• No Rubber Stamps Wanted Here

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    In addition to making a person really sick and miserable, the flu can be deadly. According to Virginia Dept. of Health data, 243 Virginians have died due to flu during the current flu season (Aug. 1, 2024 to March 29, 2025). Five of those deaths were children. During its peak, the week ending Feb. 8, 11 percent of all emergency room visits were for diagnosed cases of flu. Children constituted the largest segment of emergency room visits.

    A flu vaccine has long been available. Unlike some other vaccines, it is not mandatory. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimated that, during the 2023-2024 season, the โ€œinfluenza vaccination prevented 9.8 million influenza-related illnesses, 4.8 million medical visits, 120,000 influenza-related hospitalizations, and 7,900 influenza-related deaths.โ€ Furthermore, it went on to report that the โ€œinfluenza vaccination prevented the highest number of hospitalizations and deaths among older adults aged โ‰ฅ65 years.โ€

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  • DEI: a 30-Day Update

    by James A. Bacon

    Screen grab from the UVA Education School DEI page.

    by James A. Bacon

    Monday marked the 30-day deadline for University of Virginia President Jim Ryan to report back to the Board of Visitors about what he had done to execute on the board’s directive to dismantle the university’s DEI bureaucracy and end racial preferences.

    Ryan did, in fact, submit a report to the Board. Of course, as has become standard practice, the administration declined to release it to the public. Bacon’s Rebellion was advised to try filing a Freedom of Information Act request.

    Virginia Tech, Virginia Commonwealth University, and George Mason University also are shutting down their DEI programs, and their strategies are likely to bear similarities to UVA’s. Given the fact that the universities are dismantling DEI under coercion from the Trump administration, which is threatening to yank hundreds of millions of federal research dollars if they do not comply, one can predict a minimum of enthusiasm for the mandate and a maximum of foot dragging and obfuscation.

    I have no idea of what Ryan told the Board. But I thought it worthwhile to update members of the public on the little that outsiders can deduce of what UVA has accomplished so far.

    There are superficial signs of change at Mr. Jefferson’s University, but it is too early to tell whether UVA will abide with the spirit of the directive or subvert it through pettifoggery, literalism or malicious compliance.

    The indisputable news is that UVA has taken down its university-level “Office of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion” website. DEI offices of some academic units either have taken down their websites or rebranded them. Other web pages appear to be works in progress. The education school, for instance, still has a page tagged with “office-diversity-equity-and-inclusion” in its URL but has replaced the content with the words, “Access Denied.”

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  • Hospitalizations from Drug Use Disorders Persisted in 2024

    Source: Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association

    Hospital discharges for patients diagnosed with drug-use disorders leveled off in 2024 compared to the previous year but remain elevated compared to the pre-COVID era, according to data released by the Virginia Hospital & Healthcare Association. Discharges numbered 64,460 last year, up marginally from 64,248 the previous year. In 2020 the number was 57,997.

    The Richmond metro area was ground zero for the drug plague. The City of Richmond led the list, accounting for 6.9% of total discharges. Henrico County (4.5%) was No. 3, and Chesterfield County (4.1%) No. 6. Fairfax County (5.6%), the most populous locality in Virginia by far, recorded the second largest number of discharges.

    An evaluation of other clinical conditions in the patient population showed that “mental diseases and disorders” accounted for 27% of all drug-related discharges, followed by alcohol or drug use (21.3%), stated the VHHA press release. — JAB


  • Far Left Stages Polident Protests

    by Kerry Dougherty

    โ€œRegion Rises Upโ€?

    Seriously?

    Another case of an excitable weekend headline writer sacrificing accuracy for alliteration.

    The Hampton Roads Region has a population of about 1.7 million. If a couple of thousand of sore losers gathered with hand-lettered protest signs in Norfolk on a sunny Saturday, that hardly merits such a sweeping headline.

    Unless, of course, it fits your legacy media anti-Trump narrative.

    I donโ€™t know about you but I was out and about on Saturday. I didnโ€™t notice an uprising. Did you? All I saw were folks enjoying the balmy summer temperatures.

    Yet, apparently โ€œmore than 2,000โ€ aging protesters showed up at Norfolkโ€™s Town Point Park on Saturday for a struggle session as they work their way through the fifth stage of grief. They vented their anger over the Trumpโ€™s administrationโ€™s efforts to ferret out waste, fraud and abuse in government agencies

    Thatโ€™s an odd thing to be protesting.

