
See more memes at The Bull Elephant.

See more memes at The Bull Elephant.
by Dick Hall-Sizemore

Jim Pattison Developments, the Vancouver-based owner of the warehouse in Hanover County which the Dept. of Homeland Security was proposing to purchase and renovate into an ICE processing center, has pulled out of the deal, reports the Richmond Times-Dispatch.
The company issued a brief statement, “The transaction to sell our industrial building in Ashland, Virginia, will not be proceeding.”
There had been reports that one of the Canadian political parties was calling for a boycott of a supermarket chain owned by the same company.
The anti-ICE crowd is taking the fight against federal immigration enforcement to a school near you.

by Shelly Norden
Political activism attacking U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is increasingly showing up inside Virginiaโs public schools, raising questions about where education ends and national political campaigning begins.
In recent days, union-aligned posts have encouraged educators to oppose ICE through protests, national “days of action,โ and activist trainings. Social media shared by the Virginia Education Association (VEA) shows educators holding “ICE Out of Schoolsโ signs, wearing blue as a show of anti-ICE solidarity, and taking part in these activities during what appears to be the regular school day and inside school buildings.
Inย one post, VEA shared photos of educators with the caption, “We stand with our brothers and sisters in Minnesota and across the country in opposing ICE presence in our schools! Did you wear blue in solidarity with Education Minnesota today? Share your photo in the comments! #ICEOutSchools.โ

Several of the images appear to be taken inside classrooms, hallways, and other school spaces, suggesting organized political messaging taking place in publicly funded facilities.
Other posts show how coordinated the campaign has become. VEA promoted an event titled “Eyes on ICE: Document and Record,โ described as a “Know Your Rightsโ training hosted by MoveOn and the NEA. The graphic encouraged participants to “get the tools you need to exercise your rights as federal agents terrorize our communities,โ and urged members to join a national call to action. Another post encouraged supporters to “shine a light for Minnesotaโ by lighting candles on street corners in solidarity with anti-ICE efforts.
Not everyone within the union welcomed the approach. Some members questioned why union resources were being used for political activism at all. “What a waste of time,โ one member wrote. “Why not send out a survey to us paying members to find out our opinions on the topic.โ
(more…)
by Steve Haner
Ignore what they say. Watch what they do. The Virginia General Assembly could cut the bills of Dominion Energy customers a bit, but instead will give the company another ten years to take your money and spend it on someone else (after skimming off its healthy profit).ย

A ten-year program using money from all ratepayers (business customers included) to bury the tap lines of a few of the utilityโs (residential only) customers is about to get another ten years to run, through 2038. This happens with an intentionally opaque enactment clause at the end of companion bills House Bill 1393 and Senate Bill 253.
The most recent phase of the โstrategic undergrounding programโ (SUP), phase eight, cost $318 million and worked out to just under $800,000 for every mile of buried lines and just under $11,000 for each customer served. “Served” includes both the home that got the new lines and any homes down the line which benefit if that one connection fails less often.ย
Without question the 155,000 houses upgraded or downstream from upgrades have shown a dramatic reduction in outages since. But a cost versus benefit analysis on whether this is a good use of more than $3.4 billion for the other 2.6 million customers is lacking, and the State Corporation Commission staff highlights that void in its comments on the pending phase nine proposal.
Ten more years of this will easily cost ratepayers another $3 billion plus. It is reasonable to assume the utility in the first phases of projects targeted 4,000 miles of homes with the worst reliability records. The lowest hanging fruit is done. ย ย

by James C. Sherlock
The author just read a news article by the prolific Markus Schmidt in the Virginian-Pilot. It was a reprint of an article Mr. Schmidt wrote for his employer, the Virginia Mercury. His full-throated support of Virginia Democrats is his right. Examples abound:
Virginia AG Jones joins 21 attorneys general condemning DOJ pressure on Minnesota.
Jan 29, 2026, 11:31 AM
Coalition warns Trump administration demands for resident data and policy changes threaten state sovereignty.
โNot the right location:โ Hanover supervisors, residents oppose DHS ICE facility
January 29, 2026, 5:28 AM
Hundreds pack meeting room as board cites land-use conflicts and lack of consultation over detention proposal.
Democrats push restrictions on federal immigration enforcement in Virginia
January 28, 2026, 12:52 pm
Package of bills would limit cooperation, protect sensitive locations and new Democratic control of state government.
Mr. Schmidt would consider it his obligation to write such articles. It is the Virginia Mercuryโs and the Virginian-Pilotโs right to publish them.
But readers should know the sources of the news that arrives on their stoops. Weโll look.
Governor Spanberger campaigned on affordability. Her party is delivering gerrymandering.
by Chris Saxman

