Imagine, for a moment, youโre the parent of an exceptional North Carolina high school senior. She worked hard. Her grades are excellent. Her test scores are top tier.
She applies to and is accepted at Virginiaโs prestigious flagship, the University of Virginia. The cost of in-state tuition for a first-year student ranges from roughly $16,500 to $27,000 while the cost to out-of-state students is more than $66,000.
That discrepancy is to be expected. State-supported schools always offer reduced tuition to in-state kids.
But UVa goes way beyond that. The university founded by Thomas Jefferson offers in-state tuition and enhanced financial aid to ILLEGAL ALIENS who live -illegally – in the commonwealth. If they attended high school here for two years these illegals are treated as preferred students.
Make it make sense.
Yesterday, the Department of Justice announced that it had filed suit in the Eastern District of Virginia, asking a federal judge to bar the state from enforcing the policy.
The suit claims that UVaโs policy โis not only wrong, but illegal.โ
โIn Virginia and nationwide, schools cannot provide benefits to illegal aliens that they do not provide to U.S. citizens,โ said Attorney General Pam Bondi in a news release. โThis Department of Justice will not tolerate American students being treated like second-class citizens in their own country.โ
If that North Carolina girl canโt get in-state tuition, why should someone who is in the country illegally get preferential treatment? Continue reading.
Even Sen. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, Virginia Senate president pro tempore, knows the last thing Fairfax County needs is more money. Earlier this month, Sen. Lucasย postedย on X, โIโm getting sick and tired of localities in Northern Virginia (especially Fairfax) spreading misinformation about being underfunded by the Commonwealth of Virginia. Itโs time to correct the record and stop these lies.โ
Sen. Lucas explains that Fairfax County commissioned a study with the Weldon Cooper Center at the University of Virginia, which inaccurately found that Virginiaโs largest county only gets 50 cents back on each tax dollar raised by the Commonwealth. The liberal senator continues, โThis is false and is a number derived by only counting money we send the county directly, not services used by all.โ
In the X thread, Lucasย pointsย to the irony that the center Fairfax County is paying to conduct the โstudyโ finds exactly what is most convenient for the argument that they are entitled to more money from the state. She concludes ย the thread by stating, โWe will not be bullied or lied to by the richest community in the Commonwealth that is constantly begging us for more funding.โ
While the countyโs leaders ask state officials for more money, they continue to tax many Fairfax residents, particularly seniors on a fixed income, out of the county. As property taxes have increased by about 65% in the last decade, and an incredibly unpopular 4% food tax will be implemented in January, county leaders continue to increase their own salaries. The Board of Supervisors chairman, Jeff McKay, also enjoys a taxpayer-funded car. Fairfax Countyโs residents further cover Chairman McKayโs car tax, gas, auto insurance, E-ZPass, oil changes, and car washes.
Buckle up, folks. Nick Shirleyโs blockbuster report on massive fraud in the daycare and healthcare industries in Minnesota may just be the tip of the Somali iceberg.
Investigations are underway in Washington State where more than 500 licensed daycares are run by Somalis. Many without physical addresses.
Uh-oh.
๐จ BREAKING: Following the exposure of millions in fraud at Somali-run care centers in Minnesota, similar concerns are now surfacing in Washington state, where 539 of about 5,000 licensed care centers are Somali-run, many lacking a physical address.
The Trump administration has announced that Virginia will receive $189,544,888 for 2026 alone to improve rural healthcare. That figure is based on an application made by the Youngkin Administration that specified how it would be spent. ย ย
That is just a down payment. The Rural Health Transformation Programโs $50 billion in funds will be allocated to approved states over five years, with $10 billion available each year from 2026 through 2030.
While the program includes federal-level guardrails, nearly a billion dollars over five years represents a significant investment in rural healthcare in this state. The administration and the General Assembly will be lobbied vigorously to direct the funds. ย
The General Assembly would be wise to ensure that the Inspector General and JLARC closely monitor:
Where the funds are allocated,
How they are spent, and
The prospects for long-term returns worthy of the short-term investments. ย ย
One undeniable challenge will be monitoring new and existing nonprofits that are already seeking shares of that funding, regardless of the state planning that has already occurred. Their costs can primarily be overhead in programs like this. ย
In a one-party state with no limits on campaign contributions, the blogs and TV networks, given the withered state of our print media, will need to pay particularly close attention to those same matters.
