• What Democrats Will Pass First if Given Full Political Control

    By Steve Haner,

    A 137 megawatt battery storage facility in California. The previous battery bill would mandate about 140 such plants in Virginia.

    Predicting how Democrats will transform Virginia should they gain full control of state government in Novemberโ€™s election is easy. Just look through the list of 400 plus bills vetoed by Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin, most of them from 2024 and 2025.ย ย ย 

    The progressive bills which reached Youngkinโ€™s desk with unanimous or near unanimous Democratic votes and then died will stand a much greater chance of survival under Democrat Abigail Spanberger, if she wins. Sadly, few of these issues have received much attention during the long campaign season and were ignored in the single, one-hour debate, held after weeks of early voting.ย  ย 

    At a meeting last week of the legislative Commission on Electric Utility Regulation, several of the vetoed bills were reviewed with the open intent to push them though again in 2026. On top of the list were the companion bills that would amend the Virginia Clean Economy Act to include a huge amount of utility-owned long-term battery storage facilities, adding $18 to $29 billion dollars of capital costs upon utility ratepayers. ย 

    Youngkin also vetoed a bill requiring electric utilities to pay a federal prevailing wage for their own employees and contracted workers constructing or repairing electrical generation facilities. If the bill wasnโ€™t likely to produce higher pay and thus higher project costs for ratepayers, unions wouldnโ€™t be pushing it.ย  ย 

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  • Parental Involvement an Afterthought in Fairfax County Public School Prayer Rooms

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
    Republished with permission from IWFeatures

    On September 8, during the Religious Liberty Commissionโ€™s hearing at the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., President Donald Trump announced upcoming guidance from the Department of Education regarding prayer in public schools. He said, โ€œI am pleased to announce this morning that the Department of Education will soon issue new guidance protecting the right to prayer in our public schools and its total protection.โ€ 

    Leftists have criticized Trumpโ€™s support of prayer in schools and further suggested that Republican states inappropriately favor Christian teachings. But in Fairfax County Public Schools, the largest district in Virginia, if local leaders were prioritizing any religion, itโ€™s Islam.

    On September 15, parents of five minors attending a Fairfax County public high school met in private to discuss their childrenโ€™s exposure, and in a few cases, conversions, to Islam. One of the parents shared with IW Features that the conversion journey began with designated prayer time in their public school. The districtโ€™sย Regulation 1502ย states: โ€œEach school and office within the district shall provide at least one meditation and silent reflection space that is easily accessible and adequately accommodates the needs of students and staffโ€ฆ Supervision, as available, will be provided in the meditation and silent reflection space.โ€

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  • The Birds Are On the Move

    It’s mid-October, which means it’s the season for…. the leaves to turn, I’ll bet you were thinking. Yes, but just as fun, it’s peak bird migration time as our feathered friends wing it to southward to the Sunbelt and beyond. According to the people at the BirdCast research consortium, which uses weather radar and computer algorithms to compile its estimate, a record 1.25 billion birds were in flight across the nation on Sept. 23, and the number has been exceeding a billion daily since then.

    A live bird migration map showing the migration traffic across the United States, indicating high numbers of birds in flight with color-coded regions for varying migration densities.

    Luckily for Virginia bird watchers, the Old Dominion has been smack dab in the middle of the flight path the past few days.

    While I love the birds that frequent our back yard and compete with squirrels for seeds in our bird feeder, I’m not so wild about the geese. They frequently stop at the two drainage ponds in our neighborhood and leave a slimy mess all over the walking trail. Other than that, I wish our flying friends the best of luck in their southward journeys. — JAB


  • A Protege of Clarence Thomas at UVa. ?!

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Prof. Caleb E. Nelson, University of Virginia School of Law

    After reading incessantly on this blog that the faculty of the University of Virginia is hopelessly progressive and woke and that students studying there will be indoctrinated in progressive ideas that are bad for the country, imagine my surprise upon learning that one of the leading originalist interpreters of the Constitution teaches at the University of Virginia.

