• Be Careful What You Wish For

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Wren Building, College of William and Mary

    President Trump has directed the Secretary of Education to expand the reporting requirements of institutions of higher education in order to determine if any of those bodies are still using race as an admissions criterion.

    Accordingly, the Secretary has directed the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) to collect the following data from each higher ed institution, disaggregated by race and sex:

    For applicants and admitted students:

    1. Standardized test scores
    2. Final grade point averages
    3. First-generation-college student status

    For enrolled cohorts:

    • Graduation rates
    • Financial aid offered
    • Financial aid provided

    In her directive, the Secretary directed NCES โ€œto develop a rigorous assurance process for reported dataโ€ in order to โ€œensure the information collected by the Department is accurate and reliable.โ€

    These directives raise a host of questions and policy issues.

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  • Restoring Arlington Cemeteryโ€™s Reconciliation Monument

    The restoration of a monument in Arlington Cemetery may serve as the spiritual portal that brings America back to its origin in greatness.

    A statue on a pedestal surrounded by white gravestones and pink cherry blossom trees in Arlington Cemetery.
    Arlington National Cemetery photo by Rachel Larue

    by Scott Powell

    The attack on normalcy, traditions, and history in America intensified in 2020 with Covid-19 lockdowns and the riots catalyzed by the death of George Floyd.ย When destruction then turned under the Congressional Naming Commission to the icons associated with the Confederacy of the Civil War period, the Reconciliation Monument in Arlington Cemetery came into the crosshairs.ย It was removed from Arlington on Dec. 16, 2023,ย despite longstanding traditions and laws against desecrating gravesites. The Reconciliation Monument was the last work of the sculptor Moses Ezekiel, and he chose the monumentโ€™s location as his burial ground, making the monument his headstone.ย 

    Now with the Trump administrationโ€™s priority to revive Americansโ€™ appreciation of their heritage, this somewhat obscure monument is in the spotlight. And for good reason, because the Reconciliation Monument can serve as the catalyst and spiritual portal that bring America back to its origin in greatness as the nation of โ€œe pluribus unumโ€ โ€” meaning one out of many.

    In a recent post on X, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reiterated that the reinstatement of the 1914 Reconciliation Monument, which celebrates the bringing together of the South and the North after decades of post-Civil War division, was important because it fosters the unity of America, and its removal by โ€œwoke lemmingsโ€ in 2023 was inconsistent with honesty and openness about the past. The secretary added: โ€œUnlike the Left, we donโ€™t believe in erasing American history โ€” we honor it.โ€ The Reconciliation Monument is projected to be restored to Arlington in 2027.

    Most Americans may not realize the full cultural and spiritual significance of restoring this monument to its rightful place in Arlington Cemetery. In this time of intense spiritual warfare against traditional values and constitutional America, we certainly need to preserve and restore historical monuments. But we also need to go on the offense and uphold the American values that inspired these great markers of history. And the Reconciliation Monument compels such action better than any other monument in Arlington and beyond.

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  • Miyares Excoriates “Utter Travesty” Against Women Swimmers

    by Scott Dreyer

    A man in a navy suit and striped tie standing in front of a blue backdrop, appearing to speak or address an audience.
    Attorney General Jason Miyares at Aug. 25, 2025, press conference in Salem.

    At 10:30 a.m. on August 25, Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares held a press conference at the Salem library to reveal his officeโ€™s investigation into alleged abuse by Roanoke College officials against members of the 2023-24 womenโ€™s swim team.

    About twenty people attended the event, including five Roanoke County elected officials, some local media, and members of Miyaresโ€™ office and campaign staff. No one from Roanoke College administration was present.

    Bill Bock, attorney for two members of the swim team, opened the conference by pointing out the unfairness the lady swimmers had faced. โ€œPublicly available data indicates that about 54.4% of Roanoke Collegeโ€™s full-time students are female. Yet some 58% of varsity athletic roster spots at Roanoke College are on male teams. That means thatย males at Roanoke College have more than one hundred more varsity roster spots than do females, even though about 45% of the entire student population is male.โ€

    Bock added that two members of the team โ€œfiled discrimination claims with the Virginia Attorney General because in 2023, not only did Roanoke College have far fewer varsity athletic roster spots for women than men, but that year Roanoke College actively supported a former swimmer from the (โ€ฆ) menโ€™s swim team moving over to the womenโ€™s swim team, merely because this man claimed a female gender identity.

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  • The Inherent Conflict of Interest in Bargaining with Public-Sector Unions

    A group of men in formal attire gathered around a table filled with stacks of money, engaged in discussion. Behind them, several signs with political messages can be seen, indicating a focus on labor and economic issues.
    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    by J. Kennerly Davis

    In the spring of 2020 — with Democrats controlling the Senate, the House of Delegates, and the Governorโ€™s mansion โ€“ the General Assembly narrowly passed and Governor Northam signed HB-582, now set out in Section 40.1-57.2 of the Code of Virginia. That law, enacted during the widely disorienting onset of Covid, marked a dramatic change in Virginia labor law, and it represents gross legislative malfeasance that cries out for repeal.

