• Top U.S. Foundations Fund the Desecration and Destruction of Fine Art

    by Patricia N. Saffran

    A bronze sculpture depicting a horse rearing up with a knight in armor, set against a brick wall in an art gallery.

    The Monuments Exhibition in Los Angeles, co-presented by the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) and the Brick, features historic Confederate Beaux Arts statues splashed with paint and graffiti, along with contemporary art based on a theme of satirizing the South. Most notably, the exhibition displays the once-magnificent historicย Charles Keck equestrian statue of Stonewall Jackson after it had been dismembered and reassembled in grotesque form.

    I attempted to pose questions to the presidents of some of the world-famous foundations that financed the exhibit. The foundation presidents refused to answer any questions. Transparency among foundation officials doesnโ€™t exist.

    Those questioned include representatives for Elizabeth Alexander, President of the Mellon Foundation, John Silbeman, President of the Teiger Foundation, and Joel Wachs, President of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, also Treasurer of the Teiger Foundation and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. 

    The following questions were directed in particular to the Mellon Foundation:

    (more…)

  • Bill Would Effectively Abolish Life Without Parole

    by the Liberty Unyielding staff

    A close-up photograph of a man with short hair and a serious expression, facing the camera directly.
    Anthony Juniper: saved from execution by Virginia’s abolition of the death penalty.

    When Virginia abolished the death penalty in 2021, Virginians were assured that it wasnโ€™t needed, because the worst murderers could be given life sentences without the possibility of parole.

    But soon, even the worst killers could be released. Legislation has been introduced to allow all prison inmates serving long sentences to seek release after specified periods โ€” even serial killers, child killers, and other murderers who once would have been eligible for the death penalty. HB 853 and SB 634, known as the โ€œsecond lookโ€ bills, have been amended to create three tiers for release. Some inmates could seek release after 15 years, while those who commit the most serious offenses would have to wait 20 years or 25 years, depending on their offense.

    A smiling woman with long dark hair wearing earrings, photographed closely with an expressive pose. There is a name and dates below the image.
    Keshia Stephens: unavailable for comment

    Most Virginia inmates already spend less than 15 years in prison. For example, manslaughter carries a sentence of one to ten years. Drug possession can lead to sentences of up to 6 months, 1 year, or 10 years, depending on the type of drug.

    But some murderers, such as serial killers, are serving sentences of life without parole. This โ€œsecond lookโ€ legislation could not only release them, but give them more freedom than they would get from parole. Inmates released on parole are subject to the supervision of a parole officer, and if they misbehave, they can be sent back to prison for a long time. But inmates released under HB 853 and SB 634 would be free as a bird, with no parole officer to keep tabs on them.

    (more…)

  • Jeanine’s Memes

    A news anchor sitting at a desk, smiling and gesturing, with a skyline backdrop and a speech bubble stating, 'My job is to make you think the views of 10% of the country are actually the views of 80% of the country.'

    View more memes at The Bull Elephant


  • After Last Yearโ€™s Overhaul, Va. Lawmakers Consider Tweaking K-12 Assessment Testing

    Bills would address studentsโ€™ final grade, administration of tests and retakes

    by Nathaniel Cline

    Less than a year after it was enacted, lawmakers will revisit a proposal that brought major changes to Virginiaโ€™s K-12 public school testing system, with the main debate centering on whether to keep or repeal a provision passed last year that requires assessments to count for 10% of studentsโ€™ final grades.

    A classroom setting with students actively participating; some are raising their hands while a teacher engages with them.
    Photo credit: Virginia Mercury

    Overhauling the testing system aims to raise student performance, strengthen outcomes and make the Standards of Learning (SOL) assessments in core subjects (math, reading, history and social science) more meaningful. 

    The changes made to SOL testing to tie test scores to final grades, shift test timing, and give parents clearer results garnered widespread support in the General Assembly. However, some lawmakers, like Del. Kelly Convirs-Fowler, D-Virginia Beach, who opposed certain portions, argued the education community did not entirely support the revamp. (more…)


  • Keep RGGI Tax Off Customers? Good Luck With That

    by Steve Haner

    Sen. Adam Ebbin
    Photo credit: Washington Post

    Virginia Democrats are so eager to reinstate a carbon tax on Virginiaโ€™s electricity producers that there are now three pathways active to accomplish the goal: a bill, a budget amendment and a motion filed with the Virginia Court of Appeals.

