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National and Virginia News Headlines: Tuesday Morning

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Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Tuesday, July 7.

*Greece readies new bailout bid ahead of summit

*The non-Clinton alternative for Democrats (“Bernie Sanders speaks for the activist left.”)

*Experts Debunk The Coal Industry’s “Energy Poverty” Argument Against The Pope’s Climate Action

*Trump Lashes Out At Critics, Makes Incendiary New Claims About Mexico

*Rand Paul, dorm room philosopher: Why his “slavery” nonsense is so outrageous (“Paying taxes makes you a slave, says a grown man running for the most powerful office in the world”)

*APNewsBreak: Cosby said he got drugs to give women for sex

*South Carolina Senate Votes To Remove Confederate Flag

*Confessions of a Clinton reporter: The media’s 5 unspoken rules for covering Hillary (“Everything, no matter how ludicrous-sounding, is worthy of a full investigation by federal agencies, Congress, the ‘vast right-wing conspiracy,’ and mainstream media outlets”)

*Senator Kaine Travels to Middle East, Gives Progress Report on ISIS

*Presidential Contender Jim Webb Almost Beat a Man to Death, Aide Claims in Book (If true…wow, just like his hero Andrew Jackson.)

*McAuliffe’s PAC takes in $370,000 (“Billionaire Robert L. Johnson, BET founder, donates $100,000.”)

*Carter makes distinction between Confederate flag, monuments (Sure, but no reason to have either.)

*Energy rules have Dominion Power weighing new nuclear reactor (This company is so stupid – HELLO? Any intelligent life there? Nuclear power is WAYYYYY more expensive than energy efficiency, utility-scale solar and onshore wind. Duh.)

*Body cameras, cybersecurity and nanosatellites: Virginia eyes future

*Gay rights advocates decry Virginia House GOP’s religious freedom agenda

*Virginia Republicans aim to broaden party appeal with ethnically diverse candidates (They can do that, but unless/until their party’s atrocious policies and attitudes vis-a-vis minorities change, I doubt it will work.)

*Casey: The legislature should act on UFOs, LSD (“Lawmakers passed the 2014 voter-photo ID law with no bona fide evidence anything was broken, and with no sincere suggestion anything needed to be fixed. By those standards, there are many other ‘dangers’ that need legislating.”)

*US appeals court upholds Chesapeake Bay clean-up plan

*Why rape kits go untested in Virginia

*Franklin County family fights pipeline to preserve life on farm

*The outspoken conservative riling the Fairfax County School Board (“Outnumbered by liberals, Elizabeth Schultz is used to defeat. Even so, she’s praised by many parents.” Barf.)

*Ethics experts: no problems with Portsmouth mayor’s properties

*Student rep might get voice in Norfolk School Board meetings

*Nationals drop series opener against Reds (“By the sixth inning, the only Nationals on the field who were expected to be starters this season were shortstop Ian Desmond, catcher Wilson Ramos and right fielder Bryce Harper.”)

*D.C. area forecast: Hot shot today, daily storm chances through end of week

Hungry Stomachs Can’t Be Hungry Minds: Meeting Our Students’ Most Pressing Needs First

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In a recent press release, Fairfax County Public Schools announced its participation in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Summer Food Service Program. The school system’s embrace of the initiative, which provides nutritious food over the summer to students who qualify for free and reduced-cost meals, marks another commendable move in a positive direction for the County.

For one thing, the ongoing success of the program demonstrates FCPS’s encouraging ability to cooperate with federal, state, and local bodies to undertake what amounts to very challenging (and necessary) work. Other than the USDA, which runs the program, the Virginia Department of Health acts as a sponsor, and local agencies like Fairfax County’s Department of Neighborhood and Community Services aid in administering the service. In working to keep upwards of 50,000 eligible students nourished, FCPS has also attracted the help of community centers, housing developments, and numerous volunteers, all of whom have given freely of their time and resources to serve. Such public-private partnerships remind us how willing individuals and institutions are to lend a hand when given the opportunity, and how much transformative work can be done at little to no cost; FCPS should seek to expand this sort of multi-level cooperation and these sorts of public-private partnerships in as many other contexts as possible.