    Prior to the enactment of HB-582, public employee collective bargaining was prohibited by state law. This prohibition was consistent with long-established practice across the country.

    The 2020 law significantly altered the landscape in Virginia. It repealed the state prohibition on public-sector collective bargaining and now allows localities โ€“ counties, cities, and towns โ€“ to formally recognize labor unions and other employee associations as bargaining agents and to enter into collective bargaining agreements with those agents.

    If a local government does not adopt an ordinance recognizing a bargaining agent, employees of that government can form a unit, request collective bargaining, and force the local government to vote on recognition within 120 days.

    Since the law took effect on May Day 2021, public sector unions and their supporters have pressured local governments across the commonwealth for recognition of bargaining agents. Several cities and counties, including Alexandria, Richmond, Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun, and Prince William, have adopted ordinances or resolutions allowing public sector collective bargaining, and union activities in those localities are steadily advancing.

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  • Married Moms Twice as Likely to Be “Very Happy”

    Married women receive more physical touch and are less lonely than single or childless women

    Bar graph showing the estimated share of U.S. women ages 25-55 who report being 'very happy' across different categories: married with children (19%), married without children (11%), unmarried with children (13%), and unmarried without children (10%).

    Press release from the Charlottesville-based Institute for Family Studies:

    A new YouGov survey, sponsored by the Institute for Family Studies with the Wheatley Institute, finds that married women are more likely than their unmarried counterparts to report feeling deep connection and meaning in their relationships and are less likely to report being lonely.

    The 2025 Womenโ€™s Well-being Survey (WWS) of 3,000 women in the US aged 25-55 found that married mothers reported higher levels of happiness and physical touch, as well as less loneliness, than their unmarried or childless counterparts.

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  • Punish Perverse Beltway Counties by Cutting Transportation Funding

    Northern Virginia counties that let students use the opposite sexโ€™s bathrooms and locker rooms can pay to pave their own streets. We wonโ€™t.

    A sign for an all-gender restroom on the left and a congested highway filled with traffic on the right.
    Image credit: Restoration News

    by Jacob Grandstaff

    President Donald Trumpโ€™s administration should pull all Department of Transportation funding from counties and cities whose school boards continue to push far-left gender ideology. A good place to start would be in the heart of the swampโ€”the Washington, D.C. suburbs.

    The school districts in Alexandria, Prince William, Fairfax, Arlington, and Loudoun County continually defy the Department of Educationโ€™s order on required gender norms and policies. These leftist-controlled districts prioritize radical gender ideology over student safety and biological reality, allowing boys who identify as girls into female restrooms and locker rooms, and vice versa. This perversion not only endangers students but mocks commonsense protections under Title IX, which was meant to safeguard womenโ€™s spaces.

    As a result, the Department of Education announced it will pull all federal funds from these school districts. This is a start, but itโ€™s insufficient. Federal education funding makes up a tiny proportion of local school budgets, and certainly not enough to force compliance in wealthy areas like the D.C. suburbs. To truly force change, Trump must hit them where it hurtsโ€”their roads, bridges, and transit systems funded by the Department of Transportation.

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  • Hey, Virginia Beach, Check Your Begrudgery

    by Kerry Dougherty

    There I was, tiptoeing back into the news on Sunday afternoon when I stumbled on an alarming WVEC 13 News Facebook post: โ€œState Police Probe โ€˜Sensitiveโ€™ Situation in Virginia Beach, Urge Public To Avoid Bay Colony Area.โ€

    There I was, tiptoeing back into the news on Sunday afternoon when I stumbled on an alarming WVEC 13 News Facebook post: โ€œState Police Probe โ€˜Sensitiveโ€™ Situation in Virginia Beach, Urge Public To Avoid Bay Colony Area.โ€

    Facebook post from WVEC 13 News alerting about a 'sensitive' situation being investigated by state police in Virginia Beach, advising the public to avoid the Bay Colony area.

    Wait. What? 

    It was an oddly worded headline. A โ€œsensitive situationโ€? Who writes these things? As it turned out a 40-year old homeless man was shot to death when he attempted to break into the home of a State Police Special Agent who lives on Lee Road in Bay Colony.

    Crime isnโ€™t non-existent in this upscale area, but shootings? Rare. Very rare. 

    No surprise there were hundreds of comments on Facebook. What WAS surprising was the tone. 

    Looks like Virginia Beach suffers from a rip-roaring case of begrudgery. Continue reading.