But America is no less greater. Indeed, the achievements of our Founding Fathers grow more noteworthy with time as our nation becomes less Euro-centric and more global in its constituency and its outlook.
With that in mind, here are my list of Great Americans from colonial times to 1876 —
George Washington. The indispensable man. The ย general who held a ragtag army together for 8 years to eventually defeat the British (yes, with French help). To this day, America is the only English colony to win its freedom by force of arms and not by royal consent. The first President who established that the USA would be a democracy without a hereditary chief executive. Indeed, he willingly gave up his power — a truly novel idea at the time. And unlike others, he did not feel the need to imprison or execute his opponents.
Abraham Lincoln. The founder of modern America. First, in reaction to secession, he decided that the Union was actually worth fighting for. Second, his decision to issue the Emancipation Proclamation spelled the end of slavery. Third, he had a vision to reunite the nation, which (eventually) succeeded. In addition to the obvious, his administration also initiated the transcontinental railroad and the land grant university system. If Washington created the USA, then Lincoln put it on the road to become a superpower.
The number of law enforcement employees declined slightly (1.2 percent) in 2024 compared to the year before, according to Virginia State Police Crime in Virginia data. The number of both civilians and officers was almost identical to that in 2022 when homicides were roughly 25 percent higher. If the number of law-enforcement personnel is a critical variable for explaining the violent crime rate, it’s not evident from these numbers.
Arguably, law-enforcement morale and policing tactics are more important than raw numbers. Unfortunately, the Crime in Virginia contain no data reflecting upon morale. Turnover and early retirement in police officer ranks might be useful indicators of morale, but those numbers are not captured in the crime reports. — JAB
Even as homicides and violent crimes declined in 2024, according to the Virginia State Police Crime in Virginia 2024 report, the number of assaults on Virginia police officers continued at roughly the same rate as in the previous two years. The 727 injuries to officers did represent a 10-percent decline from 2023, however. One police officer was killed in the line of duty; 679 injuries were classified as “minor.”
It’s not clear if the data reflect a real increase in the number of assaults on police officers or a statistical artifact. States the report: “A new method of data aggregation reflects a higher number than reported in previous years.” The report does not say what the number would have been under the old methodology.
โDavid Ramadan, a former Republican state delegate from Loudoun County and a member of the George Mason board, said Spanberger has the authority to ask all the board members at UVa and George Mason to submit their resignations or be fired.ย
Yours truly was quoted by The Washington Post as asking how Scott Beardsley, new president of the University of Virginia, differs from former president Jim Ryan when it comes to his commitment to Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. The Post also quoted my comrade in arms Stu Smith, a popular conservative social media poster, as calling Beardsley a DEI ideologue. And it quotes Joel Gardner, president of the Jefferson Council, as withholding judgment on Beardsley, suggesting that he promoted DEI at the Darden School when he was dean because it’s what he had to do to survive.
I think the reporter Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff represented everyone’s position fairly (although I made it extremely clear to him that I was not speaking with any authority on Beardsley’s appointment). My problem is not with Rozenzweig-Ziff but the headline. If you’re quoting two conservatives on social media questioning the logic of Beardsley’s record on DEI, and quoting one conservative withholding judgment, and that’s all you’ve got, it’s insane to have a headline suggesting that a conservative “backlash” is “brewing.”
If there’s a story, it’s that Beardsley’s selection as UVA president has prompted so little questioning by conservatives. The “backlash” is nonexistent. But that wouldn’t have made a very exciting headline. — JAB
The year: 2075. The American colonies on the Moon are getting restless under Washington’s tyrannical rule….
This second edition of “Dust Mites” has a snazzy new cover, includes helpful lunar maps, and is 5,000 words tighter than the original. The sequel, “Trogs,” is scheduled for publication this summer.
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