For all those Bacon Rebellion commenters who are so anxious to praise and support ICE, you would be well served to read George Will’s latest column. Will is not a progressive; not a radical left-winger; not even a Democrat. He is a bona fide conservative. As evidence of his credentials, he was the first person the newly formed Jefferson Council invited to speak at UVa. They even hosted a cocktail party for him.
For those of you who do not subscribe to the Washington Post, for whom Will writes two columns a week, you can check out the story of George Retes, born in the U.S. of a mother who was a citizen, here.
Here are some details that Will supplied that are not in the other account:
Retes’ driver’s license identified him as an Army veteran. The “ICEmen” (Will’s term) didn’t bother to check it.
2. He has a Disabled Veteran license plate.
3. One of the rear windows of his car had an “Iraq War Vet” sticker.
4. He was made to sit on the curb after being pepper sprayed and hit with tear gas with his hands zip-tied behind him for four hours.
Will concludes by asking, “How many appalling incidents are occurring during todayโs tsunami of sometimes lawless ‘law enforcement’? ICE might not know and, if it does, might not speak truthfully.” He laments that ICE “behaviors besmirch the reputation of the nation [Retes] served.”
When they show you who they are, believe them.ย That clip, first noticed on X back in August, struck me as a bit of “authentic Abigail,” especially the tone when discussing Republicans. There goes the moderate mask.ย Perhaps even then there was a quiet plan to try to do what she said couldn’t be done, overturn the state’s anti-gerrymandering constitutional provision by next year.ย But clearly, she was ready to push for it by 2028.ย Will of the voters?ย That can’t be allowed to stand in the way of the progressive agenda.ย This needs to be shared widely.ย ย
Have Democratic Speaker Don Scott and Democratic General Assembly leaders thrown Democratic Attorney General nominee Jay Jones under the bus? Talk about the proverbial October surprise: Scott has announced an unprecedented move to do a super-partisan redrawing of the stateโs congressional districts.
Is this legal under the new Virginia Constitution redistricting provisions enacted a few years ago? NO. At least Scott admits as much. He says he wants to change the constitution to allow his unprecedented power play. His plan will require a special statewide constitutional amendment referendum election next April
Yet the people of the Commonwealth voted 2-1 in a 2020 statewide referendum to ban any partisan redistricting. The two new constitutional provisions stripped the General Assembly of its traditional role in redistricting. Giving the power instead to a nonpartisan Virginia Redistricting Commission. If the VRC proved unable to draw the new districts, the new constitutional provisions gave the power to the Virginia Supreme Court.
Dems in Virginia are in a panic over the Republican momentum, which increases with each new Jay Jones scandal.
So they’re yanking Winsome Earle-Sears off the campaign trail and forcing her to stop raising funds during a “special” General Assembly session scheduled to begin on Monday.
It’s special all right. Itโs a naked power grab and it reeks of desperation.
It also appears that Jason Miyares will have to stop raising money once the General Assembly goes into special session. Virginia law prohibits statewide officer holders from fundraising during a session.
Fresh off their No Kings weekend, Virginia Democrats unveiled their most partisan, oligarchical, undemocratic move: With 12 days left before the election, Democrats are calling the General Assembly into a special session on Monday at 4 p.m..
This is unprecedented chicanery. Itโs the behavior of grasping, machine-like politicians. This is Tammany Hall on the James.
Will Virginians recoil from these undemocratic tactics? We can only hope.
It could backfire. Democrats hold just a one-vote majority in each chamber. That means every Democrat delegate running for re-election will have to haul their derriรจres to Richmond and beclown themselves for a quorum. Republicans should ignore the session and continue to campaign and appeal to voters with common sense.
Both houses of the General Assembly are planning to convene on Monday, Oct. 27.ย The notices went out to the members today.ย Technically, this will be a reconvening of the 2024 Special Session I, which never adjourned sine die.
As reported by the Virginia Political Newsletter, the main item of interest will be Virginia getting into the redistricting fray started by the Republicans in Texas.
Rather than summarize the report, I have copied it below:
โSeveral sources confirmed to Virginia Scope on Wednesday that part of the special sessionโs focus will be on redistricting.
Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, D-Fairfax, told Virginia Scope that legislators are meeting to address actions by the Trump administration.
Speaker of the House Don Scott, D-Portsmouth, and his office did not respond to a request for comment.
Spanberger would revoke Gov. Youngkin’s executive order that protects Virginia.
by Victoria Manning
More than 5,600 illegal aliens have been arrested in Virginia since Feb. 2025 thanks to federal and state law enforcement working together through the Virginia Homeland Security Task Force. Gov. Youngkin’s office told Restoration News those arrested included violent criminals including MS-13, Tren de Aragua, and other gang members affiliated with transnational criminal organizations.
In Feb, Gov. Youngkin issued Executive Order 47 to keep Virginians “safe from dangerous criminal illegal immigrants.” The order directed state police and encouraged local sheriffs to work together with immigration enforcement to remove criminal illegal aliens from Virginia communities.