More than anything else, though, FCPS’s participation in the program is an important acknowledgement of the obligation to meet our students’ most pressing needs at all costs-even as the number of students receiving free and reduced-price meals continues to increase. Rather than think of this as a budgetary strain, we should consider the fact that more students have been able to register-and have their needs addressed-a glowing success.

The fulfillment of such basic needs as food and shelter, after all, is prerequisite to FCPS’s other ambitions for its students-better grades, higher test scores, improved graduation rates, and so on. Academic aspirations like these are secondary, in both practical and moral terms: according to the USDA, children who miss meals are “more likely to be sick, absent or tardy, disruptive in class, and inattentive,” and County records repeatedly show how much more students who qualify for free and reduced-cost meals struggle than their peers, academically and otherwise.

Hopefully, FCPS’s participation in the USDA Summer Food Service Program is a step towards further initiatives aimed at addressing more specific groups and their unique needs, even beyond the classroom. The continually changing nature of our County, along with its size and diversity, calls for a school system focused on the wellness of the student as a whole and, moreover, of the community as a whole. FCPS should strive, then, to become a school system with expanded health services and extracurricular programs, among other things. More than one-size-fits-all initiatives and minor adjustments-from the push for marginally later school start times to nominal modifications to graduation requirements-we need programs, and an entire school system, that will reach out to our most vulnerable students and address their most fundamental needs first. A good meal is a good start.

Omar Fateh, a lifelong Fairfax County resident and a former Academic Advisor at Northern Virginia Community College, is running for Fairfax County School Board (At-Large).

Former Rep. Tom Perriello Appointed Special Envoy for the Great Lakes Region of Africa

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Congratulations to former Rep. Tom Perriello on his appointment by Secretary of State John Kerry as “Special Envoy for the Great Lakes Region of Africa.” Every time I see Tom get another important job, it reminds me of three things: 1) that he is one of the sharpest people out there; 2) that he was a huge asset to Virginia’s 5th CD and to Congress more broadly; and 3) that the voters of Virginia’s 5th CD, in their infinite wisdom, made a huge mistake in downgrading from Tom Perriello as their representative to the mindless right-wingnut (Robert Hurt) they’ve got in there now. Heck, Hurt probably can’t even name the U.S. Great Lakes, let alone the countries in the Great Lakes region of Africa (let alone co-author the latest Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review)! Heh. Anyway, congratulations to Tom Perriello, and good luck in your important new job!

Virginia Helps Successfully Defend Chesapeake Bay Restoration

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The following press release is from Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring's office.  Which reminds me; have I mentioned recently how happy I am that Mark Herring is our Attorney General – and NOT right wingnut Mark Obenshain (or Obenshain's model Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli)? 🙂 

 

~ Virginia was the first Bay state to defend its Bay restoration plan and its ability to work cooperatively with other Bay states and federal partners ~

 

RICHMOND(July 6, 2015)-Today, a three judge panel of the Third Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld the right of Virginia and other Chesapeake Bay states to work together to protect and restore the Bay. In April 2014, Attorney General Mark R. Herring filed an amicus brief in American Farm Bureau v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to protect Virginia's efforts, making the Commonwealth the first state to defend the Bay plan on appeal. The brief laid out the economic, environmental and historic reasons Virginia was compelled to weigh in on the side of the Bay and the reasons that the long history of cooperation between Bay states should be honored.

 

The brief also refuted arguments made in an amicus brief from 21 attorneys general, all but one of whom were from outside the Bay watershed, that opposed the ability of Bay states and the EPA to work cooperatively to address the health of the Bay, which is North America's largest estuary and a major economic force for the region, annually contributing an estimated $2 billion and 41,000 jobs from commercial fishing, $1.6 billion and 13,000 jobs in saltwater angling, $70 million in crabs, and $680 million in tourism.

