• A Call for Civility

    Virginians are desperate for a change in tone. The Charlie Kirk memorial at UVA hit all the right notes.

    I was proud of the University of Virginia students speaking last evening at the Charlie Kirk memorial held in Cabell Hall. The message was pitch-perfect: a celebration (as advertised) of free speech and civil dialogue. The students’ uplifting message was echoed by Attorney General Jason Miyares and UVA faculty legends Larry Sabato and Ken Elzinga.

    Since Kirk’s assassination, social media has been its usual cesspool. Left and right affixing blame for political violence upon the other. Lefties tut-tutting that violence was not justified but Charlie Kirk was a horrible person, others celebrating his death openly. Their counterparts on the right tarring all Democrats, progressives, and leftists with extremist sentiments expressed on Tik Tok and Twitter.

    The UVA students sponsoring the UVA Kirk memorial — Young Americans for Freedom, the College Republicans, Turning Point USA — stayed positive. They did not call for vengeance but for forgiveness. They did not demonize those with different views. They called for comity, for engaging with and listening to others.

    As the country immolates itself with hatred and political violence, this is a message that most Americans desperately want to hear.

    Readers may have noticed that I have significantly cut back my posts on Bacon’s Rebellion. I make an exception today, before heading off for a two-week vacation in France. (For what it’s worth, the atmosphere in France is just as ugly as it is here. The center is not merely eroding. It has collapsed. Demonstrations and strikes are breaking out everywhere.) I am hoping against hope that, thanks to events like the UVA memorial and another taking place at Virginia Tech today, the mood in Virginia will be a little less rancorous when I return. — JAB


  • As MAGA As Ever

    A man with a beard and short hair speaks into a microphone, wearing a suit and tie, with an American flag backdrop behind him.
    John Reid

    John Reidโ€™s endorsement by Joe Morrissey won’t fool voters into thinking he’s a political moderate.ย 

    by Paul Goldmanย ย 

    Radio show host John Reid got nominated by accident when the likely GOP Lt. Governor primary winner dropped out. Soon Reid, now the GOP LG nominee by law, chose to engage in a public feud with GOP Gov. Youngkin. In that regard, Reid seemed toย suggest Youngkin was anti-gay when apparently the Governorโ€™s political folks tried to get Reid — openly gay — to drop off the GOP ticket. This instantly made Reid the poster boy for the anti-Youngkin MAGA GOP folks loyal to President Trump. He eagerly embraced them despite the basic anti-equality bias of the MAGA movement

    I wrote about these events months ago, predicting they showed that John Reid wasnโ€™t ready for prime time as a statewide political candidate. Before he got embroiled in the statewide politics at the candidate level, John had been perhaps the most successful political radio host in Virginia.ย 

    But thereโ€™s a world of difference between radio show host politics, and politics at the statewide candidate level.

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  • If Politics Ruined PJM, is More Political Control the Fix? Maybe.

    Former FERC Chair Mark Christie

    by Steve Haner

    State elected leaders want more control over the regional electricity marketplace that manages the power grid in Virginia and 12 other neighboring states.ย They have a point in their complaints about PJM Interconnection Inc.โ€™s problems but they are also deeply engaged in blame shifting for higher energy costs.ย 

    Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) was one the several state governors who called Monday for major changes in the governance of the regional transmission grid operator, with an open threat that Virginia might leave entirely if demanded reforms were not adopted.ย The speech was covered by the Richmond Times-Dispatch, but with little focus on just want Youngkin and the others are asking for. Youngkin also said nothing about what would replace PJM, given Virginia is a major power importer.

    Top on the governorsโ€™ joint list of reforms is an opportunity to choose, or at least nominate, two members for the 8-seat PJM governing board.ย What Youngkin and the newspaper didnโ€™t mention is that one of the names they put forward is Mark Christie.ย Christie is the former chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and spent 17 years on the Virginia State Corporation Commission. He spoke right after Youngkin.

    PJM, one of several regional transmission organizations around the country regulated by FERC, is currently governed by a board chosen by the multiple generation and transmission companies which are part of its network.ย Some of the most controversial energy decisions within its footprint, from eastern North Carolina to west of Chicago, are largely out of the control of state and local authorities.