    Incidentally, you could almost smell the Ben-Gay just from looking at the photos of the Boomers. Anyone with an Ensure pushcart could have made a killing. Continue reading.


  • Map of the Day: Where the Old People Are

    Source: Stat Chat

    The 2020 Census reported that approximately one in five Virginians (22.6%) were aged 60 and older, placing Virginia in the United Nations’ โ€œaging societyโ€ category, writes Sol Baik for the Weldon Cooper Center’s StatChat blog. The “Eastern Shore” counties, clustered to the east and west of the Chesapeake Bay, had the highest percentage of seniors (36.8%). The Eastern Shore also had the highest percentage of what Bacon categorizes as the “really old” (85 or older), while the Southwest region has the higher percentage of oldsters with disabilities (41%). Read more here.

    — JAB


  • Student Funding, Family Choice

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    by Calder Svensen

    The landscape of American education is shifting. With the potential dissolution of the Federal Department of Education, states have a rare opportunity to rethink how education dollars are spent. Rather than waiting for broad, national solutions that may never materialize, Virginia should lead in designing an approach that prioritizes flexibility, choice, and long-term benefits for students.

    A Student-Centered Funding Model

    Picture a family โ€” two working parents raising a child, navigating each stage of the child’s education with limited options. Early on, they struggle with the high cost of daycare, unable to access public pre-K until age four. As their child moves through school, they make decisions based on whatโ€™s available, not necessarily whatโ€™s best. By high school, they worry about how to afford college or vocational training, knowing the cost could leave their child with years of debt.

    Now, imagine an alternative: a student-account model that gives families direct access to their childโ€™s allocated education funds while keeping resources within the stateโ€™s education system. Rather than being locked into a single school assignment, these accounts allow parents to see exactly how much funding is allocated per student and decide how best to use it โ€” whether for public school, homeschooling, or alternative education.

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  • Detours and Delays

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    by Calder Svendsen

    Scheduling is nine-tenths of the job, as any successful โ€” or unapologetically unsuccessful โ€” parent will tell you. Love, life lessons, and the hard knocks of parenting certainly have their place, but theyโ€™re more like the mortar holding together the mileposts of daily life. The real challenge isnโ€™t just shaping a childโ€™s future โ€” itโ€™s managing the day-to-day. School, in whatever form parents can afford, should be a steady road in the rocky terrain of adolescence.

    Yet every year, the school calendar is riddled with off-ramps and detours โ€” days off for teacher training, midweek breaks for holidays, and early dismissals scattered throughout. What should be a structured system instead feels like a fragmented patchwork, where districts attempt to accommodate every obligation but end up satisfying none.

    Childcare, at any age, is a balancing act of career, home, and relationships โ€” to say nothing of the actual work of parenting in between. But when the school schedule becomes so inconsistent that it adds stress instead of structure, we have to ask: who is it really serving?

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  • The DEI Debate, So Far, Is Stupefyingly Superficial

    by James A. Bacon

    Image credit: Chat GPT

    Virginia Tech President Timothy Sands held a special meeting Friday to discuss the impact of the Trump administration’s order to shut down higher-ed Diversity, Equity & Inclusion programs across the country. Tech’s Board of Visitors voted recently to comply with the directive, and Sands said that the university would no longer require diversity-and-inclusion training for incoming students.

    As summarized by Radio IQ, however, Sands said itโ€™s important for members of the campus community to be politically active and explain to friends and neighbors about why they believe diversity in higher education is vital to democracy. โ€œI appreciate all of your willingness to engage, whatever way you can. Because we have to be able to make that case for the public.โ€

    Sands did not elaborate upon his thinking — at least Radio IQ did not mention it in the article, which went on to cover other issues that the Tech president addressed in his two-hour Q&A — but there is enough there to warrant a closer look.

    Sands is using “diversity,” a concept no one disagrees with, to shield a broader amalgam of concepts in “Diversity, Equity & Inclusion,” including a slew of controversial propositions intrinsic to the word “equity.”

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  • City of Richmond Bumbles Along

    by Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Hopefully, the new Richmond mayor, Danny Avula, will avoid the examples of his recent predecessors who spent their terms chasing shiny, big economic development projects and instead will try to improve the basic operations of city government. That will be a tall order in itself.