 

“Because of today's ruling, Virginia and our fellow Bay states will be able to continue the important and urgent work of restoring the health of the Chesapeake Bay,” said Attorney General Herring. “The most promising plan for Bay restoration was under attack from out of state special interests and I couldn't let that go unanswered. The economic, recreational, environmental, health, and intrinsic value of clean water and a strong, healthy Bay compelled us to come to its defense. We've still got a long way to go to get the Bay back to where we want it, but today's ruling lets us stay on this promising trajectory.”

 

Noting that “water pollution in the Chesapeake Bay is a complex problem currently affecting at least 17,000,000 people (with more to come),” the panel ruled in favor of the Bay because:

 

“Congress made a judgment in the Clean Water Act that the states and the EPA could, working together, best allocate the benefits and burdens of lowering pollution. The Chesapeake Bay TMDL will require sacrifice by many, but that is a consequence of the tremendous effort it will take to restore health to the Bay-to make it once again a part of our “land of living,” Robert Frost, The Gift Outright line 10-a goal our elected representatives have repeatedly endorsed.”

 

At issue in the case was the EPA's 2010 adoption, under the federal Clean Water Act, of a scientifically-sound “pollution diet,” also called a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL,) based on watershed management plans developed by the individual states whose waters flow into the Chesapeake Bay.  Virginia's brief pointed out that it is “undisputed that the Bay TMDL details at issue…are creatures of the Bay States' authority,” with the states themselves creating and committing to individual plans which were then incorporated by the EPA into the final TMDL blueprint.

 

Under governors of both parties, Virginia has frequently entered into agreements with other Bay states and the EPA to protect the Bay. For example, the administration of Governor Bob McDonnell worked cooperatively with the EPA to address concerns throughout the process and reach agreement on Virginia's TMDL plan. Thus, the claims in the appeal that the EPA has usurped state authority were simply wrong; the Bay states have long been and continue to be partners with each other and the EPA in protecting the Bay.

 

The district court upheld the TMDL plan, noting that “that the procedures established to ensure public participation in the TMDL drafting process were sufficient” and “the framework established by the Bay Partnership in developing the Bay TMDL is consistent with the provisions of the [Clean Water Act] and [Administrative Procedures Act.]”

 

Attorney General Herring's decision to file a brief in support of the Bay was announced at historic Fort Monroe in Hampton. The decision was applauded by advocates including the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, the League of Conservation Voters, and the James River Association, as well as individuals and small business owners who depend on a clean and healthy Bay to make a living. 

National and Virginia News Headlines: Monday Morning

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Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Monday, July 6.

*Greeks reject bailout offer in landslide

*Greek Finance Chief Resigns After ‘No’ Vote on Bailout Deal

*Why Iran’s Supreme Leader Wants a Deal (“Ayatollah Khamenei is appeasing his hard-liners with tough rhetoric, but he keeps reviving the talks for a reason.”)

*Kerry says Iran nuclear talks ‘can go either way’ (“He spoke as diplomats here entered the final hours of more than 18 months of negotiations that will establish a new relationship between Iran and global powers or collapse amid recriminations and threats to world peace.”)

*Paul Krugman: Ending Greece’s Bleeding (“Europe dodged a bullet on Sunday. Confounding many predictions, Greek voters strongly supported their government’s rejection of creditor demands. And even the most ardent supporters of European union should be breathing a sigh of relief.”)

