and two private) that show the constitutional amendment to re-gerrymander Virginiaโ€™s congressional districts is under 50%, the odds of its passage on April 21st are clearly in doubt.

    No wonder national Democrats are pouring money into the Commonwealth to win this vote.

    This is not a done deal. Hence the money.

    Okay. Letโ€™s play it outโ€ฆsuppose the amendment passes.

    Democrats then have a clear path to a 10-1 federal delegation in the House of Representatives.

    The GOP would be on track to losing districts 1, 2, 5, and 6 as none of them would have less than 56% of the vote going to Democrats based on the 2025 gubernatorial landslide victory of Abigail Spanberger.

    Map illustrating the 2025 Gubernatorial election results by district in Virginia, showing a breakdown of U.S. House, House of Delegates, and State Senate outcomes, with color coding for political party strength.

    What would Republicans and Independents then do in these new districts if they know the very likely outcome in November is a Democratic representative?

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  • Cadet Crisis: VMI’s Culture on Trial

    Proposed legislation reopens questions into the validity of the state’s investigation into VMI student culture.

    Four military personnel in uniform holding a red flag with the Virginia Military Institute emblem in an outdoor setting.
    he past six years at VMI have been defined by the microscopic look into VMl’s student body culture by the state of Virginia. Photo courtesy of Pikabuu2 via the Creative Commons License

    by Jackson Doane

    It’s commonly said that good fences make good neighbors. Between Washington and Lee (W&L) and the Virginia Military Institute (VMI), nothing separates us but a short walk, yet we have long been good neighbors. So when news broke in January that two bills were introduced in the General Assembly that would limit VMl’s ability to selfยญgovern, I felt it only right to look into why our neighbors were suddenly under scrutiny.

    House Bill 1374 and House Bill 1377 were recently introduced, and since then, the complicated and, at times, hostile relationship between the school and the state government – which dates back at least five and a half years – has resurfaced with renewed intensity.

    In October 2020, a front-page article in the Washington Post detailed allegations of racially discriminatory incidents at VMI over the preceding years. The story drew national attention, especially in the wake of a summer and fall of race-based political protests, and thrust VMI into the national spotlight.

    The article caught the attention of the then-governor at the time, Ralph Northam, who is also a VMI alumnus. He co-signed a letter with the lieutenant governor and attorney general to VMl’s Board of Visitors, the school’s governing body, calling for a “state-funded, independent third-party review” of the student body’s culture, particularly regarding students of nonwhite ethnicities.

    Northam’s letter described what he believed to be a “clear and appalling culture of ongoing structural racism at the Virginia Military Institute.” That letter, combined with national media attention and pressure from state officials, led the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV) to commission an investigation by the third-party law firm Barnes & Thornburg, which released a report published in June 2021. The 2021 report
    The SCHEV investigation at VMI was conducted from January 7, 2021, to June 1, 2021, spanning a period of 145 days. According to SCHEV, it was done with the purpose of investigating allegations of racism and sexism at VMI.

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  • Virginia’s Population Reached 8.88 Million in 2025

    Map showing the 2025 population estimates by locality in Virginia, color-coded based on population size: more than 250,000, more than 100,000, more than 25,000, and less than 25,000.
    Click here to view interactive map. Credit: Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service

    The Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service at the University of Virginia has published its mid-decade population for Virginia and its localities. Summary from the Weldon Cooper website:

    Virginiaโ€™s population reached 8.88 million as of July 1, 2025, an increase of more than 248,000 residents since the 2020 Census. Between 2020 and 2025, the stateโ€™s average annual growth rate was 0.5 percent, slightly below the national rate of 0.6 percent. Virginia remains the 12th most populous state and ranked 11th nationally in numeric population growth during this period.

    Of the stateโ€™s population increase since 2020, natural increase (births minus deaths) contributed 78,388 people (31.5 percent), while net migration (people moving in minus people moving out) added 170,326 people (68.5 percent).