Virginia languishes in the bottom half of states for vaccine distribution: 38th to be exact, with just 29 percent of available vaccines administered.
Virginia languishes in the bottom half of states for vaccine distribution: 38th to be exact, with just 29 percent of available vaccines administered.
I’m asking public school teachers, wherever they may be, to tell me about the current state of education and their students: The good, the bad and the heartbreaking.
Facebook, Twitter, Google and Amazon have the power to muzzle people, ban apps and destroy platforms to silence points of view they do not like. This sort of thing happens routinely in China. In America, it’s chilling.
In the aftermath of the mob action at the U.S. Capitol two days ago, establishment Republicans have decisively condemned not only the rioters but President Trump for firing them up with assertions that the 2020 election was stolen.
The Virginia Department of Health has released its priorities for receiving the COVID-19 vaccine in the next phase of the vaccination rollout. The top priorities are exactly who you’d expect — front-line essential workers and people over 75. It is reassuring to see that child-care and K-12 teachers and staff are high on the list.
I was pleasantly surprised that the governor didn’t berate or punish Virginians who are doing their best to stay healthy during a pandemic
These hooligans want to turn our country into an unstable banana republic. In fact, they took it up a notch from the left-wing nuts, they unleashed anarchy inside one of the most iconic symbols of our republic.
After months of kowtowing to the local teachers’ union, which is doing its best to keep classrooms closed, Aaron Spence belatedly joined the common sense, get-the-kids-back-in-class lobby.
Yet here is Cosmopolitan Magazine with a plus-size model on its cover and this headline: “This is HEALTHY: 11 women On Why Wellness Doesn’t Have to Be One-Size-Fits-All.”
“Austere management practices” is a polite way of saying that hedge funds like Alden buy struggling newspapers, slash costs to the bone and slurp up advertising revenue, vampire-style.
If you had asked me in January what the blockbuster stories of 2020 would be, I would have predicted the impeachment of Donald Trump and the death of Kobe Bryant.
I don’t like to end the year on a negative note, but the English language? Doomed.
I could see the future: my parents driving for hours on graduation day only to search fruitlessly for my name in the program. Instead of lining up in cap and gown, I'd be thrashing around in the pool trying to pass one last exam.
In some places - Virginia, for instance - law-abiding, healthy Americans are being told they can’t leave their homes during certain hours. They’ve been told how many visitors they may have in their dwellings. Until the Supreme Court stepped in, many Americans were told they couldn’t attend worship services.
Footage circulating on social media shows a Lynnhaven Mall security guard on the ground, being pummeled by one of the punks.
I have been critical of Virginia’s colleges and universities, especially the University of Virginia, for the intolerance of conservative political and cultural viewpoints.
Last Thursday my son tested positive for COVID-19. The previous Sunday evening, he and I had cooked dinner together and watched “Mosul” on Netflix.