• The Most Important Issue Not on the Ballot in November

    by J. Kennerly Davis

    A historical painting depicting a gathering of Founding Fathers in a room, with one figure gesturing passionately while others listen intently around a table.
    Debating the origin of rights and freedoms. Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    As our fall elections rapidly approach and we consider the differing positions taken on particular issues by the individual candidates competing for our votes, it is vitally important that we first carefully consider a fundamental question not on the ballot but tied closely to the deeper meaning of this and every election. Itโ€™s a deceptively simple question, but one that encompasses the essence of every significant policy issue that confronts our Commonwealth.

    The question for us to ponder before we vote is, simply: Where do our rights come from?

    The most basic decision that the members of every society must make is how to define the place of the individual in the society, and from there to determine the relationship of the individual to the group, the distribution of legitimate authority, and the system of government.

    In any system of government, ultimate authority, or sovereignty, must be located somewhere in the system for the government to function. For most of recorded history, in most places, sovereignty has been located in anti-democratic authoritarian rulers supported by the dominant classes from which they emerged: monarchs and their nobles, military strongmen and their armed forces, party leaders and their ruling political parties.

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  • Letter from UVA College Republicans

    Letter addressing the assassination of Charlie Kirk, expressing sorrow and concerns about freedom of speech and recent violence on campus. Signed by the Executive Board of College Republicans at the University of Virginia.
    (20+) Facebook

    “As we watched Charlie Kirk lose his life yesterday, many of our professors, teaching assistants, and peers met this gruesome news with joy, laughter, cheering the violence on, and wishing it upon us conservatives.”

    But renowned political science professor Larry Sabato was not among them.


  • Can Virginia Save $2.6 Billion in Medicaid Spending Through One Simple Fix?

    Brad Hart is co-owner of Forest Park Pharmacy, an independent pharmacy. He has a few things to say about Medicaid spending in Virginia. Independent pharmacies have a big stake in state Medicaid policies, but the dude is from Fort Worth, Texas! Click here to listen.

    A man in a green shirt smiling, discussing Virginia Medicaid spending, with the text 'Virginia Medicaid wasting $2.2 BILLION???' in the background.
    https://www.facebook.com/share/v/177wc6wQga/

    Hart’s commentary is based on a report by Arlington-based Strategic Directions, an advocacy group that “give[s] stakeholdersโ€”whether theyโ€™re state Medicaid programs, independent pharmacies, or legislatorsโ€”the strategic insight and advocacy they need to create meaningful change.” So… probably not a disinterested group. However…

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  • More Evidence the VCEA Is Based On a False Premise

    By Derrick Max

    For several years now, Virginians have been told that the Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA) is necessary to save Virginia and is a necessary step to save the planet. Weโ€™ve been told that rising seas, worsening storms, and other supposedly catastrophic impacts of man-made climate change justify a radical restructuring of Virginiaโ€™s entire energy system. But what if that very premise — the idea of accelerating climate danger — rests on faulty or potentially unreliable data? 

    A recent peer-reviewed study published in the Journal of Marine Science and Engineering entitled, โ€œA Global Perspective on Local Sea Level Changesโ€ cuts right to the heart of the green extreme narrative. Contrary to the drumbeat of alarm, the Dutch researchers found no evidence that sea level rise has accelerated due to climate change. Sea levels have been inching upward since the end of the last Ice Age, but the data shows no sudden spike in recent decades. If rising seas are not accelerating, then the doomsday clock that climate advocates use to justify economy-wrecking mandates simply isnโ€™t ticking as loudly or as fast as they claim. 

    Nowhere is this misunderstanding more evident than in Hampton Roads and Norfolk, often held up as โ€œground zeroโ€ for sea level rise in Virginia. What is rarely mentioned is that much of the measured change there is the result of land subsidence (the ground itself is sinking) rather than oceans rapidly rising. That distinction matters. It means local challenges in Norfolk are largely geological and infrastructural, not evidence of global climate collapse.  

    Streets in Norfolk routinely flood during heavy rains and tides, and the regionโ€™s naval installations are grappling with the need for improved stormwater management and hardened infrastructure. These are serious local concerns, but they stem from subsiding land and aging drainage systems, not accelerating global sea rise. Addressing them requires targeted investments in drainage, stormwater systems, and coastal defenses, projects that could be undertaken for a few billion dollars, far less than the $20 billion or more Dominion plans to sink into offshore wind (including a yet to be started Phase II). 

