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Bacon Meme of the Week

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A 10 Percent Increase in Real Wages?
Wow! … if true.
From Secretary of Commerce Juan Pablo ‘s December newsletter:
Over the last year, weโve announced 156 billion dollars in net new capital investment across the Commonwealth. That growth is broad-based. We currently have 220,000 open jobs, with 85,000 more on the way, plus another 40,000 construction jobs. Because of this opportunity, real wages in Virginia have increased by more than 10 percent over the past year. The national average is just 4.2 percent. That means real wages in Virginia are growing at more than twice the national rate.
Real wages are a critical metric of economic wellbeing. If the 10-percent-increase-in-real-wages figure stands up to scrutiny, that’s an extraordinary accomplishment for Virginia. But does it stand up to scrutiny? Perhaps someone in our desiccated husk of a press corps could look into it.
Update from Austin Stevens in the Governor’s Office:
The Secretaryโs newsletter was citing data from Virginia Works, which highlighted July 2024 to July 2025 data from the Current Employment Statistics (CES) report for BLS. You can see the wage growth highlighted for total private was 9.42%, which was rounded up to 10%. In the newsletter, we walked people through the nominal increase while highlighting the national/CPI data to end up getting to real wages.
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Gun Killings Down in 2024
But homicides remained highly concentrated in nine old urban localities.

Source: JLARC From the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission report, “Effects of Community Gun Violence in Virginia“:
Virginia ranks 23rd highest among states for violent firearm offenses, with 88 per 100,000 residents annually on average (slightly below the 50-state average of 93). Virginiaโs statewide gun homicide rate was 5.4 per 100,000 people, which was 21st highest among the states and equal to the national average.
In related matters… JLARC has access to Virginia’s 2024 homicide numbers. Why hasn’t the Virginia State Police published its 2024 Crime in Virginia report yet?
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Maps of the Day: Virginia’s Data Center Surge
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Fairfax Forfeits Transgender Case
Fairfax County Public School leaders capitulated after a student challenged their pro-transgender policies in court, offering hope that the era of so-called โtransgender rightsโ is coming to a close.
by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
Republished with permission fromย IWFeaturesLast month, Fairfax County Public Schools, represented by Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP, extended a Rule 68 Offer of Judgment to a former student, identified as โJane Doe,โ over its bathrooms and pronouns policies. Virginiaโs largest public school district granted the plaintiff $50 and attorneyโs fees associated with the case.
Jane Doe, represented by America First Legal, filed the lawsuit asserting that the district violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments, Title IX, and the Virginia Constitution by prioritizing โgender identityโ over biological sex and religious conscience. The plaintiff had encountered a boy in the girlsโ bathroom while at school, which school policy permits. The districtโs code of conduct stipulates bathroom and locker room use is based on โgender identityโ rather than biological sex. It also mandates preferred pronoun usage.
In response to the districtโs decision not to fight the case, Jane Doeโs mother told IW Features, โMy sincere thanks goes to my daughterโs legal team at America First Legal, who were the only adults during this whole ordeal to listen to my pleas for help to keep my daughter safe while she was at school.โย
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Youngkin Budget Proposes Partial State Deduction for Tips, OT
by Steve Haner
Governor Glenn Youngkin (R), trying to cut taxes to the end. Governor Glenn Youngkin has proposed that Virginia conform its tax rules to most of the changes in federal taxes adopted by Congress last summer, including recognizing a state tax deduction for tip income, overtime pay and interest payments on car loans.ย ย
Those tax policy recommendations are part of the Republicanโs final introduced state budget package, which heย presented to legislators on Wednesday at a joint meeting of the House and Senate financial committees. Their fate willย be decided early next year byย the legislators and incoming Democratic Governor Abigail Spanberger.ย ย ย
The departing Governor also proposed to make other tax cuts he enacted during his term permanent, including the stateโs current standard deduction amount of $8,750 per person or $17,500 per couple and the higher Earned Income Tax Credit. Without legislative action the standard deduction would revert in 2027 to $6,000 per couple, which was the allowed deduction at the start of his term. The higher deduction saves a married couple up to $661 per year, so losing it would hurt.ย ย ย
โThere is no need for any new taxes and there is no need for tax increases,โ Youngkin told the assembled legislators and Spanberger, who was watching in the front row. He included in that admonition theย carbon taxย on electricity imposed by the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), which he ended but which Spanberger has pledged to reimpose, reaping half a billion dollars per year from energy customers.ย ย
Youngkin is proposing only partial compliance with the new federal deductions for tips and overtime income, and the car loan interest. Deductions would not be available this current year, unlike the federal deductions. Starting with tax year 2026, a taxpayer who qualified for those deductions at the federal level could take 25% of that amount off on their state tax return, and in subsequent years it rises to 50% of the federal amount.ย
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State Govt’s Maintenance Backlog: $1.1 Billion+

Source: JLARC | Capital Maintenance and Construction An insidious form of deficit spending is deferred maintenance. Could that be a problem in Virginia? The Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission took a look at state-owned buildings, valued at between $31 billion to $47 billion.
The M-R FIX [database] shows that about half of state-owned buildings are almost 50 years old or older, and about one-third of the systems (e.g., HVAC, roofing, plumbing, etc.) in state buildings are past their expected lifespans (i.e., expired), according to generic lifespan metrics. … M-R FIX does not include data on actual building condition. …
The state does not currently have an estimate for the total cost of addressing needed maintenance at state-owned buildings. However, data collected by JLARC staff from 12 agencies/HEIs with the majority of state-owned building square footage indicates that current maintenance reserve project needs exceed $1.1 billion.ย
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Advocacy and Activism for Teachers
The Virginia Education Association emphasizes radicalism and resistance over reading and math.