Virginia Democrats ran up huge numbers led by now Governor Abigail Spanberger who defeated former Lt. Governor Winsome Earle-Sears by an astonishing 15+ points.
The House Democrats gained 13 seats and now will have a 64-36 majority – a dramatic switch from the House Republican majority of 66 seats just 8 years ago.
Momentum can change so quickly.
The central theme of Spanbergerโs campaign was affordability. That was also the running theme of every Democratic campaign last year. From Zohran Mamdaniโs stunning mayoral victory in New York City to Mikie Sherrillโs campaign for governor of New Jersey – it was ALL about affordability.
Pocket book issues. The Democrats won everything last year.
The year before?
The 2024 presidential election came down to Immigration and Inflation.
Trump closed the Border, but now his lead on immigration has turned negative due to that all-too-common trait of political winners – Over Reach.
They went too far, too fast. Off narrative. No one likes a bully or being bullied.
(more…)by Dick Hall-Sizemore

Out of curiosity after reading Derrick Maxโs article on the family and medical leave act, I watched the video recording of that subcommittee meeting on HB 1207.
Derrick Max raised legitimate questions and objections to the bill. There were two Republican Delegates on that subcommittee.ย Neither asked a single question of the billโs patron nor made a single comment.
Beyond the non-engagement of the minority party, this subcommittee meeting is a perfect example of how the legislative process is broken.
Now I get to play the role of the old fart talking about the good old days.
When I was involved in the legislative process in the General Assembly in the 1970โs and 80’s, both as staff and lobbyist, subcommittees were the venue in which important, complex bills were subjected to a thorough review. There was often a lively debate between proponents and opponents.
(more…)
Is the Virginia Military Institute a racist institution that warrants General Assembly intervention? Maybe the Virginia legislators should ask these two young men.
by Kerry Dougherty

It was late Sunday night when my son blew in the back door. I was standing just inside, fleece, rain jacket, hat and mittens on, leashes in hand, about to walk the dog.
โWanna come with me?โ I asked.
โSure,โ he replied to my surprise.
It was about 38 degrees and drizzling. The exact sort of raw weather that makes me wonder why anyone thinks Virginia Beach is a 12-month destination.
Itโs not.
โGrab a jacket,โ I said, gesturing to the coat rack bursting with an assortment of foul weather gear.
โIโm fine,โ he said, adding the obligatory, โI went to school in Buffalo, remember?โ
That again.
Every time my kid ventures out – underdressed – into the cold, he reminds me of the four years he spent in Godโs refrigerator.
And as usual, my 20-something son was wearing his year-round uniform: T-shirt and shorts.
I didnโt glance at his feet. But a few minutes into our walk, when he stepped into a deep puddle and let out an involuntary WHOA, I realized he was wearing flip-flops.
by Derrick A. Max
Governor Abigail Spanberger campaigned on a promise to sign โpaid family and medical leaveโ when it reaches her desk. But popular vote-getting concepts often ignore the damaging impact such policies have once they are implemented. Virginiaโs paid family and medical leave program (Senate Bill 2/House Bill 1207)ย is a case study in how expansive design choices can turnย aย popular benefitย ideaย into a long-term economic liability.ย
SB2 appears straightforward: a state-run insurance program providing up toย 12 weeksย of paid leave, funded through payroll contributions. Look closer, however, and the bill reveals aย combination ofย unusuallyย broad eligibility, weak gating mechanisms, near-universal employer obligations, and a built-in funding escalation clauseย that sets the stage for rising costs and growing burdens on employersย —ย particularly small businesses.ย
The House version of the bill was cleared by a subcommittee yesterday and will be considered by the House Labor and Commerce Committee Tuesday.ย The Senate version is on the docket for Senate Commerce and Labor Committee Monday.
A Generously Designed Program, Ripe forย Growing Utilizationย
SB2 offersย wage replacement atย 80 percent of a workerโs average weekly wage,ย capped at the state average weekly wageย (a generousย $1,463 in 2025). Thatย provisionย places itย amongย theย mostย generous state PFML programsย nationwide.ย Generosityย does not stop with benefit levels.ย
Americaโs Teachers Are โDrunkโ on Inquiry-Based Learning: Why Virginia Should Include Social Studies in its Accountability Standards
by Jaime Osborne
I attended the recent National Council of the Social Studies (NCSS) annual conference in Washington, D.C., an event that draws thousands of educators from across the country. Unsurprisingly, inquiry-based learning dominated the agenda. Even sessions not explicitly labeled as such framed inquiry as the preferredโif not superiorโmode of instruction. The message was unmistakable: Inquiry-based learning is no longer one approach among many. It has become the orthodoxy in social studies education.ย ย
For those unfamiliar with it, inquiry-based learning is a way of learning that starts with questions instead of answers. Rather than a teacher just saying, โHere are the facts,โ they ask questions like, โWhy do you think this happens?โ They encourage students to explore, ask questions, try things out, and find answers on their own, with the teacher acting more like a guide on the side.
My skepticism of this trend had been building for years. It crystallized at the NCSS conference in Nashville, Tenn., two years ago, when I stopped by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) booth and spoke with a representative about widespread learning losses, particularly among economically disadvantaged students. One exception stood out; namely Catholic schools. โEveryone is wondering what Catholic schools are doing differently,โ the NAEP representative remarked.
As an adjunct professor in a school of education, I wasnโt surprised. Catholic schools tend to emphasize direct instruction and content-rich curricula. Their success aligns with decades of cognitive science researchโmost notably the work of E.D. Hirschโshowing that background knowledge is a prerequisite for reading comprehension and higher-order thinking. Critical thinking is not a generic skill that can be taught in the abstract; it is domain-specific and depends on what students already know. Yet many schools have become so enamored with vague โ21st-century skillsโ that they have sidelined content knowledge, despite clear evidence that knowledge still matters.