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  • Maybe We Can Just Let AI Do Our Thinking For Us

    Line graph showing overall average score changes over the years from 1992 to 2024, with data points indicating scores in various years and comparisons to previous assessments.
    Average NAEP 12th-Grade Reading scores nationally broken down by percentile: Top 10%, Top 20%, Average, Bottom 25%, and Bottom 10%.

    Largely overlooked in the furor over stabbings and assassinations the past few days, the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) has reported more dismal data about educational achievement of today’s youth. The latest updates report on 12th-grade reading and math as well as 8th-grade science.

    Average scores for top and bottom performers alike were lower in 2024 than the pre-COVID, pre-George Floyd year of 2019. Overall, only 35% of 12th-graders scored proficient in reading and 22% in math. In other words, young people are losing ground in acquiring the verbal and mathematical skills required to thrive in the burgeoning knowledge economy.

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  • Sow the Wind, Reap the Whirlwind

    โ€œI told you soโ€ leaves a bitter taste in the mouth, but the tragic news yesterday about Charlie Kirk took my memory back immediately to the debate on Baconโ€™s Rebellion after another tragedy in Charlottesville. Far too many of the usual suspects rejected my argument then that the condemnation of political violence had to go both ways or it would be worthless. A failure to jointly condemn violence right or left, KKK or Antifa, would simply feed the fire.

    One of the speakers in favor of Dominionโ€™s proposed natural gas plant in Chesterfield at Monday nightโ€™s public hearing told me someone from Roanoke on the other side quite openly and forcefully said any person who supported building the plant should be condemned to Hell. Similar attitudes appear in every political quarter and forum. It should sicken us all, but sadly it does not.

    Yes, one of the worst offenders now sits in the White House, and the reports this morning are he issued on social media a list of recent shameless political attacks, omitting the attacks on liberals from his concern. It was just June when a murderer motivated by ideology killed one Minnesota legislator and wounded another, and it wasnโ€™t that long ago that former Speaker Nancy Pelosiโ€™s husband was wounded by someone seeking to kill her.

    It will never leave us entirely. Political violence goes back to the beginning, and within the past couple of days I reread Shelby Footeโ€™s account of Lincolnโ€™s assassination. But if all agree that all such acts are equally reprehensible, and if all agree to openly condemn such actors from within their own supposed camp, it will be a start. There are people who responded to that earlier debate over Charlottesville who totally lost my respect, and eight years later I doubt they have learned a thing. Let’s see.ย 

    Sow the wind, reap the whirlwind. Hosea 8:7 — SDH


  • UVA’s FIRE Ranking Worse Than It Looks

    Statement from The Jefferson Council:

    The truth is finally catching up with the myth. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression’s (FIRE) just published its 2026 College Free Speech Rankings, reflecting FIRE’s new focus on the actual reality on the 257 college campuses surveyed rather than stated policy. While the Ryan administration often talked the talk on free expression issues, they rarely walked the walk. The past administration often pointed to UVA’s high position in FIRE’s rankings as support for its policies, but now that the real world is being taken into consideration, UVA’s ranking has tumbled from 1st to 21st place.

    The new report even more clearly highlights the disparity at UVA between formal written policy and how the students actually perceive the reality. Thus, the report significantly summarizes UVA’s student experience as follows:

    “Student perceptions are poor with UVA failing to rank in the top 100 for any area. UVA ranks in the bottom 50 for both โ€œComfort Expressing Ideasโ€ and โ€œAdministrative Support,โ€ signaling relative unease and skepticism toward leadership despite strong written policies.”

    Other very important findings of the new FIRE report show that UVA has decreased in five of the six main criteria analyzed–including receiving an “F” grade in three of the six: “Self-Censorship”, “Administrative Support”, and “Political Tolerance.”

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  • Do Apportionment Rules Short-Change Virginia?