Virginia’s Democrat gubernatorial candidate, Abigail Spanberger, has vowed to rescind Youngkin’s orderโclaiming it “tears families apart.”
Illegal alien invasion harms Virginians
Four years of wide-open borders under the Biden administration have wreaked havoc on Virginians. In 2023, Pew Research estimatedย overย 230,000 unauthorized aliens were living in the state.
Just when the Demsโ attorney general nominee was hoping the daily headlines about his scandals might abate, heโs back in the news.
And itโs worse than ever.
According to Nick Minock, reporting for ABC News, Elliott Bondurant, a courageous New Kent County Circuit Court Judge — unafraid of Virginiaโs powerful Dem machine — appointed a special prosecutor to get to the bottom of Jonesโ sweetheart reckless driving deal.
Specifically, the investigation will center on how Jones cleared his 1,000 hours of community service, which allowed him to avoid possible jail time.
This arises out of his January 2022 arrest for flying along I-64 at 116 mph at 1 a.m. After numerous delays, his case was resolved with a guilty plea in 2024 after he supposedly performed 1,000 hours of โcommunity service.โ Half of those hours involved โworkโ at his own political action committee.
Unlike offenders with similar charges, Jones neither lost his driving privileges nor went to jail. Or even had a suspended jail sentence.
This case reeks. Jones is a member of a prominent Norfolk family. Apparently itโs good to have connections. Continue reading.
The 2025-2026 soybean harvest and market began in September with Virginia soybean farmers having lost their biggest customer as a result of Trumpโs tariff policies.
In 2023 (the latest year for which figures are available), soybeans were Virginiaโs top agricultural export at over $1.4 billion.ย Exports to China accounted for $784 million (56 percent) of that total. In retaliation for the high tariffs imposed by the Trump administration this year, China imposed a 20 percent tariff on American soybeans.ย That tariff, in combination with existing taxes and duties, pushed the overall rate on U.S. soybeans to 34 percent.ย As a result, U.S. soybean exports to China have been zero since May.ย As a Purdue University Center for Commercial Agriculture report recently noted, โThe U.S. soybean harvest began in September without any orders from the worldโs largest buyer: China.โ
Currently, Virginia soybean farmers, who increased the acreage devoted to soybeans from 500,000 acres in 2023 to 600,000 acres this year, face an unenviable situationโrising costs and decreased demand for their product.ย As Virginia Businessexplains, โComing into this year, many farmers were just hoping to break even because crop prices were weak while costs had increased.ย But Trumpโs tariffs, which helped make their crops uncompetitive around the world, drove prices down further, and tariffs on steel and fertilizer sent farming costs up even more.โย The Federal government estimates that soybean farmers will lose $100 an acre this year. With 600,000 acres in cultivation, that could translate into a total loss of $60 million for Viriginia soybean farmers this year.
Del. Marcus Simon, D-Falls Church-Fairfax, wrote a long email to constituents Oct. 21 regarding the Attorney General’s race.
Delegate Marcus Simon
He spent much of the missive on what the Attorney General does, and endorses fellow Democrat Jay Jones, but it’s a lukewarm endorsement at best.
Simon, an attorney himself, writes in part:
โThe office of Attorney General in Virginia is often overlooked, buried down-ballot beneath the governorโs race and even some state legislative contests. But make no mistake: this office is one of the most consequential in the Commonwealth not only for its influence on Virginiansโ daily lives, but for its power to check federal overreach when Washington veers off course. In the age of Donald Trumpโs return to the White House, the party that holds this office will determine whether Virginia stands up for the rule of law or stands aside.โ
Simon goes on, writing: โDuring Trumpโs first term, Democratic attorneys general from states like California, New York, and Massachusetts successfully blocked dozens of unlawful federal actions – from the travel ban to the rollback of environmental protections to efforts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act. If Virginiaโs AG had joined those coalitions, the Commonwealthโs 8.8 million residents would have had a stronger voice in those national fights.โ
If you visit the Virginia Office of the Attorney General web site, click the โAbout the Officeโ drop down button, you will not see any mention of the word โfederalโ in the duties and responsibilities of the AG, which is described asย โthe Commonwealth’s law firm. In addition to representing the interests of the people of Virginia, our clients are Virginia state government and the state agencies, boards and commissions that compose it. “
Two years ago, Dominion Energy Virginia predicted that by 2035 a residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity would pay $174 per month.ย That represented a 50% increase over the first 15 years of compliance with the Virginia Clean Economy Act.ย The current bill, just five years into the age of VCEA, is already just below $160.
It its revised integrated resource plan, filed with the State Corporation Commission last week and discussed in another Baconโs Rebellionpost today, the company is now predicting the 2035 price for that residential customer using exactly 1,000 kWh will be $255.79, which is instead a 120% increase over the cost at the time VCEA passed.