    One of my long-term complaints has been that the City of Richmond seems unable to do the basic things that local governments do. The most recent examples:

    1.A couple of weeks ago, the city sent out thousands of tax rebate checks with the wrong names on them. It had to cancel those checks and reissue them.

    2. Not to be outdone by the finance department, the mail room overseen by the cityโ€™s Dept. of Information Technology sent out hundreds of debt collection notices the next week to the wrong addresses. To make matters worse, in this latest incident, โ€œresidentsโ€™ names, addresses, claim numbers and debt amounts [were] issued to the wrong locations.โ€

    The new mayor has his work cut out for him.

     


  • DEI for Dummies

    This is Part 3 of a three-part series, DEI in the Dormitories

    by James A. Bacon

    The 200+ Resident Advisors who populate the University of Virginia’s undergraduate dormitories are required to put on several events for their hallmates and suitemates each semester. The RAs are given a small allowance for food for these get-togethers, one of which must have a Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Belonging (DEIB) theme. For the DEI events, the RAs are strongly encouraged to consult a “DEIB Catering Guide.

    The 2024-25 edition of the Guide provides some pointers to keep in mind when planning a multicultural event. Food can be a great way to share a culture, but the handout warns, “We want to be aware of reducing a culture to just its food. Is there any additional lesson or discussion about the food and culture? Does this food have a larger cultural significance?”

    The Guide helpfully provides a list of minority-owned businesses in the Charlottesville area that the RAs might consider patronizing: nine Black-owned businesses, three LatinX-owned, seven Asian-owned, one LGBQT+-owned, one Jewish-owned, and the Kindness Cafe, which “supports people with disabilities.”

    Although they may not be minority owned, restaurants are listed that serve food of mostly non-White cultures: soul food, Mexican, Chinese, Thai, Korean, Hawaiian, Indian, Turkish, Mediterranean. Somehow an Italian restaurant, Mona Lisa Pasta, made the cut. “This list,” states the Guide, “can be helpful if you are centering an identity group and would like to share more about the culture and cuisine.”

    Few details escape the eyes of the student leaders of the Resident Advisor program, which defines its mission of making UVA dormitory residents feel included and welcome. They are especially attentive to the perceived needs of so-called marginalized groups.

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  • “Green” Mandates, Profit Demands Drive Dominion Price Hikes

    Dominion’s White House Solar farm in Louisa County

    By Steve Haner

    The pending price increase for electricity from Dominion Energy Virginia is higher than the 14% jump reported by the news media, which basically parroted company releases.ย Should all of Dominion’s current rate applications at the State Corporation Commission be approved, residents and businesses will pay about 20% more.ย ย 

    The 1,000-kilowatt hour monthly bill used for illustration (smaller than many households really see) was about $116 just before the implementation of the 2020 Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA).ย All the pending price increases could take that to about $170 within two years.ย  And that almost 50% increase is not the end, as additional VCEA compliance costs will keep piling on for years to come.ย ย 

    A repeal of the legal mandates to tie Virginiaโ€™s energy future to intermittent wind, solar and battery power would not take us back to the lower costs before it passed.ย But it would bend the future cost curve downward and save Virginiaโ€™s households and businesses billions of dollars over time. Will the issue be put to the voters in November by the candidates?ย Will they fall for claims that the problem is all the data centers and not the โ€œgreenโ€ mandates?ย ย 

    On April 1, Dominion, serving 2.7 million Virginia customer accounts, announced a pair of major rate applications. In one, it seeks a 15% increase in its base rates, and that increase is despite removing a major expense item that is now included in base rates.ย In the second, it wants about a 50% increase in the separate bill charge for fuel and purchased power, in part to pick up that expense it removed from base rates.ย ย ย ย ย 

    Those two requests would add more than $21 to the current bill of just under $141 for that 1,000- kWh user. But the media accounts (and the companyโ€™s own news release) ignored all the other price increases pending at the SCC, which will add another $7 to the bill for 1,000 kWh if approved.ย  These pending applications are all VCEA compliance costs: ย 

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  • Woke Bootcamp

    Part 2 of a three-part series, DEI in the Dormitories.

    by James A. Bacon

    Eddie came to the University of Virginia as an out-of-state student. The move was a big leap for him, and the transition was not easy. Fortunately, the Resident Adviser (RA) on his dormitory hall helped him fit in. “He was here for me,” Eddie recalls. “I wanted to do the same for other guys.”