*Virginia rethinks approach to transportation project funding

*State goes greener with fleet vehicles

*Virginia Beach council moves quickly using consent dockets

*Nationals complete sweep of Giants

*U.S. dominates Japan 5-2 in final, ending drought in fairytale rematch

*D.C. area forecast: A showery Monday, then turning hot with episodic storm chances

Much More Than Just My Two Cents: Protecting the Vote is at the Heart of Liberty

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“We hold these truths self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

With much to celebrate yesterday, we celebrated our nation’s birthday. We wished each other a Happy July 4th. We gathered with families and friends. There is much to celebrate. Our great country continues to move forward celebrating all our nation’s people. We are inextricably bound together. Together many of us work to make more perfect this union, as our forbears believed we must.

But today, on July 5th urgent work looms. With the GOP gaming elections in multiple ways, voting has become a cruel joke on too many in the electorate. So far our side has not fully mobilized to confront the decades-long attempt to strip you and me of our vote. This is not imaginary. It happens, as I will illustrate.

I believe that until recently Democrats have been unwilling to talk too loudly about this issue for fear that such talk might inadvertently suppress the vote even more. We know that when Democrats turn out, we win. This can be true even in heavily gerrymandered districts. Thus getting every last legal voter registered and to the polls is vitally important in upsetting the GOP gerrymandered apple cart. But it is not gerrymandering alone which keeps Democrats from voting. It is the entire bundle of tactics and strategies designed to peel away votes, a few votes here, a few there, a thousand here and a thousand there, until finally the cumulative effect is major. Remember all those too-close-to-call elections by margins under 100 votes and going into recounts?

Long before Virginia’s Voter ID requirement, when we still lived in Virginia, my husband was told he could not vote without a driver’s license. That was false at the time. On one occasion, I was told (falsely) that I was not on the voter registration books. At the time, I had voted in the same precinct for more than 20 years. When after a couple of “looks” at the books supposedly turned up nothing, I insisted that a Democratic poll official weigh in. And then the GOP poll worker found me on the books, where I had been  all along. Another time I was told I “couldn’t vote” because my maiden name was on my registration, but not on my driver’s license. (This, by the way presents a growing threat to the voting rights of married women who changed their names at marriage-please make your registration and driver’s licenses match. A female Texas judge was denied the vote for this reason). I (politely) demanded other poll officials step in. And I did vote on a regular ballot. In some tight races only 2 votes per precinct could be the difference in an election. This is not trivial.

Recent testimony has led even NCs conservative majority in the GA to dilute one part of its new Voter ID law. Now voters can use a provisional ballot if they do not have an ID. However, this is non-ideal because it is second class voting. Provisionals are less likely to be counted. Please read some of the testimony linked in this paragraph. A sizable number of voters have been led on a wild goose chase for documents they will never be able to obtain.

Beyond voter ID, numerous ways of suppressing the vote have been skillfully included in the more than 50 page voting bill which passed our NC GA here. There are dozens of changes to the law. Notice,however, how benign sounding Wapo makes the added observers sound!  They aren’t. And there are already plenty of officials at NC polling places. One of the least talked about methods of vote suppression is voter intimidation at the polls, which is further “legitimized’ by adding these added observers. They will be, in many cases, actually from a Tea Party group called “True the Vote.” This group has filed false claims of thousands of legal/legitimate voters in multiple states, including NC. In state after state there is little to no evidence that voters are voting illegally and that a “problem” is exceedingly rare. This hasn’t stopped pols trying to invent a faux scandal.

Vote suppression hawk Sec of State Chris Kobach of Kansas has now been given authority to bring cases of “voter fraud,” bypassing the official prosecutors offices. This same right wing politician has marketed a software program with lists to other states, falsely accusing voters who merely have moved of voting in two states.  

