Bader notes that the Code of Virginia requires the governor to call a special election and does not leave it to his mere discretion.

Virginia's Public Square
Virginia's Public Square
Bader notes that the Code of Virginia requires the governor to call a special election and does not leave it to his mere discretion.
The answer? Logistics and a failure to plan accordingly.
Business is bad enough in Virginia. Why crack down on one of the first building blocks on Virginia’s economic recovery?
The total of federal CARES Act dollars spent rises to $120 million.
Republican Delegate Jason Miyares (R-Virginia Beach) is bringing on core talent from the Trump White House.
Who knew that Wallops Island was fully functional as surface-to-air missile defense system for the eastern seaboard?!?
This tongue-in-cheek Christmas card from Pete and Burson Snyder of Disruptor PAC is making the rounds, not least of which to raise the all important question: How will Santa evade Ralph Northam’s 12am-5am curfew?
Good luck, folks.
Much has been made about the natural law foundations of the American experiment, lines that are best expressed in our Declaration of Independence.
For many, such a declaration expressed an unfulfilled yet promising hope that was best defended by our U.S. Constitution as we sought a “more perfect Union” that would defend and protect our God-given rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Unfortunately, we live in more decadent times where grift is easier than work, times that the 19th century philosopher Frederic Bastiat warned about in his work entitled The Law.
Fast forward to today, as grievance seems to be a cottage industry in the wake of the near universally condemned 1619 Project attempting to define American history based on the arrival of enslaved persons on the Virginia shoreline by English ships bearing Dutch letters of marque.
Should America be defined by her vices rather than her virtues? One might argue that vice — whether described as the commons or the vulgar — is rather ubiquitous in history writ large. In fact, suffering and injustice is the common experience of mankind, and this fragile thing we call civilization is only guaranteed by the thousands of good deeds that resist what J.R.R. Tolkien called the “long defeat” of history.
Reason Magazine senior editor Damon Root raises the question of how men such as Frederick Douglass saw the question of human freedom in the context of the American experiment. Root’s answer is that Douglass crafted a far more reaching and nuanced narrative of the American experiment that spoke not only to the Jeffersonian principles outlined in the Declaration, but to America’s common pledge to eternal principles and constitutional liberty:
Far from seeing [the Declaration] as a morally ambiguous document that sanctioned white supremacism, Douglass extolled it as “a glorious liberty document” that justified the ending of slavery and other forms of race- and gender-based inequality. Douglass’s message, says Root, is as vital to the current moment as it was in the 19th century.
The video is worth your time.
Root’s book entitled A Glorious Liberty is available on Amazon for $20, and its arguments might be worth sharing among those who are winged by wokeness, but are more possessed by the opportunity for grift than they are any true concern for moral justice in the world.
There are a lot of questions about the COVID-19 vaccines — which are safe, which are ethical, when will they be made available, and who will get them first.
The Virginia Healthcare & Hospitals Association (VHHA) are already fielding questions and comments surrounding the new vaccines, and while there are at least four of them to choose from, VHHA is doing its best to get as much information out to the public as possible.
In that spirit, VHHA made a helpful and short video about what the initial rollout is going to look like:
At present, there is zero talk of a vaccination mandate either in Richmond or being recommended as a policy direction.
Given the scarcity of the vaccine at present, the real concern is prioritization among at-risk populations — including the elderly and minorities.
Thankfully, the large first wave seems as if it will be able to inoculate the vast majority of Virginia’s frontline doctors and health care staff, as well as make available the option of a vaccination to our law enforcement, firefighters, and emergency services personnel — key populations who are overtly exposed to COVID-19 in closed environment such as homes and businesses.
Former CEO Karl Miller isn’t opposed to “political bribery” per se, just the sort that’s not in his control.
If Virginia’s public schools can’t figure out how to open, Del. Michael Webert (R-Marshall) has a solution they might not want to hear…