    Christieโ€™s prepared remarks, which he shared with Baconโ€™s Rebellion, and we share with you in full (with some of the acronyms explained), get into that history. A key excerpt follows:

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  • And in More Charlie Kirk-Related Developments in Virginia….

    ***** Sponsored Content *****

    A graphic promoting a community gathering titled 'Free Speech & Civil Discourse' in honor of Charlie Kirk, featuring silhouettes of diverse people, with event details including date, time, and location.

    This memorial to Charlie Kirk focusing on free speech and civil discourse is being organized by the University of Virginia chapters of the Young Americans for Freedom, College Republicans, and Turning Point USA. Charlottesville residents are encouraged to participate in person. Others may watch it remotely. Click here to view the livestreamed event when it begins at 5:00 p.m. today.


  • “Comeback Tour” at Virginia Tech to Honor Charlie Kirk

    by Scott Dreyer

    Virginia Tech

    As our region and nation reel from the senseless violence that recently stole the life of conservative icon and free-speech advocate Charlie Kirk, there is also a sense among many that a kind of invisible line has been crossed: not only how has political violence struck America again, but how can some publicly take a ghoulish delight in the cold-blooded murder of a 31-year-old, leaving his wife a widow and his two children, ages 3 and 6, fatherless and now too youngย to ever hold any memories of their dad?

    Among those posting to social media expressing opinions that can be interpreted as condoning, excusing, or even celebrating Kirkโ€™s assassination are a nurse at LewisGale, an employee of the Roanoke City Police Department, and professors at both Roanoke College and Virginia Tech. 

    The Roanoke Star has reached out to those entities for statements; these stories are developing.

    Not only are some celebrating the bloodshed, but others seemย to now beย threatening other conservatives with violence, apparently in hopes of silencing them.

    For example, leftwing talker Keith Olbermann seemed to threaten CNN commentator Scott Jennings with a tweet on X, โ€œYouโ€™re next, (expletive),โ€ a tweet Olbermann later deleted but which Jennings flagged for FBI Director Kash Patel to investigate.

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  • All the Lovely People

    A cartoon pig wearing glasses and a suit stands in front of a blackboard, gesturing as if giving a presentation.

    Charlottesville writer Scott Johnston’s new book is a lark, but it makes a serious point about society’s new norms, status seeking, and virtue signaling in the wealthy enclaves of New York.

    Listen to the latest Oinkonomics podcast.


    James Bacon: Hello, everybody. I’m Jim Bacon, and this is the Oinkonomics Podcast.

    A man with grey hair and a beard is speaking into a microphone at a public event, wearing a blue checked shirt and a dark blazer, set against a teal backdrop.
    Scott Johnston

    American society seems more divided than at any time since the 1960s, when the Vietnam War was raging and the Civil Rights Movement was at its peak. What’s really scary today is that we’re not at war, and the gains of the Civil Rights Movement have been consolidated and institutionalized. What is driving the discord? The root of the increasingly acrimonious divisions in our society, I would argue, has been the spread of critical theory, and the reactions, and perhaps overreactions to it.

    Very few Americans can actually define critical theory. Not many have even heard of it. But its precepts have trickled down through academia, school systems, and elite media into the popular culture. Basically, critical theory views human interactions through the paradigm of oppressors and oppressed. This set of ideas is commonly referred to as wokeness.

    Today, I am talking to Scott Johnston, a Charlottesville novelist, about his latest work, โ€œThe Sanderson’s Fail Manhattan.โ€ The novel is set in Manhattan, not Virginia. But it explores how wokeness plays out, not just in academia and politics, but in the everyday interactions of the educated elites who have most fully embraced it. โ€œThe Sanderson’s Fail Manhattanโ€ takes place in New York City, but it easily could have been set in Fairfax County.

    Scott is a Northerner, transplanted to Virginia. He graduated from Yale, worked on Wall Street, and launched several successful businesses. His 2019 novel, Campusland, skewers political correctness run amok at his alma mater. It’s hilarious, and I recommend it highly. He explores similar themes in the Sanderson’s Fail Manhattan, which was published this summer.