Another vote suppression tactic is frequently moving polling places so voters aren’t sure where to vote. Think this doesn’t happen? In District F in Montgomery County, VA, where we used to vote when we were Virginia residents, our polling place was moved numerous times in an 8-10 year period. We voted at the Briarwood Club House, near the right front of the elementary school, near the left front of the elementary school, at the front of the middle school, the side of the middle school. When, following the gym collapse of Blacksburg High, the middle school temporarily served as the high school, we voted in the back of the building. A greeter for many years, I saw voters driving in circles not sure where to go. No voting place, I repeat no voting place, should be moved that many times.  Would it surprise you then that the registrar then was a Republican and the turnout in that district historically was around 70% Democratic? What is really sad is that the Republican registrar was appointed at the time by a majority of election board Democrats, who should have used their ability to appoint a Democratic registrar. Democrats just cannot make those kinds of supposed “bipartisanship” mistakes. Republicans don’t. If we give away our times to have oversight, then we have abrogated our duty to provide balance.

Here in NC, registrars have moved student precincts around to suppress the turnout of young people. They have done this to students at Appalachian State in Boone and to students of NC State in Raleigh. This is no accident.

Hostile takeovers by the NC General Assembly of city and county voting has become a real problem in NC. Today’s (7/5/2015) News and Observer lead editorial includes these words regarding the G’s hostile takeover of county elections in Wake County and the City of Greensboro, both Democratic strongholds. This paragraph is specifically about Wake County:

Why? Republicans have been turned out of both boards (Supervisors and Education) after years of angry, unproductive rule.  They were summarily dismissed in fair and square elections, elections, by the way, conducted with the same rules rules in effect when Republicans were in power. So GOP leaders fixed that, literally, by drawing new districts skewed to diminish the voting power of Democrats.

Most Democrats would lose next time under the rigged plan. And some seats were eliminated altogether. The GOP cannot stand that Dems recently won every single space up for a vote on the Wake County Boards of Supervisors and hold most on the Board Education. In Greensboro, now GOP pols get to chose their voters. This stands voting on its head. We are supposed to choose government leaders, not the other way around.

Gerrymandering on steroids has loomed over many states. But SCOTUS let stand last week Arizona’s bipartisan redistricting. Similar issues arise in North Carolina and Virginia. Just recently, in fact, Virginia’s gerrymandered districts were struck down.

We must not just be vigilant, but also  we must act to protect the vote wherever it is threatened. Some Democratic candidates appear to be taking it seriously this time. Hilary Clinton and Bernie Sanders both have listed voting rights as critically important. We can help them achieve that either directly by working with candidates on voting rights or through groups specifically chartered to do just that. In NC it’s Democracy NC and the NAACP, the ACLU. I will write more about voting rights issues as we get closer to the election.

On the Question of God or gods, on the Contrast Between the Hebrews and the Greeks

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I find myself wondering something about the idea of God. It grew out of my noticing the strangeness of the contrast between two important cultures in the millennium before the birth of Jesus: the culture of the ancient Greeks and that of the ancient Hebrews.

Here’s the thing. These two peoples/cultures inhabited basically the same world – empires, metals, lots of war, slavery, annihilation-but despite that sameness they can to very different conclusions about a question of a matter most fundamental to worldview: the question of having God or the gods at the center of the cosmic order

Which is it, and what might be the fundamental difference between the cultures that would account for such different ways of seeing the fundamental order of the world.

The Greeks saw the world of the divine beings as a plurality, a whole diversity of gods having dealings (not always admirable) among each other. A many-ness, and a strong flavor of amorality.

The Hebrews saw the world of the divine as inhabited by ONE GOD — and indeed from Abraham onward that was THE defining feature of the Hebrew religion, and is still at the center of the basic Jewish prayer, the Shema Yisrael: “Hear, O Israel: the LORD our God, the LORD is one”

So it looks like the Hebrews at least would have said that the difference between believing in One God or in many gods was of the utmost importance.

Which is what leads to the question:

Is it a really fundamental matter about how to perceive reality, and if so, what can account for how these two cultures living choosing so differently on this matter despite inhabiting the same basic world?

Did their cultures give them basically different ways of thinking? If so, what was that difference? Or did they come to have different needs, or different senses of the nature of life, growing perhaps out of different historical experiences?