  • Former Swim Team Captain Exposes Abusive, Vengeful Staff

    A young woman wearing a Roanoke College swimming shirt stands at a podium during a press conference.
    Roanoke College Swim Team Captain Lily Mullens Oct. 5, 2023. (WSLS/YouTube screenshot)

    by Scott Dreyer

    On August 25, Attorney General Jason Miyares held a press conference at the Salem library to share the findings of his officeโ€™s investigation into how Roanoke College treated members of its womenโ€™s swim team, a controversy that first erupted in the fall of 2023 and went on to make national headlines. Miyares claimed that not only did his office find that Roanoke College violated the swimmersโ€™ civil rights, but also violated the Virginia Human Rights Act and federal Title XI, which was created in 1972 to guarantee equal access to sports for females.

    Cady Mullens read a statement on behalf of her daughter Lily Mullens, one of the complainants in the Attorney Generalโ€™s investigation of Roanoke College, who could not attend the conference due to work obligations.

    โ€œI am Lily Mullens, the former captain of the Roanoke College Womenโ€™s Swim Team. Iโ€™m here today with a heavy but hopeful heart, sharing an experience thatโ€™s honestly been the hardest thing Iโ€™ve ever gone through. Two years ago, my teammates and I returned to campus with college dreams of an amazing swim season. But that optimism was shattered when we learned a male swimmer was joining our womenโ€™s team, and we realized that instead of focusing on training and our studies, we would be entering into a battle against our own school and the NCAA for our very basic rights, to compete fairly with and against other female swimmers and to speak freely in defense of our own fair treatment.

    โ€œWhat followed was a grueling ordeal that took a tremendous toll on my mental health, physical well-being, and emotional strength. My teammates and I faced anxiety, sleepless nights, and a sense of defeat and abandonment, knowing biology stacked the odds against us. The leaders responsible for ensuring a safe and lawful educational experience were not only indifferent to our discrimination but actively retaliated against us, upset that we wouldnโ€™t prioritize a manโ€™s feelings above our own rights and accomplishments. At times, the backlash on campus left me so fearful, I became a prisoner in my own dorm room.

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  • The Future of News?

    Restoration News has a thoughtful essay by Matt Wolfson about Jeff Bezos’ makeover of The Washington Post, the largest provider of state/local news in Virginia. Although Bezos is pushing the Post’s op-ed section to embrace liberty and free markets, Wolfson sees the Amazon CEO’s moves as a deep-state power play.

    His conclusion: “This is media-as-cartel: A monopolization of information by a small number of connected players who can set the terms of its release, and even stop some information from being released at all. It is an unprecedented threat to Americaโ€™s constitutional republic andย the free flow of public opinionย on which our founders knew it to depend.”

    In this view, state/local news reporting is very much the tail of the dog — indeed, hair on the tail of the dog. How that coverage is structured and resourced likely hinges largely upon decisions made for strategic reasons that have nothing to do with Virginia’s wellbeing. — JAB


  • Our Family Survived Four Days Without Cell Phones!

    by Kerry Dougherty

    A historic building with multiple balconies, surrounded by a vibrant garden featuring various plants and flowers.
    Shrine Mont

    They say that when people look back on their happiest children experiences they rarely reminisce about the big trips or visits to plastic theme parks like Disney World.

    Nope. Our fondest memories center around the time we spend relaxing with loved ones.

    Itโ€™s the small moments, the quality family time that stick with us.

    That sounds right.

    My happiest childhood memories almost always settle on our annual family camping trips: the Jersey Shore, Niagara Falls, Maine, West Virginia.

    It wasnโ€™t the destinations that I remember. It was the long car rides where we played license plate games, sang, told stories to pass the time. I donโ€™t remember any fancy meals, but I do recall the food we shared at splintered roadside picnic tables.

    With that in mind, my daughter and I decided to plan a four-day last-gasp-of-summer getaway for five adults and three kids, who range in age from four months to nine years.

    Where do you go to spend a couple of days of relaxation – with an infant – without breaking the bank?

    โ€œWhat about Shrine Mont?โ€ I suggested.

    Last summer a friend and I spent a weekend in Orkney Springs, Va. at a quirky, old-fashioned church retreat center. We werenโ€™t there for spiritual growth. We were there for a pickleball camp.

    We came away enchanted and vowed weโ€™d be back with our families. Continue reading.


  • Who Are the Haters Now?

    by Chap Petersen

    Ten years ago, withย the initial rise of Donald Trump, a yard sign began popping up in the yards of right-thinking progressives: “Hate Has No Home Here.”

    The message was effective, promoting the righteousnessย of the homeowner while demonizing “the other.” A moral hierarchy was established.

    Funny, how that seems a long time ago.