Source: Virginia Education Association | Facebook by Victoria Manning
The Virginia Education Association (VEA), the state arm of the National Education Association, has no interest in educating your children. Instead, they want to push “advocacy and activism for educators”โa goal they stated explicitly and repeatedly throughout their November 2025 conference. The VEA indoctrinates educators whose public-school classrooms become incubatorsโcreating future Democrat voters.
During the VEAโs Education Professionals in Collaboration Conference in November, the session topics and speakers focused on far-left social justice talking points, and virtually nothing about improving educational opportunities for Virginia’s kids.
The VEAโs event keynote speaker was non-binary author George M. Johnson whose book, All Boys Arenโt Blue, is found in schools across the nation. Leftists decry the removal of Johnsonโs book from school library shelves despite its X-rated content. Excerpts include passages such as, โHe reached his hand down and pulled out my d***. He quickly went to giving me ****. I just sat back and enjoyed it as I could tell he was too.โ The book is filled with vile sexually explicit content that the VEA celebrates and pushes onto children.
The VEA claims itโs โbook banningโ if anyone opposes pushing this sexual propaganda onto minors. In fact, they recently promoted Johnsonโs book as a way to โfight against censorship in our schools.โ
Johnsonโs controversial activism doesnโt end with the sexualization of children. He also instructs that America is systemically racist.
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A Coordinated Effort to Delegitimize and Intimidate the UVA Board

UVA Board of Visitors boardroom by The Jefferson Council
Any discerning observer paying attention to the ongoing barrage of unprecedented attacks on the University of Virginia Board of Visitors (BOV) and its leadership cannot help but notice a striking similar pattern. The same allegationsโlargely manufactured, repetitious, and thinly sourcedโare recycled again and again, apparently in the belief that if a proverbial โbig lieโ is repeated often enough and echoed by multiple voices, it will eventually be accepted as fact. This naturally raises two questions: Where is this campaign coming from, and why are its participants acting with such unusual aggression and hostility?
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A closer look at developments in Charlottesville, coupled with information from knowledgeable inside sources, provides the answer. There is little doubt that these attacks are part of a highly coordinated and well-financed effort. This effort appears to be led by both friends and supporters of former president Jim Ryan and former UVA officials, further joined by Democrat members of the Virginia Senate, the Spanberger political team, certain members of the faculty and administration, and several student organizations (all collectively referred to hereafter as the โCabalโ). Much of this activity appears to be synchronized and amplified by a professional public relations firm.
Why are they doing this? The immediate objective is clearly to intimidate and delegitimize the BOV during the current search for a new university president. The broader objective, however, is plainly political: to prevent the selection of any president who might depart from the highly politicized progressive agenda that has dominated the University Grounds for roughly the past fifteen years.
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Great Idea: Online FOIA Libraries
I’d love to see one of these for the University of Virginia! — JAB
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Leadership by Example Has Broken Down at VMI

Photo credit: The Cadet by George Mayforth
My recent visit to the Institute during Parents Weekendโan occasion traditionally marked by pride in the Corps and confidence in the VMI systemโleft me with observations that must be addressed openly and honestly. These concerns do not arise from distant rumor or nostalgia; they come directly from what I witnessed on Post. And while the current administration has begun tightening standards, the conditions I observed demonstrate that the Institute faces deeper cultural issues that cannot be ignored. The issues I witnessed suggest that much more must be doneโand done with urgencyโif VMI is to remain true to its mission and its standards.
Physical Fitness and Military Bearing: A Visible Decline
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The most visible and immediate concern was the overall lack of athletic conditioning across the Corpsโan issue not limited to the Rat Line but evident at every class level. This is not simply about cosmetic appearance; physical readiness is a foundational pillar of a military college and central to the development of citizen-soldiers.
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The Empty Bus to Nowhere
Why Virginia’s rural transit subsidies need a reality check

AI-generated image of empty bus: Grok by J.D. Wong
If you live in one of Virginiaโs picturesque rural counties, you may have seen a familiar, yet puzzling sight: a large, brightly branded public bus rolling down a country road or regional highway, carrying nothing but a driver and a volume of air.
This phantom fleet is largely funded by the Federal Transit Administrationโs Section 5311 program, a well-meaning but economically obsolete initiative that pumps millions of tax dollars into “Formula Grants for Rural Areas.” Administered in the Commonwealth by the Department of Rail and Public Transportation (DRPT), these subsidies are designed to provide mobility to rural residents. But from an economic perspective, we must ask the hard question: Is this a good use of money?
The answer, increasingly, is no. The Section 5311 program represents a classic government failure.
Public transit relies on density to be efficient. In urban centers like Arlington or Richmond, a bus can serve dozens of riders per hour, spreading the operating costs across many riders. In rural Virginia, where population density drops to fewer than 50 people per square mile, the economics of fixed-route transit collapse.
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“They should no longer have police in traffic enforcement.”