    Caleb E. Nelson is the Emerson G. Spies Distinguished Professor of Law of the University of Virginia Law School.ย After graduating from Harvard Law School, he clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. As noted by the New York Times, he is regarded as โ€œone of the most respected originalist scholars in the country.โ€ย His work has been cited in more than a dozen Supreme Court opinions, with each of the six members of the conservative majority citing him at least once.ย 

    Prof. Nelson says, directly, โ€œI am an originalist, and if the original meaning of the Constitution compelled [an] outcome, I would be inclined to agree that the Supreme Court should respect it until the Constitution is amended through the proper processes.โ€

    It would seem that the UVa. faculty is not as monolithic as we had been led to believe.


  • We’ve Heard It Before

    It’s not political violence, it’s political immaturity.

    by Joe Fitzgerald

    In โ€œThe Killing Joke,โ€ the Joker has kidnapped one Batman ally and crippled another to prove the world is absurd, and wants to know why Batman isnโ€™t laughing. Savagely grabbing the Joker, Batman replies, โ€œBecause Iโ€™ve heard it before and it wasnโ€™t funny the first time.โ€

    The line often pops into my head when somebody in politics does something politically stupid or something they think is politically brilliant. No, the two arenโ€™t the same, although the joke tells itself.

    Weโ€™ve heard Jay Jonesโ€™s joke before. โ€œShoot the lawyer twice,โ€ was the original ending, although โ€œshoot the political consultant twiceโ€ is one of my favorite variations. Itโ€™s not a joke about violence so much as expressing disdain for a person and then doubling down on it. No politicians were harmed in the making of this joke. Rather, itโ€™s a joke about political opportunism and immaturity.

    Jonesโ€™s opportunism first became obvious to many when he played the race card on Mark Herring. Herring had used dark makeup in a Halloween portrayal of a rap musician when he was 19. Jones, running against Herring for the attorney general nomination, said Herring, 60 by then, wasnโ€™t sufficiently apologetic. Jones at the time was running with the endorsement of Ralph Northam, who was older than 19 when he used a character in a Klan hood for his medical school yearbook photo. No hypocrites were harmed in the making of this paragraph?

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  • Taxes and Teamwork, or Just More of the Same?

    by Jon Baliles

    Property taxes in Richmond, Va., are rising without a commensurate improvement in government services.
    Image credit: Bing AI Creations

    Today Richmond’s Mayor and City Council will debate (and probably vote) on whether or not to maintain the real estate tax rate at $1.20 per $100 of assessed value or lower it four cents to offer some relief to property owners and renters. The Mayor and some on Council (probably a majority) say that the city has too many needs and cutting the rate four cents will create a $17 million shortfall in the budget that will have to be adjusted midyear; some services will have to be cut back or people laid off, etc.

    The cityโ€™s general fund budget grew by $50 million since last year and by $268 million since 2021. While needs have also increased (as they do every year), for a decade there has been no attempt to rein in spending or make sure the money that is spent is effective and accomplishing its mission. In that time, assessments and taxes have gone through the roof and are pricing people out of their homes, making homes and apartments more unaffordable for many. The city is not offering relief nor does it seem to be planning on offering any.

    In addition, a presentation given to City Council a year ago in October 2024 outlined a dire financial situation while the Stoney administration argued against a tax rate reduction. Council was told the FY2026 budget would face a $27 million deficit and by 2030, it would rise to $149 million. That presentation showed spending would increase by an average of almost 6% per year but revenue will grow by an average of about 3%. You donโ€™t need to be a math genius to figure out there is a problem there, but nothing was mentioned about making sure spending did not exceed revenue.

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  • Support Anti-Fascism by Burning the Flag of the Country that Defeated Fascism!