    Good day to you, Scott.

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  • Another Virginia Trump Nominee Runs Afoul of Trump

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Erik Seibert, former interim U.S. Attorney, Eastern District of Virginia

    Poor Donald Trump.ย  His appointments as U.S. Attorney in Virginia are proving to have too much independence and integrity.ย First there was Todd Gilbert in the Western District.ย Now, there is Erik Seibert in the Eastern District.

    Seibertโ€™s office was overseeing the investigation of Letitia James, New York Attorney General, for mortgage fraud regarding her purchase of a house in Norfolk.ย After he refused to seek an indictment after investigators were unable to find incriminating evidence of fraud, the Trump administration made it clear that it wanted him out.ย He then resigned.ย Unlike Gilbertโ€™s resignation, this one made national news.

    Seibert had been serving as the interim U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District since January. In May, President Trump formally nominated him for the U.S. Attorney position.ย Both of Virginiaโ€™s Democrat Senators, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, had supported Seibert.

    Shortly after appointing Culpeper attorney Mary Cleary to be the interim U.S. Attorney, Trump announced that he intended to nominate White House aide, Lindsay Halligan, for the post. Halligan had been one of Trumpโ€™s attorneys in the case regarding his retention of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago.ย  Most recently she has been in charge of removing โ€œimproper ideologyโ€ at the Smithsonian.ย Halligan has no prosecutorial experience.ย Before joining the Trump defense team in the Mar-a-Lago case, she had primarily handled insurance claims.

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  • Signs of the Times

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Campaign sign for Abigail Spanberger, featuring her name and the word 'Governor' against a blue background.

    This weekend I spent time in the center of Virginia. That would be that area west of I-95, south of I-64, and east of the Blue Ridge–encompassing Powhatan, Buckingham, Cumberland, Campbell, Bedford, and Franklin counties. Some I just passed through on the main highway (Rt. 60); others I spend more time in on lesser roads. The weather was gorgeous; the roadside goldenrod glorious.

    A campaign sign for Winsome Earle-Sears for Governor 2025, featuring her image and the outline of Virginia, set in a landscaped yard.

    This is Republican country; deep red. Youngkin carried it with 77 percent of the vote in 2021; Trump got 73 percent last year. All the General Assembly members from these counties are Republicans; their representative in Congress is a Republican.

    Last year, anyone driving through this area would have been overwhelmed with campaign signs for Trump. This year is notable for the lack of campaign signs.

    There were some signs for Earle-Sears scattered throughout, but not many, considering the large area covered. What surprised me were the signs for Spanberger. There were almost as many, if not as many, as there were for Earle-Sears. (I wasn’t keeping an actual count, so this report is based on my impressions. And, after all, in politics, that is usually what counts.) One interesting note was the presence of signs for Miyares. There was one large, banner sign for him, as well as an occasional yard sign.

    I am not sure what this signifies, if anything. It could be a sign that Republicans in this area are either not excited about the election itself or not excited about Earle-Sears. Either way, that could mean be another sign that she is in trouble.


  • Jeanine’s Memes

    A joyful older man sitting at a desk with a laptop, holding a coffee mug. The top text reads, 'TAXES ARE THE PRICE WE PAY FOR A CIVILIZED SOCIETY.' The bottom text states, 'I SHOULD BE GETTING A HUGE TAX REFUND CHECK NEXT YEAR.'

    View more memes at The Bull Elephant.


  • From the Classroom to the Culture War

    by Kerry Dougherty

    A close-up of the book cover titled 'Culture-Bending Narratives' by Jason Locy, displayed on a stack of books with a soft focus background.

    Earlier this year โ€œMorning Joeโ€ host, Joe Scarborough, said his daughter, a student at the University of Virginia, is afraid to raise her hand in class. โ€œIf she says anything polticallly incorrect she knows sheโ€™ll immediately be cancelled,โ€ he said.

    Great.

    It happens everywhere. Colleges and universities have become intolerant left-wing indoctrination centers.Several days ago, I stumbled upon this essay on Facebook. The author gave me permission to reprint it, but asked to remain anonymous. I suspect itโ€™s because of some of the backlash he got on his post.

