There’s a piece of legislation sitting in the House Veterans Affairs Committee — H.R. 5905 — that cuts a swath 75 years deep into American history and attempts to undo the sort of wrong we’re no longer supposed to talk about in the classroom.
The Montpelier Descendants Committee and Montpelier’s professional staff are raising issue with the planned vote today by The Montpelier Foundation Board to retract its promise to share governance of President James Madison’s estate with descendants of the families whom Madison enslaved.
Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S., and second leading cause of death for people ages 10-34. More than 100,000 Americans have died from overdoses in the last 12 months.
The last of five federal prisoners charged with conspiring to kill a fellow inmate at United States Penitentiary-Lee pleaded guilty today to federal charges related to the attempted murder.
The L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs at Virginia Commonwealth University has named seven honorees who will be recognized at the 15th Excellence in Virginia Government Awards.
There is a convoluted logic in the State Superintendent’s report that suggests that laws that were passed to eliminate discrimination can be used to justify discrimination.
“Weakness,” Knox County Mayor Glenn Jacobs, known to WWE fans as Kane, wrote on Twitter last week, “which is really what the Left is all about, is a fatal character flaw.”
New Dominion Bookshop in Charlottesville will host an in-person reading with poets Nin Andrews and Amy Woolard on Saturday, April 2, from 7-8 p.m.
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