    A promotional flyer for an event titled 'ANTI FAscist TAILGATE' hosted by UVA Law's 'Friends Against Fascism' group, featuring a grill with flames and items like burgers and hot dogs, along with highlights including flag burning.

    by Tom Neale

    Many of you are no doubt unaware of a UVA Law student group called โ€œFriends Against Fascism.โ€ They are not an officially sponsored UVA CIO student organization. As you see in their flier, they sponsored a tailgate October 3rd ostensibly condemning fascism in America.

    The capital letters in the title spell out ANTIFA, leaving no doubt about this groupโ€™s philosophical beliefs. Although this October 3 event was not violent, it was no less abhorrent for those of us who are cognizant of the hatred ANTIFA has for our American core values. They promote discord, not civil discourse and polite debate among those with differing viewpoints, and on numerous occasions have resorted to violence during events across the nation. We donโ€™t know if the groupโ€™s founder, Kirk Wolff, is truly an ANTIFA member or meant the reference as a facetious joke. If he did, let me tell him itโ€™s not remotely funny.

    JAG, the US militaryโ€™s Judge Advocate Generals Corps located at UVA, is dedicated to legally representing our military. ย Youโ€™ll see in their flier that Friends Against Fascism extended a โ€œspecial invitationโ€ for them to attend the event.

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  • “All of the Above” Abigail? She Did Say It.

    By Steve Haner,

    “All of the Above” Abigail Spanberger

    Democratic nominee for Governor Abigail Spanberger told the October 9 statewide debate audience that she favors an โ€œall of the above strategyโ€ in addressing Virginiaโ€™s massive demand for new electricity in coming years. If she has used that phrase before in this campaign, it hasnโ€™t made the record.

    โ€œAll of the aboveโ€ is a slogan more than an energy plan, and plenty of politicians in both parties are quick to use it. It is also a stock phrase used by the Republican candidate, Winsome Earle-Sears.ย But Earle-Sears was also clear during the debate that she embraces coal and natural gas as thermal generation fuels in โ€œall of the aboveโ€, and Spanberger has never embraced either.

    The Virginia Clean Economy Act Spanberger supports calls for both fuels to be fully eliminated by utilities and created legal impediments to building new gas plants before the final deadlines for retirement. Spanberger has said in interviews that she understands the existing gas plants are not going away soon (a brave statement of the obvious) but indicated hostility to new ones in the meantime.ย Building new ones is the issue.ย 

    In responses to both Cardinal News and Inside Climate News, she said:

    โ€œAt this juncture, natural gas is going to be part of the energy mix into the futureโ€ฆ However, I think when it comes to new natural gas infrastructure, thatโ€™s where we really need to be focused and sort of thinking carefully about the lifespan of those projects and whether indeed they are the most cost-effective solution.โ€

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  • Abolish Red-Light Cameras

    Improve safety with longer yellow lights.

    by J. Kennerly Davis

    A close-up view of a traffic light equipped with a red light running camera, mounted on a pole against a clear blue sky.

    Traffic ticket revenue maximization and safety have been competing motivations for public officials since the dawn of the automobile age. This has certainly been the case with the enforcement of red-light laws.

    The first electrified traffic signal was activated in Cleveland, Ohio in 1914. For decades after that, traffic signal compliance depended on a somewhat fortuitous combination of observation and enforcement by uniformed policemen who happened to witness an individual violation.

    Things changed dramatically in 1992 when New York City began to automate enforcement by launching the first red light running camera program in the United States. Fairfax County became the first locality in Virginia to automate enforcement in 1995 when it installed red light running cameras under a temporary pilot program authorized by the General Assembly.

    The pilot program used by Fairfax County lapsed in 2005 but in 2007 the General Assembly passed legislation generally authorizing Virginiaโ€™s counties, cities, and towns to install and operate red light running camera systems to enforce compliance and support the ticketing of offenders. That legislation is codified in Section 15.2-968.1 of the Code of Virginia.ย 

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  • Jay Jones: Democrat Nightmare That Wonโ€™t Go Away

    by Kerry Dougherty

    Itโ€™s been one week since we learned that in 2022 Jay Jones wrote psychotic text messages that claimed he wanted to put two bullets in the head of GOP leader Todd Gilbert.