Written by the Jefferson Council
A rumor circulated this week claiming that the Board of Visitors has developed a short list of candidates for a future University presidency, despite the recent appointment of Scott Beardsley. At the top of the list allegedly is Risa Goluboff, former Dean of UVA Law from 2016 – 2024. After hearing this whisper campaign, we feel it is an appropriate time to educate the University community as to the back story that underlies the rumor and helps to explain many of the recent machinations at The University.
For some time, we have heard from knowledgeable sources that Jim Ryan had identified Risa Goluboff as his preferred successor whenever he chose to step down as Presidentโwhich according to his own statements was in the not-too-distant future. The first step in implementing this plan was to have Ms. Goluboff appointed as the new Provost to succeed Ian Baucom. While Ms. Goluboff is considered to be an intelligent and affable person by many, her greatest asset may have been her close alignment with Ryan and her full buy-in to his politicized โgreat and goodโ agenda.
Unfortunately for the preconceived Ryan succession plan, that was not sufficient for her peers, as they apparently did not believe she had the credentials to be the Provost. Accordingly, Goluboff was neither the search committeeโs choice for Provost nor, allegedly, even a finalist. Then, in a resulting huff, Ryan refused to accept the search committeeโs actual nominee choice, resulting in a failed Provost search to the detriment of the University. This would help explain why the University community has been given no transparency whatsoever regarding what occurred during the initial search and why it failed.
(more…)
by Kerry Dougherty
Finally.
A common-sense court decision that derails the Democratsโ redistricting chicanery in Virginia.
For the time being, at least.
The radical left in Virginia is so determined to deprive conservatives of proportional representation in Congress that they intend to appeal the circuit court ruling that came down Tuesday.
The issues are really quite simple: In 2000 Virginians voted overwhelmingly to abandon gerrymandering and go to a non-partisan method of drawing congressional districts.
Districts are redrawn after each census, so another is not due until 2030.
Presently Virginia is represented in Washington by six Democrat members and five Republican. About right when you consider that in the last presidential race, the Democrat won with just 51.8% of the vote.
Drunk with power now that they control all branches of state government, hard-core leftists such as State Sen. Louise Lucas want to amend the constitution AGAIN to return to gerrymandering and create 10 Democrat districts and just one Republican.
Itโs a naked undemocratic power grab and the shameless way Dems went about it is repulsive and violates the spirit, if not the letter, of Virginiaโs Constitution.
Thank God a judge has blocked it. Hopefully, higher courts will follow the law and not be swayed by political pressure. Continue reading.
by Dick Hall-Sizemore

The Trump administration has to know it is in trouble when Hanover County opposes the establishment of an immigrant processing center within its boundaries.
Hanover is the most reliably Republican jurisdiction in the Richmond area and one of the most reliable in the state.ย In each of the last three Presidential elections, Trump won about 62 percent of the votes in the county. Yet, Wednesday night, the Hanover County Board of Supervisors told the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS) that it did not want a gigantic ICE โprocessingโ center in its jurisdiction.
On January 22, DHS notified Hanover County that it was proposing to purchase a large warehouse in the county โin support of operations.โย The federal agency informed the county that, based on its research, in accordance with federal regulations, it had determined that no historic properties would be affected.ย It invited the county to provide any comments on the undertaking within 30 days.ย The title line on the letter referred to the โICE Washington DC Processing Center.โ
(more…)