    After applying to the program and getting accepted, Eddie (not his real name) arrived in Charlottesville before the fall semester to undergo week-long training. He expected to get practical counseling tips: how to help someone through a hard time, for example, or how to establish healthy boundaries. Some of the advice was useful, such as recognizing depression and dealing with suicidal ideation, but he says the training took an unexpected turn.

    Much of the conversation revolved around the trainees’ “identity” — their racial, ethnic, religious, and gender background. Instead of focusing on academic excellence or the Honor Code or the multitudes of ways students could bond with others over common interests, Eddie says, RA training dwelled on the challenges of “marginalized” students.

    White students were told at times to confront their privilege, Eddie says. “They’re very strict with the type of mindset they want you to have…. It’s almost to the point where you’re being indoctrinated into the DEI ideology.” He describes the training as “woke bootcamp.”

    UVA President Jim Ryan is scheduled to report back to the Board of Visitors by April 7 on the progress he’s made in eliminating racial preferences and dismantling Diversity, Equity & Inclusion at UVA in line with presidential and gubernatorial directives. A close look at the Housing and Residents Life program shows how tricky that will be.

    It’s easy to give jobs and programs new titles and delete DEI rhetoric from website pages — just swap out “DEI” with “inclusion and belonging.” Such superficial actions don’t touch the philosophy that animates DEI, however. It is difficult for Board members, who are fed carefully curated information by the administration, to know what’s happening on the ground.

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  • The Plumber’s Apprentice

    by Calder Svendsen

    Image credit: Bing Image Creator

    I recently needed a plumber and was surprised when he showed up with an apprentice in tow โ€” one of my former students. The young man had dropped out the year after taking my class, a decision that surprised no one who knew him well.

    He was capable, witty, and clever enough to recognize that nothing in his senior year of high school was going to push him in a direction he wanted to go. Rather than spend another year in coursework he found irrelevant, he left school and, without a clear plan, was corralled into his fatherโ€™s plumbing business โ€” his dadโ€™s way of ensuring he had a path forward instead of drifting without one. Now, heโ€™s on track to be fully certified in his trade, and by the time his former classmates are still figuring out their next steps โ€” whether in college or elsewhere โ€” he may already be earning more than any of his former teachers.

    But for all his intelligence and work ethic, he couldnโ€™t fit into the rigid mold of high school. Like many of his peers, he felt his time there was more of an obligation than a meaningful experience โ€” something he had to endure rather than something that guided him toward his future. Dropping out seemed like the only real choice he had left, the last bit of agency left to a sixteen-year-old who had already learned everything he felt was valuable in a traditional classroom.

    Now, even with a GED, he carries the stigma of being an underachiever, as if leaving school to pursue a trade makes him less successful than those who stayed.

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  • Jeanine’s Memes

    From The Bull Elephant


  • DEI in the Dorms

    Part 1 of a three-part series, DEI in the Dormitories

    by James A. Bacon

    To visit the Instagram page of the University of Virginia’s residence advisors (RAs), who mentor dormitory students and enforce the rules, is to pass through a portal into a world of happy thoughts and contagious exuberance. The RAs, as they are known, exude positivity. In short TikTok-like clips, they express why they signed up for the job.

    Allison, a third-year student, gives a two-handed wave and forms a heart sign as she shares what being an RA means to her. “I think about building connections and fostering a community within a dorm,” she says. It can be intimidating for first years to walk into a dormitory not knowing anyone, she explains, but by organizing teas or movie nights she can bring them together and “open up the conversation.”

    The number of RAs is either 240 or 295, depending upon which UVA web page one consults. The slots are coveted because they provide free room, a meal plan, and leadership opportunities.

    No doubt Allison’s enthusiasm is typical. But there is a dark side to UVA’s Housing & Residence experience. According to Bacon’s Rebellion’s sources, “woke” ideology permeates the program throughout: from the recruiting of the RAs, to their training, to the orientation and events they put on, to even the dormitories RAs are assigned to.

    Critics say UVA’s mission has morphed from education to indoctrination. The process commences before students even enter a classroom. It starts with the dorm-room orientation they receive from their RAs, and it continues throughout the year.

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