    Last Thursday, the Lt. Governor of Virginia, a black woman and first-generation immigrant, was speaking before the Arlington School Board on its decision to let students use bathrooms based on identified, rather than biological, sex. ย Protestors surrounded the meeting to protest her speech. One of them held up a sign which stated the following:

    A protestor holds a sign reading 'HEY WINSOME, IF TRANS CAN'T SHARE YOUR BATHROOM THEN BLACKS CAN'T SHARE MY WATER FOUNTAIN' during a demonstration outside a school board meeting, surrounded by other demonstrators carrying various signs.

    In other words, if you don’t agree with our position on “trans” kids in school, we will return this state (and you) to its segregated past.

    Political activists say a lot of dumb things. But what was so disturbing about this message was that it was written in big block letters and openly displayed for an extended time in the most liberal community in Virginia — without anybody objecting. (To her credit, Abigail Spanberger quickly and firmly condemned the offensive sign).

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  • Bacon Meme of the Week

    A humorous graphic featuring crispy bacon strips with text that plays on a riddle about what someone would have if they took pieces of bacon.

  • The Governor’s Race

    Polls, common sense, Eskimo Pie, $$$, tonsils

    Happy group of diverse people celebrating in front of a chart showing increasing votes, with money bags in the foreground.

    by Gordon C. Morse

    Just like that, Virginia Lt. Gov. Earle-Sears, the Republican candidate for governor, has seen a significant improvement in her race with former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, the Democrat.

    This news came via Roanoke College, whose polling folks calculated a few months ago that Earle-Sears trailed Spanberger by 17 points. That seemed to be a sizable gap โ€“ sizable enough to make you wonder if Earle-Sears would enter the fall as a viable candidate. Virginiaโ€™s quadrennial exercise in gubernatorial selection could conceivably lay an egg.

    Now the chicken, the egg, whatever, has recovered and Earle-Sears trails by only 7 points, says Roanoke College.

    The other preferred metaphor involves resuscitation or even resurrection. Sheโ€™s not flatlining anymore; sheโ€™s not comatose; thereโ€™s a pulse.

    Then again, another recent poll โ€“ this one from Old Dominion University and completed online โ€“ invites Earle-Sears back into the ER. Furrowed brows all around.

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  • A Cautionary Tale for Republican Appointees

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Todd Gilbert Photo credit: Roanoke Times

    In a surprise move, Todd Gilbert has resigned his position as acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia.ย  Gilbert, a stalwart conservative Republican and former Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, had been in the position for a little over a month.ย  Gilbert offered no explanation for his resignation.

    Brandon Jarvis, who publishes the Virginia Political Newsletter, reports that the story among insiders is that Gilbert was forced out by the Trump administration because he dared to buck the leaders in Washington. 

    Time for a little background.  Virginiaโ€™s Senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, had submitted two recommendations to the Trump administration: Gilbert and Rober Tracci, former Commonwealthโ€™s attorney in Charlottesville.  Trump nominated Gilbert, who was then sworn in as the interim U.S. Attorney, awaiting confirmation by the Senate.  Gilbert called it the opportunity of a lifetime.

    According to Jarvisโ€™ sources, โ€œthe White House wanted him to replace an employee who worked in the office under the Biden administration and hire Robert Tracci, who was the other person in contention with Gilbert for the appointment.โ€  Gilbert pushed back, citing his prerogative to hire his own choices for his staff.   He eventually gave in and hired Tracci as the number two official in the office. 

    Gilbertโ€™s display of independence must have irked or alarmed someone in the White House, because word soon came down that the President would withdraw his nomination unless he resigned.

    Tracci is now acting U.S. Attorney.


  • Maybe Ryan Should Have Toughed it Out

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    The Trump administration has found that George Mason University (GMU) has violated federal law with its DEI policies.ย A spokesman for the Dept. of Education said, GMU “waged a university-wide campaign to implement unlawful DEI policies that intentionally discriminate on the basis of race.”

    The penalty?ย The president of the university, Gregory Washington, must publicly apologize for his actions and pledge to follow the law. In addition, the Richmond Times Dispatch reports, โ€œthe school must review its policies and documents, such as instructions for hiring panels and scoring rubrics for resumes, to ensure they comply with Title VI. And Mason must conduct an annual training for administrators who make hires and promotions.โ€

    Wow!ย Thatโ€™s it for such serious offenses?ย All he has to do is apologize and promise not to do it again?ย At UVa., the president had to resign.ย At Harvard, Columbia, and Brown, fines are in the tens and hundreds of millions of dollars.ย The administration is seeking a $1 billion settlement against UCLA.ย  Trump is obviously going after schools with deep pockets and lots of federal research grants.ย There is not that kind of leverage against a large, public university that has a relatively small research budget. In addition, thumping GMU does not generate the national headlines.

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