    He attended another Virginia state university.

    The Dangerous Redefinition of Words And The Legacy of Charlie Kirk

    It’s time we stop trying to silence each other and listen. When I was in college, I watched newly graduated professors change the definition of words to mean something completely different from their etymological roots, to suit an ideological agenda.

    When asked to define “racism” in a mandated sociology class, I replied something along the lines of – “prejudice of another based on the other’s ethnic background or race” – my sociology professor, a freshly minted Ph.D from UT, told me I was wrong – that it actually is “the oppression of one group by a class with more power” or some other postmodern redefinition, conveniently none of which had to do with race, the literal root word of “racism”.

    When I asked “If a black person who owns a restaurant refuses service to a white person simply because they are white, is that racism?” I was told “No”, because “black people are systemically or structurally oppressed” or something along these lines.

    Regardless of the truth of black people being an oppressed class or not, changing the definition of “racism” to not include “race” meant something was terribly wrong here. If I didn’t go along with the redefinition of the word, I was academically penalized. I got a C on the exam where this was later asked.

    Guess why? Continue reading.


  • Bacon in the News: Joe Luter RIP

    A smiling older man with gray hair, wearing a blue and white striped shirt, seated indoors.
    Joe Luter

    Joe Luter, the Norfolk-born businessman who rescued Smithfield Foods from near bankruptcy and built it into the nation’s largest producer of pork products, passed away last month. Read his obituary here. The size of the bacon market was estimated to be $15.2 billion in 2024. According to one online source, Virginia-based Smithfield accounted for 27% of the U.S. bacon market in 2022. And according to a highly credible source (me), Smithfield’s smoked bacon is incredibly delicious.

    Smithfield thick cut bacon packaging, featuring cherrywood smoked bacon with a bowl of food in the background.

    For what it’s worth, Luter had retired from Smithfield before corporate leadership agreed to sell the company to a Chinese corporation. China represents the world’s largest market for pork products. Fortunately for Americans, the Chinese have never developed a taste for American-style bacon, so the bacon that Smithfield makes in the U.S. stays in the U.S. — JAB


  • Teacher Pay and Student Performance

    A scatter plot titled 'State by State: Rising Payrolls, Falling Performance' showing the relationship between changes in school payroll percentages from 2019 to 2023 and changes in NAEP rankings from 2019 to 2024, with Virginia marked as an outlier.

    In a newly published study, Open the Books calculated the relationship between the increase in a state’s average teacher pay between 2019-2023 and the increase (or decrease) in NAEP (National Assessment for Educational Progress) test performance between 2019 and 2024. It found a mild negative correlation: “Higher overhead costs are associated with lower test scores.”

    Virginia is a serious outlier. Pay increases (31%) in the Old Dominion exceeded those in all but four other states, while the drop in NAEP ranking (15 places) was the second worst in the nation. I invite readers to chew upon these numbers in the comments. Continue reading to see the data. — JAB

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  • New Scholarship Tax Credit Hangs on Future State Decision

    By Derrick Max

    As early voting in the gubernatorial race in Virginia is about to begin, students in the Commonwealth hang in the balance.ย  While Governor Glenn Youngkin (R) was able to implement a landmark school accountability measure that will help inform parents and the public about our studentsโ€™ true performance, most of his other efforts at more fundamental education reforms were blocked by the progressives in the General Assembly.ย  ย 

    Now, a landmark federal education reform has drawn a sharp new line in the sand. The question for every Virginian, and most critically for gubernatorial candidates Abigail Spanberger and Winsome Earle-Sears, is this: Will our next governor embrace the transformative potential of the Federal Scholarship Tax Credit (FSTC) established in the Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA), or will she slam the door on a generation of students?ย  The tax credit will be available in states which have agreed to participate beginning in 2027.ย 

    From a free-market perspective, the diagnosis of what ails our public school system is clear. For too long, we have treated education as a one-size-fits-all government monopoly, with a top-down bureaucracy more responsive to powerful teachers’ unions than to the needs of students and families. The result? Stagnation, a lack of accountability, and children, particularly those from low-income families, trapped in underperforming schools.ย 