    One week since the Virginia elections were turned upside down after we learned that the Democrats had nominated a murderous psycho for attorney general.

    The worst part of Jonesโ€™ demented tirade? Jones claimed that Todd and his wife, Jennifer, were โ€œbreeding little fascistsโ€ and  heโ€™d like their kids to be murdered and die in the arms of their mother.

    Sick beyond words.

    A week later these words still cause revulsion – among normal people, anyway. And one week into this scandal the Democrats look more and more craven as they feign disgust with their nominee but stop short of demanding Jones to get out of the race for attorney general and seek the psychiatric help he so desperately needs.

    At last nightโ€™s gubernatorial debate the moderators tried valiantly to get Abigail Spanberger to answer the most important question of the night: Will she continue to endorse Jay Jones for attorney general?

    In response, Spanberger babbled and spouted word salads, but refused to answer.

    โ€œAs governor you have to make hard choices,โ€ Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears barked at Spanberger. โ€œWhy wonโ€™t you tell Jay Jones to get out of the race?โ€

    As the scandal unfolded, Attorney General Jason Miyares expressed, over and over, that he is most sickened by Jonesโ€™ cruel wishes for the Gilbert boys who were two and five when Jones was dreaming of their deaths.

    Continue reading.


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    A cartoon depicting a man with a charming smile, holding a phone and texting, with speech bubbles including names and phrases related to murder and politics. The text reads 'Murder, He Wrote' and references individuals in a dark comedic context.

    Find more memes at The Bull Elephant.


  • Talking SOL Testing Reform with Senator VanValkenburg

    A teacher stands at the front of a classroom holding a book, while a group of attentive children sit at their desks, looking at her. The room is bright with sunlight and educational posters on the walls.

    by Todd Truitt

    I met with Senator Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, this summer over tacos at a restaurant in his district to discuss whatโ€™s next with Virginiaโ€™s Standards of Learning (SOL) exam reform. VanValkenburg is the Chair of the Senate Public Education Subcommittee and a high school Social Studies teacher in Henrico County.

    Whoever wins the Governorโ€™s race in November, the next administration will likely be in charge of a massive 9-figure project to overhaul our assessments consistent with the 2023 work group report on assessments. That work group was convened pursuant to House Bill 585 (which was sponsored in 2022 by VanValkenburg) and conducted by the administration of Governor Glenn Youngkin.

    VanValkenburgโ€™s Philosophy on Standardized Testing

    VanValkenburg is a fierce defender of standardized testing. He believes that such assessments are crucial to our state education system for the purposes of educating children to their fullest potential and for data reasons, teaching and maintaining high academic standards. In addition, he is a strong supporter of Virginiaโ€™s testing requirement for graduation for similar reasons; Virginia is one of six remaining states with such requirement.

    As for the criticism standardized tests cause โ€œteaching to the test,โ€ he told me itโ€™s essential that any tests be of high quality and Virginiaโ€™s tests largely are not. VanValkenburg said: โ€œno one ever complains about teaching to the AP exam.โ€

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  • Bacon Meme de la Semaine: France Is Bacon

    A plate of crispy bacon strips displayed on a round tray, with a map and a book titled 'Francis Bacon' in the background.

    From frites to fine wine, from Gothic cathedrals to water-lily murals, there are many things to admire about French culture. Perhaps the least appreciated by Americans is the fact, as I discovered after two weeks in the land of berets and escargot, that the French love their porc products as much as we do. They even have bacon memes.

    Well, that may or may not be true. But a meme that has garnered Internet fame builds upon the famous saying of the 17th-century English philosopher Francis Bacon: “Knowledge Is Power: France Is Bacon”… which ultimately inspired the image above.