    There is also discussion in the most recent Inside Climate News report today about finding some way to make the utility companies and independent generators eat the cost. Otherwise, what will happen in 2026 and beyond will be what happened during the previous three years Virginia imposed the tax โ€“ it will get passed on to customers.ย  ย 

    Inside Climate News quoted Alexandria Senator Adam Ebbin saying โ€œthere very well may beโ€ a way to make energy producers pick up more of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative costs. No, not the energy producers, senator โ€“ but you could force the cost onto the shareholders of those companies. (In the case of Virginiaโ€™s many electric cooperatives, the shareholders and the customers are the same, so no break for them.)

    Too many legislators and voters do not understand the basic truth that only people pay taxes. Tax a business (or impose a tariff) and the money generally is made up three ways: from a price increase, or a reduction in profits shared with the owners or stockholders, or some internal cost cut, usually in personnel or benefits. All three combined are a possibility. The money comes from people.

    It is also a basic tenet of the regulatory compact that grants our utilities their monopoly territories that they are entitled to recover 100% of their legitimate costs. All their other taxes โ€“ and there are many — come through to customers on bills, and the RGGI tax should be the same.

    (more…)


  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    A plate of crispy bacon strips with humorous text about a retirement plan centered around eating bacon.

  • Touching the Third Rail: A Legislative Pay Raise to $45K

    Sen. Scott Surovell (D-Fairfax),ย 

    An amendment to the introduced state budget, proposed by Senator Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, adds $2.1 million to the Legislative Department plan for the second year (fiscal year 2028). Explanation? This amendment provides $2.1 million GF the second year to increase the salary of the members of the General Assembly to $45,000 a year from current levels for all Senators and Delegates. This increase would be effective in January 2028, after the next election of the General Assembly.

    Current salaries are $17,640 per annum for members of the House of Delegates and $18,000 per annum for State Senators. The discrepancy goes back to the early 1990s, when in a budget crunch former Governor Douglas Wilder proposed 2% pay cuts for state employees. The Republicans in the House of Delegates, then in a minority status close to where they are now, offered a floor amendment to reduce legislative salaries the same 2%. Enough House Democrats went along to put it into the budget.

    And the final conference committee on the budget thought it was a fine idea — for House members — but restored the full $18,000 for Senators. Wilder, a former member of the Senate, didn’t object. The salary differential has remained the same for more than 30 years, while the other forms of legislative compensation (mileage, per diem, stipends for off-session meetings) have soared. Just who were the fiscally conservative House Republicans and their staff person who dreamed up that floor amendment? Lost in the fog of time. Ahem. My memory fades on who was executive director of the GOP caucus that year. (It probably has saved taxpayers about $1.25 million at $36,000 per year!).ย 

    Be careful what you ask for? Isn’t that the phrase? — SDH


  • Minneapolis, Here We Come

    All the pieces are falling into place for Minneapolis-style chaos in Virginia.

    A man in a suit with a tie sitting in a formal setting, engaged in an interview.

    On Fox News, White House border czarย Tom Homanย responds to Governor Abigail Spanberger’s executive order suspending the Virginia State ‘s mandatory cooperation with ICE. Homan vows the Trump administration “will forge ahead with its deportation efforts despite resistance from Virginia’s new Democratic Gov.ย Abigail Spanberger.”


  • Abigail Spanberger: The Left’s Trojan Horse

    A woman in business attire emerging from a large wooden horse sculpture.
    Image made by Grok

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Remember last summerโ€™s gubernatorial campaign? All of candidate Abigail Spanbergerโ€™s happy talk about affordability, moderation and working across the aisle?

    Congratulations, voters. You got played.

    If there was any lingering hope that the Democrat majority in Richmond would wield their power judiciously that was laid to rest this week. Itโ€™s clear now that Virginians elected a far-left radical as governor and filled the General Assembly with left-wing extremists.

    What could possibly go wrong?