There is that $140 per month or almost $1,700 per year figure for the increased power bill cost that is popping up in some House of Delegates campaigns.ย That prediction initially came from a 2022 report issued by the Center for the American Experiment.ย And Dominionโs internal estimates are not the only ones published in the IRP.ย It has a second set of figures, higher, which use a method for estimation recommended by the SCC staff.ย
Below is the chart that Dominion included in its 2023 IRP document that predicted the cost increases for the capital plan it preferred at that time.
Source: 2023 Dominion IRP. This is for the company’s preferred proposal. CAGR is combined annual growth rate. (more…)
The North Anna nuclear plant. Think four more that big by 2045 to comply with VCEA.
If or when Dominion Energy Virginia complies with the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) and closes its hydrocarbon generation units, the best way to power Virginia will be a truly massive amount of new nuclear power.
That comes from the latest iteration of Dominionโs ever-adjusting integrated resource plan (IRP), filed with the State Corporation Commission last week. In July the SCC accepted but did not really endorse the companyโs 2024 IRP, following a long battle with environmental activists upset about its reliance on new natural gas generators.ย
One criticism of the 2024 proposal was that it covered only 15 years and thus did not reach 2045, the deadline in the VCEA for the retirement of all the companyโs coal, oil and natural gas plants. In 2024 the company still operated about 12 gigawatts of powerplants burning those fuels, mostly natural gas.ย
This document does project to 2045 and like previous IRPs offers several scenarios for maintaining reliable service to the companyโs growing customer base, now about 2.8 million customers. One scenario marked โforced retirementsโ has a plan for full VCEA compliance. It adds more than 12 gigawatts of nuclear, more than three times the size of the companyโs current four-reactor nuclear fleet.
Hey, ecowarriors, Nature Magazine has introduced the concept of the “carbon hoofprint,” which measures the carbon impact of meat across the U.S. The bottom line (according to ineluctable logic of the study) is that to save the planet, we need to eat less beef and eat more BACON!
To spare readers from the necessity of squinting, I have expanded the portion of the map displaying the hoofprints of Virginia and surrounding locales.
The carbon intensity of a city, it seems, is driven largely by the proportions of beef, poultry and pork consumed. But supply chains and the geography of “meatsheds” play a role. What’s important to know is that beef is the most carbon intensive of the meats and (based on an unscientific eyeballing of the maps below) pork is slightly more benign than chicken. Kudos to the Washington Metro. Richmond, Hampton Roads and pretty much everyone else: bad, bad, bad!
If you only read the headlines, you might think Virginiaโs economy is teetering on the brink. A recent Cardinal News story declared that the Commonwealthโs GDP growth has fallen from 6.2 percent to 1.7 percent, and touted warning signs spelled out in โthree new (economic) reportsโ that claim to show serious trouble ahead. Setting aside the fact that one of those three reports has had to revise its gloomy estimates upward after Virginia outperformed every metric they cited as reported by TJIโs Steve Haner, the implication from these reports is that Virginiaโs economy is sliding backward.
Virginiaโs reality tells a very different story.
Yes, GDP growth slowed this year. But that statistic, stripped of context, gives a distorted picture of Virginiaโs true economic health. The 6.2 percent figure the article celebrates was a short-term rebound after pandemic disruptions and included massive federal infusions; it was never sustainable. A return to 1.7 percent growth isnโt collapse โ itโs normalization far more in line with historic levels. The deeper truth is that Virginiaโs economy is restructuring in ways that will strengthen, not weaken, Virginiaโs long-term prosperity.
Beyond the GDP Headline
GDP is a lagging indicator; it measures what has already happened, not what is coming next. And whatโs coming next for Virginia is enormous. Since Governor Glenn Youngkin took office in 2022, the Commonwealth has secured more than $125 billion in new private investment, a record pace according to the Virginia Economic Development Partnership and well above the $81 billion gained under Governor Northam. Those dollars represent new plants, new jobs, and long-term tax revenue that will materialize over the next decade.
So, here we are. The morning steals upon the night. The election approaches. Two weeks to go.
About this debate last week. It raised a number of questions and not just about the two candidates for attorney general.
Jay Jones, the Democratic candidate, said he was sorry for sending out hateful text messages three years ago speculating on the violent demise of then-House Speaker Todd Gilbert and his family.
Is he? Is Jones truly sorry? A year or two ago โ or immediately after sending those comments โ did Jay say to himself, wow, maybe I shouldnโt have expressed those thoughts in a place where I might have to revisit them?
The messages were sent to a female Republican member of the House of Delegates, which is curious on its own. Did he reconsider, express regret and ask her to erase what he wrote? Once nominated for statewide office this year, did Jones anticipate potential problems and take preemptive action? Did he get out in front of it and publicly apologize? Did he seize the initiative?
Nope. He didnโt do any of those things and itโs reasonable, on that basis, to doubt the quality of his judgment.
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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