For example, the Greeks had a pretty good won-loss record, and were basically feeling like winners in the cruel intersocietal game.  It is a Greek (Thucydides, whom I have quoted in just about every one of my books and in many of my public lectures, who put these words into the mouths of the Athenians:

“The strong do what they can, while the weak suffer what they must.”

The Greeks had themselves taken their domain from another group of human beings, if I remember the narrative about the spread of Aryan peoples out of the area of Iran?  The Greeks are more the kind of  “We’re # 1” rowdy group in the lockerroom boasting and spraying champagne around. Not a lot of reason to question whether the world is good the way it is or should be improved. A lot of reward for indulging the impulse to come out on top in a contest for dominance.

The Hebrews were generally not in a position to get into this kind of lust for power.

The Hebrews/Jews were sandwiched in between mighty empires — the Egyptian (four centuries of slavery), the Bablyonian (the generations of captivity), the Assyrian (the defilement of the Temple). And these Hebrews were motivated to see the world as more ordered, and ruled by a power of more emphatically moral character, to weigh against their traumatic experience of the lack of a moral order and of power being wielded by an evil force.

All that pondering then leads me, for whom “Pursue the Truth” is a driving force, the question arises: If that picture I just painted is a substantial piece of an answer, is the effect of that explanation to increase or decrease our assessment of the validity of the different choices?

Would this picture provide support for the likely rightness of the perception, or would it undermine it?  Which side should we be listening to, if either?

I make no pretense to know about what kind of divine beings there might be, or if there is anything like that in the cosmos or not. But here is how I might see a relevant case being made in either direction.

On the one hand, one could say this picture discredits the belief in one God. One might say that this idea was, for a victim society, a kind of opiate– at least a killer of some pain.

At least things make sense, in some ultimate sense,” those wanting their afflict to make sense, despite the pain. “At least in some invisible world of God’s justice, the wrongs will be righted.”

That would be comforting for a much-victimized people to believe.

But on the other hand, one might reasonably argue that their experience could lead them to see more deeply into the way things are and the way things should be, since the way things are has often been so painful.

The people who have experienced victimhood — conquered, killed, hauled into slavery — are driven by their suffering to see deeply into the big picture, and they see the reality of the battle between good and evil, and the moral obligation to serve the good and defend the sacred. They know that injustice is bad, because they experience its badness in their bodies and their souls.

In this way, their experience compels that people to think about the deep problems in the condition of humankind–  in a world in which the problem of uncontrolled power has subjected the human world to a ongoing force of brokenness stretching through the millennia (and into our times here in America).

Their experience leads them to perceive a deep reality of prime importance– a reality that could reasonably be called “the battle between good and evil.”

Anyway, those are the places my wondering took me today, when I somehow stumbled into the question of God or gods, and the mystery of how worldviews of these two cultures came to be so different on a fundamental question about the structure of reality.

Not just any two cultures, either. These two –Athens and Jerusalem–  together, constitute the two basic building blocks of the civilization, the two main cultural streams out of the ancient world, that have shaped the civilization of which we are in America are part.

I say there are important truths from both of them.

Hurrah for the Greeks, for example, for providing some of the important tools for clear thinking as a way of understanding things, and some foundation for our pursuing truth through the use of reason and evidence.

But hurray also for the Hebrews for seeing deeply into the profound moral dimension central to the circumstances of civilized humankind.

These things all come together in my new book, which addresses the question: What has gone wrong in America, and how can we set it right?

And these questions are being asked at a time when we Americans have been turned into the role of victims– as our power and our economic status and the prospects for our children and grandchildren are being taken from us.

And we are called to perceive WHAT WE’RE UP AGAINST, which should bring us to utilize the biblical sense of the centrality of the question of moral order, and the battle between good and evil.

The strategy I propose:

See the evil. Call it out. Press the battle.

I offer this book as a weapon for that battle.