    Oh, the Trojan horse governor may make a show of vetoing a bill or two in order to position herself as a moderate when she seeks national office (youโ€™ve been warned) but by turning Virginia into a sanctuary state with the stroke of a pen on Inauguration Day, she was immediately unmasked.

    In one week the new governor and her friends have turned Virginia into a woke DEI-worshipping, Marxist sanctuary state. Theyโ€™ve proposed massive tax increases, gun restrictions, revolving doors on prisons and abolishing mandatory minimum sentences for serious criminals from kiddie porn peddlersย to rapists. They want to make it easy to sue law enforcement officers and hard to lock up criminals. Oh, they also want boys competing in girlโ€™s sports and they have several bills aimed at making voter fraud easier to commit. Continue reading.


  • Education Tax Credits In Virginia – A Win Win On the Politics?

    You know who likes optionality? That’s right, politicians do.

    by Andrew Rotherham

    Letโ€™s start with the high note. I came of age in the Mary Sue Terry and Douglas Wilder era of Virginia politics. Robert Frye, the first Black school board chair in Fairfax County, lived a few houses down from me. That first might not seem like a big deal now, but it was at the time. Abigail Spanberger becoming governor of Virginia this past weekend is another importantโ€”albeit, in my view, long overdueโ€”first. Itโ€™s good to see. Sheโ€™s goingย to have her hands full, though. Her pick for State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Jenna Conway, isย a fantastic choice, serious talent.

    Created by Grok

    Earlier this month, on his way out the door at the end of this term (Virginia governors only serve one), outgoing Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) announced that Virginia would participate in the new K-12 education tax credit program included in last yearโ€™s tax billโ€”the โ€œOB3,โ€ or whatever you want to call it bill. On the one hand, the Virginia announcement was a little premature. The regulations for the new program (which we just talked about) arenโ€™t done, and there are potential moving parts. On the other hand, Youngkin is a private citizen again, and he was in a hurry at the end of his term.

    People predictably fell apart.

    Letโ€™s stipulate we probably wonโ€™t see the same reaction if Colorado Governor Jared Polis (D), who also said his state will participate, ends up as the Democratic nominee in 2028. Or if other blue state governors get it. Former Obama Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and former Democratic mayor Jorge Elorza have urged Blue states to participate. Iโ€™m not saying itโ€™s a great policy you should embrace. I am suggesting you evaluate it on its merits rather than let partisanship rot your brain. There is a lot going on here around it. (more…)


  • Is There a Doctor in the House?

    Is There a Doctor in the House?

    Part 1: Medical Directors

    by James C. Sherlock

    The active presence of the medical director in a nursing home is vital to maintaining the quality of care. By overseeing medical practices, implementing care policies, ensuring compliance with professional standards, and, if required, butting heads with facility administrators and owners, the medical director plays a crucial role in safeguarding residents’ health and well-being.

    Few physicians would tolerate the levels of understaffing, poor care, and dangerous policies driven by some out-of-state chains in too many Virginia nursing homes.  The results include neglect, abuse, and deaths of helpless people.

    Many nursing homes do a great job of caring for their residents.  We thank all of you.  But public data support the conclusions that in some nursing homes:

    • Medical directors are not present to the extent required by the patientsโ€™ needs or by law;  
    • They do not effectively intervene on behalf of patients; and  
    • Many are overextended.

    The Case of Dr. Abbasi

    In March 2025, a judge in one of the multiple scandals that erupted at Colonial Heights Rehabilitation and Nursing Center (Colonial Heights) in December of 2024 was asked to decide whether a physician, arrested and charged with elder abuse for what prosecutors called a “lack of oversight of patient care” in the death of a resident, should be allowed to continue practicing medicine at the facility. The defendant, Gohar Maqsood Abbasi, MD., was both the medical director at Colonial Heights and a mandated reporter. The judge decided that oversight of the practice of medicine was the stateโ€™s responsibility, not the court’s. He was right.  

    In the pending criminal case, Dr. Abassi is innocent until proven guilty.  

    Dr. Abbasi has an active license to practice medicine in Virginia. His license data indicates that he limits his commitments within the bounds of what should be doable:

    • sees patients 5 days a week and spends 60% of his time at his primary practice address in Chester,
    • participates in Medicare and Medicaid and accepts new patients in both,
    • is subject to no Virginia Board of Medicine Notices or Orders, and
    • has paid no malpractice claims.