    The French love affair with bacon precedes Internet memes by centuries and is deeply embedded in French culture. For example, bacon is widely served for breakfast. (Good news for Americans: “crispy” bacon, as opposed to flaccid, fatty, lightly cooked bacon, seems to be making inroads.)

    A poster showcasing a Veggie Steakhouse burger with plant-based bacon, lettuce, and cheese, featuring the text 'Le bacon, C'est LA VIE'.
    Sign seen in Toulouse
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  • A View from Delaware: States Caused PJM Price, Supply Problems

    By David Stevenson,

    Dominion’s Yorktown Power Station retired in 2019, adding to PJM’s supply problems.

    PJM Interconnection, the organization that manages the electric grid for 13 states including Delaware, has confirmed what the Caesar Rodney Institute (CRI) has long argued: state mandates are raising bills and straining reliability. Delaware policymakers now face a choiceโ€”continue policies that risk higher costs and outages or adopt measures that keep power reliable and protect families from higher bills.

    For years, PJM largely went along with state energy policies, building infrastructure and running markets around political mandates, even as costs rose and reliability weakened. As complaints over rising bills mounted, state officials began deflecting blame on PJM.

    Until recently, PJMโ€™s leaders avoided confrontation, preferring a cautious approach. That stance shifted when Aftab Khan, PJMโ€™s executive vice president of operations, planning and security, published a commentary in Utility Dive. โ€œWe at PJM need realistic solutions, not politics, to take on energy challenges,โ€ Khan wrote. โ€œSome public narratives have presented an inaccurate picture of PJMโ€™s role in cost-effectively keeping the lights on. Here are the facts.โ€

    State policies urging 100% of electric power to come from wind and solar power have struggled to deliver consistent results. Baseload power plants, such as those operating on natural gas, coal, oil, hydropower, and nuclear energy, can run 24/7 and respond to high demand on hot or cold days. Wind and solar often underperform just when electricity is needed most. For example, according to the real-time data from Electricity Map:

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  • Debate’s Biggest Losers: 450,000 Early Voters and Jones

    By Derrick Max,

    Derrick Max, President and CEO of Thomas Jefferson Institute

    Last nightโ€™s first and final Virginia gubernatorial debate between Winsome Earle-Sears and Abigail Spanberger had one clear loser — the approximately 446,000 Commonwealth voters who had already cast their early ballots.  

    For a state that has such a storied civic heritage, relying on a single, late-stage debate fails the test of responsible governance. The increase in no-excuse early voting, with a 45-day window to early vote, meant that hundreds of thousands of voters cast ballots before the candidates were scrutinized through the heat of direct, unscripted questions under the lights of a debate stage. No doubt, it seems, this is exactly what the two candidates intended.     

    The lack of debates allows the candidates to curate their image through campaign ads and partisan talking points, rather than a direct, head-to-head comparison on the issues that truly matter. Early voters were thus denied the opportunity to see if the two candidates for Virginiaโ€™s highest office can think on their feet, know the issues, or have a vision for how to lead.

    The other clear loser in last nightโ€™s debate was Jay Jones, the Democratic nominee for Attorney General whose text messages wishing โ€œtwo bulletsโ€ to murder then Speaker of the House Todd Gilbert โ€“ and the death of his children — were leaked by an unwitting recipient who was included accidentally in the violent text thread two years earlier. Jones then followed up the text messages with a phone call where he tried to justify his views and doubled down on his extremely violent text rhetoric. 

    Winsome Earle-Sears called for Jones to drop out of the race, and pressed Abigail Spanberger to do the same. Spanbergerโ€™s refusal to do so looked weak, and difficult to understand considering her clear denunciation of Jones for sending the repugnant text messages. For Jones, to have both candidates at the top of the ticket roundly denouncing his actions was a sure blow to his candidacy. 

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