    Map of the United States showing congressional reapportionment without counting non-citizens, with states colored according to the number of seats gained or lost.
    Graphic source: Restoration News

    Hayden Ludwig at Restoration News analyzes the impact of rules for apportioning congressional districts in the United States. Assigning seats on the basis of the number of citizens in a district, rather than total population, would yield Virginia an additional congressional seat, he argues. California, Texas and Florida would be big losers under a citizens-only apportionment, but nearly a dozen other states (including Virginia) would be winners. — JAB


  • SCC Staff Sees Need for More Gas Because Wind Will “Collapse”

    by Steve Haner

    SCC reveals Dominion has low confidence in its wind plant on the coldest of days.

    The staff of the State Corporation Commission (SCC) has concluded that Dominion Energy Virginia cannot meet the energy demands of our data- center based digital economy with renewable energy projects alone, and โ€œdoes not opposeโ€ adding natural gas.

    โ€œIt is unlikely, in Staffโ€™s opinion, that renewable energy development alone will suffice to serve the Companyโ€™s forthcoming energy and capacity needs caused by data center demand,โ€ wrote Public Utility Division manager Andrew T. Boehnlein in testimony filed back on August 19. Boehnlein in part focuses on the unreliability of offshore wind.

    The testimony is part of the utilityโ€™s pending application to build a new natural gas plant in Chesterfield County, subject to a full SCC hearing starting September 23. The staff analysis concluded โ€œthere is reasonable support for the claim that the Company is currently resource deficient, and that the Company will be significantly more resource deficient if the projected data center load growth materializes in whole or in part.โ€

    That testimony came from Steven E. Smith, a Public Utilities Division analyst, but in both cases it is clear they were signing off on consensus opinions. Smith reported they were โ€œnot opposedโ€ to the application but noted that the companyโ€™s application had not really proven that the proposed 944-megawatt peaker plant, only slated to run on high demand days, was the best choice to address the coming energy shortage.

    In similar testimony in another case, this one dealing with Dominionโ€™s application for a rate increase, the SCC staff chose to highlight the deficiency of utility-scale solar projects when reliable energy is in short supply. As previously reported, it noted all of Dominionโ€™s big solar projects were failing to meet promised output. All of them.

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  • Viva Abigail!

    The revolt to normal

    A young woman wearing a sombrero and traditional attire rides a brown horse, pointing into the distance against a colorful sky with clouds and hills.

    by Gordon C. Morse

    It all comes down to leadership, weโ€™re forever told. In that regard, two national newspapers recently took measure of Abigail Spanberger, the clear front-runner in the race to become Virginiaโ€™s next governor.

    โ€œWelcome to the year of the national security mom,โ€ The New York Times announced.

    Spanbergerโ€™s biography โ€œhelps convey a gut-level grasp of Virginiansโ€™ everyday anxieties about schools and crime and providing for their families and experience making tough calls in life-or-death situations involving national security,โ€ wrote commentator Michelle Cottle.

    This โ€œhits the sweet spot of making her seem simultaneously exceptional and relatable,โ€ Cottle wrote. โ€œA butt-kicking rรฉsumรฉ.โ€

    โ€œMessage: Here is a leader both formidable and approachable, tough and caring, driven by her commitment to service.โ€

    Oh, help.

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  • The Latest FIRE Free Speech Ranking

    List of universities with their rankings and scores, including The University of Virginia, George Mason University, and others.

    The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression have graded Virginia universities D grade overall in its 2026 College Free Speech Rankings. That was actually better than the national average of F.

    The University of Virginia was tops in the state with a 21st-place ranking out of 250 institutions, largely on the basis of its formally adopted policies — good enough to garner a grade of C-. However, that represents a significant decline from its No. 1 ranking last year. Virginia Tech and James Madison University garnered Fs for grades.

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  • 22nd in Education Freedom

    A color-coded map of the United States showing different states ranked by specific criteria, with a legend indicating ranks from 1-10, 11-20, 21-30, 31-40, and 41-51 using different colors.
    Heritage Foundation Education Freedom rankings

    Virginia ranks 22nd in education freedom among the 50 states and Washington, D.C., in the Heritage Foundation’s Education Freedom Report Card. The Old Dominion scores high in transparency (No. #2) and civic education (No. #3), but not so well for teacher freedom (No. #25), education choice (No. #33) or return on investment (No. #33).