    Facilities licenses show he serves or has served as medical director at three nearby nursing homes:

    • He was replaced as medical director at Colonial Heights (Lifeworks Rehab chain) effective 2025-12-08, a year after the raid. Colonial Heights averages 137 residents per day, 
    • Henrico Health & Rehabilitation Center (Lifeworks Rehab), 108 residents per day. As Virginiaโ€™s only Special Focus Facility, Henrico Health and Rehab is designated by the state as, over time, the worst nursing home in the Commonwealth, and
    • Canterbury Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center (Marquis Health Services), 177 residents per day, whose residents suffered the Commonwealthโ€™s largest loss of life during COVID.

    He discloses affiliations (see below) with:

    • Group: Prime Care Health Services PC,
    • Hospitals: John Randolph Medical Center and Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center, and
    • Nursing homes: Canterbury Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center and Henrico Health & Rehabilitation Center.

    While the government charges Dr. Abbasi with malfeasance, the publicly available records do not help its case.  

    He was not overcommitted. Two days a week serving as the medical director for those three facilities should have been sufficient. While the facilities did not help him by reporting that no medical director was on payroll, Medicare, for some unfathomable reason, allows direct provider billing for medical director services rather than facility billing. 

    But the case raises complex and important questions well beyond this one instance about the enforcement of laws and regulations governing nursing home medical direction.

    Public records provide both answers and questions. The conflicts among reports from the same providers are legion. But they speak loudly enough, even with and often especially because of the conflicts, that no commentary is required or offered.

    It is the governmentโ€™s business to deal with the issues raised.

    (more…)

  • 60,000 Wildlife Crashes Per Year

    From the Capital Region Land Conservancy:

    “Virginia is one of the first states in the eastern United States to create a Wildlife Corridor Action Planย that has a clear emphasis on protecting vital wildlife habitat corridors and reducing vehicular conflicts. With approximately 60,000 crashes each year, Virginia is one of the top ten states for such wildlife-vehicles collisions, costing over $500 million annually in property damage, injuries, and loss of life.

    “Virginiaโ€™s Wildlife Corridor Action Plan is a cooperative effort between the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources, Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, Virginia Department of Transportation, and Virginia Department of Forestry.”


  • Keeping up With Mamdani, Part II

    Publicly owned housing is such a roaring success that Delegate Elizabeth Bennett-Parker, D-Alexandria, wants to create more of it.


  • Never Given a Hearing, Never Asked a Question

    Tweet by Garrett Exner, former Board of Visitors member at the Virginia Military Institute:

    A man with short, light brown hair and a full beard smiles at the camera. He is wearing a gray suit jacket over a white shirt, with a blurred green lawn and building in the background.
    Garrett Exner

    @GlennYoungkin appointed me to the Board of Visitors at Virginia Military Institute. Unfortunately,

    @vademocrats voted to deny my appointment in what the Governor describes below as a, “shameful episode.”

    I was never given a hearing.
    I was never asked a question.
    I was never provided a reason for my denial.
    As far as I know, my appointment was never fully reviewed.

    The Privileges and Elections Committee rejected my appointment for partisan politics. When pressed, Majority Leader, @ssurovell, cited “genuine concerns about the qualifications, backgrounds, and intentions,” of Youngkin appointees at VMI and other universities.

    Mr. Surovell is not a veteran.
    He has never deployed.
    He has never prepared young men and women for service to the nation.

    (more…)

  • The BIG ONE Is Coming!!

    Maybe.

    by Kerry Dougherty

    All week American meteorologists have been vibrating with joy. Sleeves rolled up, laser pointers trembling as they assure us that THE BIG ONE is coming.

    To the South!

    Every forecast included the words โ€œonce in a lifetimeโ€ or โ€œhistoric.โ€

    Southerners were ordered to buy milk, bread and a sled dog.

    โ€œIโ€™m talking feet not inches of snow,โ€ one giddy weather guy gushed.

    On Tuesday they warned of at least 12 inches of snow in Tidewater – possibly more – declaring there was no doubt that the region would be buried this weekend because โ€œall of the models have come together.โ€ Continue reading.