    The data in Virginia is a damning indictment of this status quo. While we have seen significant increases in per pupil spending in Virginia, we are getting very little for this investment.ย  On the 2024 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), a mere 31% of Virginia’s fourth graders were proficient in reading, and only 40% in math. The numbers are even more grim for eighth graders, with only 29% proficient in both subjects. The state’s own Standards of Learning (SOL) tests paint a slightly rosier picture this year, but continue to be a deeply misleading, picture, creating an “honesty gap” that masks the true depth of the crisis from parents. Virginia was also ranked dead last in the nation for math recovery and 41st for reading recovery between 2019 and 2024. This is not just a failure; it is a betrayal of our children’s future.ย 

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  • Fairfax School Leaders Wonโ€™t Say Why They Are Destroying Studentsโ€™ Identification Documents

    by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
    Republished with permission from IW Features.

    Fairfax County Public Schools Superintendent Michelle Reid seems to be playing dumb about her districtโ€™s directive to destroy student identification records. As I previously reported inย IW Features, Fairfax County Public Schools issued new guidance to school registrars this summer, telling them to purge copies and digital uploads of studentsโ€™ personal identification documents from school records.ย 

    On July 1, Dave Anderson, Fairfax County Public Schoolsโ€™ senior district manager for student registration, sent anย emailย to school-based registrars โ€“ labeled as confidential โ€“ that states: โ€œBased on recent Division Counsel guidance reflective of FCPS Policy and the Code of Virginia, FCPS will no longer retain copies of identification documents, including the student birth certificate, in the studentโ€™s cumulative fileโ€ฆ For clarification purposes, identification documents refer to copies of a parentโ€™s photo ID, such as a driverโ€™s license, passport, etc.โ€

    A document from Fairfax County Public Schools discussing the directive to destroy student identification records, including personal documents like birth certificates and parent photo IDs, sent by Dave Anderson to school registrars.

    Earlier this month, IW Features sent an email to Reid and School Board Chair Sandy Anderson asking why. The email states, โ€œOn July 1, Dave Anderson sent FCPS school registrars an email directing them, under guidance from chief legal counsel, to purge student identity documents. What is the reason?โ€

    On September 10, Reid responded in an email, โ€œI will check in with staff to identify what document(s) you are referring to and respond as appropriate.โ€

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  • Gaslighting for DEI

    Community DEI proponents must stop ignoring the law. It is illegal to consider race, gender, ethnicity or other protected traits in employment and admissions decisions at U.Va.

    by Scott Douglas Gerber

    The Sept. 4, 2025 op-ed by โ€œ5 U.Va. Community Membersโ€ about my Aug. 15, 2025 open letter to Interim President Paul Mahoney (both published in the Cavalier Daily) is a disturbing exercise in gaslighting.

    Most notably, the 5 never say a word about what anti-discrimination law actually is. The first point I made in my open letter, and the only point I made about DEI, was that โ€œUnfortunately, as almost everyone probably knows, the University likely violated anti-discrimination law and stonewalled the Department of Justice during former University President Jim Ryanโ€™s DEI-fueled presidency. Ryan resigned because of it.โ€ To his credit, Interim President Mahoney reminded U.Va.’s Faculty Senate on Sept. 5, 2025 that โ€œCompliance with federal law is a condition of research grants.โ€

    I know that many members of the University community do not want to hear it, but the โ€œfederal lawโ€ that both Mahoney and I are referencing is this: except for a few narrow exceptions that do not apply to todayโ€™s U.Va. (for example, taking race into account in a remedy for adjudged discrimination against people of color by the defendant in a lawsuit), it is illegal to consider race, gender, ethnicity or other protected traits in employment and admissions decisions โ€” even a little bit, and even if people think it would make U.Va. โ€œbetter,โ€ to quote my recent critics, to do so. See Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard University & North Carolina, 600 U.S. 181 (2023) (companion cases); 42 U.S.C. ยง2000d, et seq. (Title VI) and 42 U.S.C. ยง2000e(2), et seq. (Title VII). Indeed, because U.Va. is a public university, it is constitutionally barred from doing so. 

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