    See Virginia details here.


  • American Rights Do NOT Come from Government

    by Chap Petersen

    Close-up view of the Declaration of Independence, highlighting the words 'Congress' and 'Declaration of the thirteen united States.' The document is aged and features ornate typography.

    As a lawyer, I both teach Constitutional Law and argue matters which arise under the U.S. Constitution.

    These cases involve phrases like “right to free speech,” “free exercise of religion,” “due process” and “equal protection under the law.”

    The above quotes are in our U.S. Constitution — but where do those rights actually come from?

    At a public hearing on Wednesday, September 3, Senator Kaine of Virginia criticized a Trump appointee for stating such American rights were God-given.

    Citing a divine source for American rights was “deeply troubling,” he said, the kind of kooky thinking associated with  theocratic regimes, such as Iran.

    Instead, these freedoms come from “our governments.”

    Senator Kaine’s opinions are not unusual in today’s secular age. Claiming that rights come from God is archaic and anti-progressive.

    But that’s exactly what the Founding Fathers believed. Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence states it best:

    “We  hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.”

    The Second Inaugural Address of Abraham Lincoln also cited divine right in explaining the American Civil War:

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  • Delegate Rasoul, You Are Not Qualified to Lecture Me on Israel

    by Paul Goldman

    Move over, Lizzie Borden.ย Formerย House Speaker Filler-Corn charges Delegate Sam Rasoul with โ€œ(f)ueling one of the oldest forms of hatred in the world, repackaged in the language of activism.โ€ย 

    She is referencing antisemitism. This is one of the harshest criticisms anybody of the Jewish faith can direct at anybody. Particularly someone with Rasoulโ€™s bio. She is in effect calling him a Jew hater. By doing so, she likewise implicates the Roanoke Democratic Committee and others for their support of him.

    (For background of the spat, read “Rasoul’s Anti-Zionism Roils Roanoke.”) — JAB

    Ms. Filler-Corn is entitled to her opinion. But she has neither the stature nor the record to make herself out as some moral authority on such matters. Beingย Jewish doesnโ€™t automatically make you an authority on antisemitism, the Middle East, or a true advocate of equality for all. Credibility comes from the heart of your record, not your circumstance of birth.

    In 2023, I was subjected to antisemitic attacks making headlines as far away as California. The fact I led the opposition to their casino infuriated Richmond Mayor Stoney, labor unions, RVA’s Black leadership, and Democratic Party officials. The only successful opposition in the Commonwealth. A lot of people were going to make a lot of money from that project. I was called the usual anti-Jewish names, the Judas Jew, whatever, over the public airwaves by a person working for the pro-casino forces. My anti-casino campaign won citywide 62% to 38%.ย 

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  • Is Robert E. Lee Making a Comeback?

    by Gib Kerr

    Portrait of Robert E. Lee in a Confederate uniform, showcasing his distinguished appearance with a beard and military blouse.
    If anyone can find an image of the West Point Lee portrait, please post it in the comments. — JAB

    America is coming to its senses.

    After a tumultuous period of temporary insanity following George Floydโ€™s death in 2020, when hundreds of statues and memorials were removedโ€”often by violent mobsโ€”passion is giving way to reason. Things are (thankfully) getting back to normal.

    The latest sign of Americaโ€™s restoration is the return of the 20โ€™ portrait of Robert E. Lee to the library at the United States Military Academy at West Point. The painting of Lee in his Confederate uniform had been removed as part of the Orwellian โ€œNaming Commissionโ€ that purged the military of any memorials to former Confederates.

    Announcing the return of Leeโ€™s portrait, an Army spokesperson said, โ€œAt West Point, the United States Military Academy is prepared to restore historical names, artifacts, and assets to their original form and place. Under this administration, we honor our history and learn from it โ€” we donโ€™t erase it.โ€

    The damage done by cancel culture in the post-George Floyd frenzy was unprecedented. Reminiscent of the French Jacobins, Chairman Maoโ€™s Cultural Revolutionaries, or the Afghani Taliban, woke radicals gave no quarter to Southerners who chose to defend their homeland in the Civil War. Historical figures like Lee were universally and unfairly demonized, then systematically eliminated.

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