As public schools suck their thumbs and concoct cockamamie plans like two days in class and three days of virtual “learning”, Catholic schools are the first to do what’s in the best interest of the students.
As public schools suck their thumbs and concoct cockamamie plans like two days in class and three days of virtual “learning”, Catholic schools are the first to do what’s in the best interest of the students.
If the McCloskeys lived in a modest neighborhood, they might get a pass for such a display of firearms. But how dare they defend their Renaissance palazzo-style palace in such a manner?
Are these educators comfortable enough to read and interpret data that show not only are children not at risk from the coronavirus but they aren’t carriers and there isn’t a single documented case of a child infecting an adult?
The stay-at-home orders prompted by the COVID-19 epidemic accelerated a trend that was already reshaping the American economy: the shift of commerce from bricks-and-mortar retail to online delivery.
The latest numbers from the state and hospital-association COVID-19 dashboards suggest that the coronavirus in Virginia still is retreating. The seven-day moving average of test-positive cases for COVID-19 tests continues to fall, hitting a new low of 5.8%.
The governor’s arbitrary 1,000-guest limit raises these questions: Has Ralph Northam ever been to a theme park? How about a bowling alley? Does he know the difference?
Wait a minute. A large school bus that’s normally jammed with kids, three-to-a-seat, will be able to carry just 13 passengers?
What will that mean to local school districts?
Contrary to what some came to believe as the goalposts kept shifting, the shutdowns were never intended to halt the spread of the virus.
When midnight mobs armed with spray paint, sledge hammers and chains wantonly destroy property, they should be arrested.
Ralph Northam wasted precious time imposing burdensome rules on healthy Virginians while ignoring the desperate needs of those most at risk of dying of Covid-19.
Ever alert to signs of racism so subtle that most people can’t see them, the University of Virginia has altered its new V-Sabre logo to remove curves that had been added to the sword handles.
What good is a pandemic if you can’t smoothly morph from nosy neighbor to government informer?
Who’d want to be a cop in today’s atmosphere?
Gov. Ralph Northam spent roughly THREE minutes at his Tuesday presser discussing the biggest issue facing the commonwealth: The drawn-out shutdowns that are killing our economy and forcing businesses into bankruptcy.
None of Northam’s restrictions make sense given that children are basically at low risk from Covid-19 and research shows they aren’t spreaders, either. But Northam - the Science Guy - hasn’t noticed.
As the governor stubbornly clings to his overly-restrictive lockdowns and ridiculous mask mandate, the department has proven to be useful to him, passing half-baked information to the public that seems designed to frighten and obscure more than inform.
My first inkling of change came in front of the refrigerated meats case last week.
The idea of defunding the police in Virginia comes close to being clinically insane. Only someone suffering from mental psychosis would seriously propound it.