Forgive my boldness, but I feel compelled to be bold enough to claim that WHAT WE’RE UP AGAINST presents a picture containing truths that have the potential to have a meaningful and beneficial impact on the battle against a consistently destructive force that has arisen on the right, and that has properties that make it fully appropriate to call it a force of evil.

This book provides — n a purely secular way, in a logically structured way fortified by evidence before our eyes — presented a picture of what’s going on in this profound national crisis we face in America in these times. And it shows that there’s something visible that should lead many in Liberal America to make a revision in their worldview, a revision that will be empowering.

The stakes in this could not be higher.

It is a coming together of Athens and Jerusalem.

The picture is developed in ways that meet the intellectual standards that have their roots in the ancient Greek thinkers. And it is infused with a moral spirit that has some real connection to that spirit that speaks in the Bible when some Hebrew figure stands up to speak the moral truth to evil power.

See the evil. Call it out. Press the Battle.

Here now a book written to be a weapon people could use in that battle.

CHECK THAT WEAPON OUT.

Petition: Change the Name of Jefferson Davis Highway in Arlington

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Why on earth do we name anything – roads, schools, whatever – after traitors, racists, etc. in the year 2015 in this country? Crazy. So…how about we rename anything with “Lee” in it “Lincoln,” like Washington-LINCOLN High School instead of Washington-Lee, or LINCOLN Highway not Lee Highway? Or we could name these schools, roads, etc. after any number of great African Americans. But Jefferson Davis and other traitors?  No thanks. If you agree, please sign the petition (click below) by a friend of mine and fellow Arlingtonian.

National and Virginia News Headlines: Sunday Morning

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Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Sunday, July 5.

*Greeks cast votes on country’s future in Europe

*Dana Milbank: Clinton and Obama are on the wrong side of history

*The U.S. Chamber of Commerce should quit lobbying for tobacco abroad (The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is awful on issue after issue. This one borders on evil, causing death and misery around the world for profit.)

*Trump’s immigration comments hurting GOP, Romney says

*Bernie Sanders Gains on Clinton in Early-State Polls, Hits Iowa Patriotic Parade Circuit

*The Activist Roberts Court, 10 Years In (“All too often, the conservative majority has changed the law to disfavor the less powerful.”)

*Schapiro: In Virginia, history was written by the losers (“When the Civil War ended, the South began another battle – for the hearts of minds of whites alarmed by the sudden ascent of African-Americans.”)

*Now comes the fight to make Virginia’s primary ballot (“Virginia has eased the rules to qualify for the ballot, but they’re still among the toughest in the nation.”)

*Davis does not belong on Monument (Or anything else, including “Jefferson Davis Highway.”)

*At rally in Virginia Beach, Confederate flag means history and heritage (These people are not the brightest bulbs…)

*Donations to Speaker’s PAC could deepen voter cynicism, political scientists say (“A pattern of big donations by legislators to House Speaker William J. Howell’s political action committee followed by plum committee assignments raises questions about another potential loophole in Virginia ethics law, some political scientists say.” That’s “legalized corruption,” plain and simple.)

*Structuring the state’s new budget

*New tobacco commission head sees opportunity, change on horizon

*Our view: The big picture on pipelines (“Still, the question remains, whether you want to stop pipelines or build them: If we have three pipelines starting in about the same place and generally headed in the same direction, shouldn’t somebody look at them all together?”)

*Editorial: Rep. Goodlatte takes aim at the Bay cleanup, again (Virginia’s Congressional delegation has some horrendous members – Morgan Griffith, Barbara Comstock – but Bob Goodlatte arguably does the most damage.)

*Nationals win, but without Strasburg

*D.C. area forecast: Drier today, but rain risk returns tonight and Monday

Cheery 4th of July Message from 2013 Virginia Republican Gubernatorial Nominee

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I mean, who wouldn’t be attracted to such a positive, optimistic, forward-thinking, inclusive party like the one 2013 Virginia GOP gubernatorial nominee Ken Cuccinelli belongs to? LOL, yeah that was snark. 🙂