Saturday, November 30, 2013

Casinos or no casinos, a real gamble for Virginia

While Virginia’s legislators have held steady against the growing tide of casinos spreading across the U.S., there are millions of reasons to believe that it’s only a matter of time before the commonwealth folds, even if legislative opposition is still strong.

According to the Washington Post, there are casinos in “various forms” across 39 states in the U.S. Twenty-five years ago, casinos were limited to New Jersey and Nevada. While these two cities remained the top earners in 2012, there were six other cities/states that raked in over one billion dollars in annual revenue during 2012. Even in the best of economic times, it’s difficult to look the other way at the potential state income generated by the casino industry.

While moral arguments have long been used to deflate attempts to legalize casinos in Virginia, critics of legalizing casinos have also cited the correlation between casinos, crime, substance abuse, and mental illness (i.e., the social corruption argument). There appears to be statistically significant evidence to prove such a correlation exists, albeit with a few reservations for factors that are difficult to control for.

As more evidence accumulates from states where casinos are legal, Virginia’s citizens and legislators can come to more informed conclusions about what effect legalizing casinos could have in Virginia. If it can be shown that casinos do not have a strong correlation to social corruption, the legalization of casinos could be well on its way in the commonwealth.


Regardless, there are millions of reasons why legalizing casinos in Virginia may go ahead anyways. While Virginia has shown a slow but steady economic recovery following the last economic recession, casinos will prove to be a very tempting source of revenue if and when a new economic recession/depression sweeps through the state. 

Friday, November 29, 2013

Rep. Morgan Griffith of Virginia: tis the season for more absurd remarks

Tis the season for more absurd remarks by Republican members of congress, and Rep. Morgan Griffith (9th District) didn’t waste any time. While recently visiting Tazewell, Griffith told a crowd of supporters during lunch that if 95 percent of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) employees were classified as ‘non essential’ during the federal government shutdown in October then “they should be able to cut 15 percent.”

Indeed, the august Griffith claimed that he intends to introduce legislation during the next session of congress that would cut the EPA’s staff by 15 percent even though he concedes that “I don’t want to mislead anyone, I don’t think it will pass in the Senate and maybe not the house but we are going to ask for their staff to be cut by 15 percent.” In essence, then, Griffith’s legislative gamble will once again waste legislative time, energy, and taxpayer dollars.

It is interesting, however, that Rep. Griffith doesn’t also believe, by implication, that the approximately 350,000 civilian Department of Defense employees who were considered “non essential” should be reduced by 15 percent. According to Griffith, then, EPA employees are essentially worthless, reflecting a widespread and fundamentally flawed view by many Republicans on which federal agencies are and are not worth their share of taxpayer dollars.

But if Griffith’s standard of reducing the number of individuals working for the government who are draining the U.S’s budget is to be applied consistently, then he might think about firing himself and a number of his Republican Party colleagues. According to a recent Standard and Poor’s analysis, the recent government shutdown cost the U.S. $23 billion in gross domestic product. That is, the government shutdown cost the U.S. almost three times the total 2013 fiscal year budget of the EPA ($7,901,104,000). Those darn facts are terrible, aren’t they?


If there is any unnecessary drain on the U.S. economy, it can easily be found in the U.S. Congress among a political party that has made economic homicide an essential part of its political tactics. The carelessness and ignorance of the Republican Party in congress is the real threat to the U.S.’s economic success, not the EPA, and at the forefront is Virginia’s very own Rep. Morgan Griffith. 

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Mark Obenshain orders a recount while Mark Herring prepares for new job

Much to the surprise of interested onlookers (*sarcasm*), state Senator Mark D. Obenshain formally requested a recount on Tuesday in what has become a “historically tight race for Virginia attorney general.”

The results of the November 5th election for Virginia Attorney General were certified by the Virginia State Board of Elections on Monday. State Sen. Mark R. Herring (D-Loudoun) was announced the victor by 165 votes, making the 2013 election for attorney general the closest Virginia political contest in “modern Virginia history” (however “modern” is defined). 

Meanwhile, state Sen. Herring announced the five co-chairmen of his inaugural committee, another unforeseen action (*sarcasm again*) that signals Herring’s own expectation of becoming Virginia’s next attorney general. According to a statement made on Tuesday by Sen. Herring, “It is within Senator Obenshain’s right to pursue electoral victory to an ultimate conclusion beyond the original count, canvass and certification.” Herring went on, “His tactics, however, will not impede our efforts to build the finest team to serve all Virginians in the Office of Attorney General or prepare for the 2014 legislative session.”

Indeed, Obenshain is well within his political rights to request a recount. Sen. Herring would undoubtedly have done the same were he in Obenshain’s position. The more important question at this juncture is what action(s) Sen. Obenshain will take if the recount returns the same result?

Some have argued that Obenshain will act honorably, but Obenshain is not the only factor in this equation, even if he is the most important factor. Another significant variable in this complex equation of power politics is the Republican Party of Virginia (RPV), an institution that is no doubt reluctant to easily concede a clean sweep by the Democratic Party on Election Day. The RPV could well influence what actions Obenshain takes if the vote count is upheld. 

As to Obenshain’s own honor or that of the Republican Party, I question anyone who believes any politician or institution on the right of the political spectrum is willing to put the country ahead of its own self-interests. I’d like to believe that Obenshain is such a politician, but recent actions by elected Republican representatives of Virginia and the U.S. have left me a bit jaded on this point.


If anything is for certain in Virginia politics, it’s that politics in Virginia needs to regain some sense of civility that existed in the not too distant past 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Height of Insanity: Virginia’s repeated unwillingness to address mental health

Most of us have heard the old chestnut regarding insanity: insanity is repeating the same mistake over and over again. If applied to Virginia’s repeated unwillingness to appropriately address the issue of mental health and the commonwealth’s mental health system, then the state is literally insane.

With the events of state Sen. Creigh Deed’s tragedy still fresh on the minds of Virginians and occupying the headlines of Virginia’s newsmakers, the insanity of Virginia’s mental health system have once again been catapulted into the uncomfortable spotlight of…reason.

It stands to reason, for instance, that if “mental health patients” are being turned away from state institutions due to a lack of adequate resources, then more resources should be purchased. We’re only discussing the lives of human beings, however. Indeed, having enough beds to house mental health patients seems to be something akin to a ‘critical need’.

Within the cultural narrative of individual responsibility in Virginia, an inability to account, much less financially provide, for individuals deemed “mentally unstable” has grown alongside. These two conceptually disparate phenomena have left Virginia’s political ‘leaders’ and bureaucrats uncertain on how to proceed. On the one hand, each individual is considered rational and responsible for his or her own success or failure in the game of life. On the other hand, there is the pesky phenomenon of mental illness, which reduces or eliminates the ability of individuals to make rational decisions.

The point is that there seem to be more than a few political leaders in Virginia who believe mental illness is more or less a hoax that does not require extensive state attention or funding. Unfortunately for all Virginians, mental illness is a very real phenomenon that deserves extensive attention and, if necessary, funding.


At this point in this issues history, how many more people have to be harmed before Virginians and their political representatives begin taking mental health seriously? If you prefer the cold-hearted pragmatic question: how many more taxpayer dollars do we have to lose related to mental health related tragedies before Virginia begins taking mental health seriously?

Friday, November 22, 2013

STEMing the tide of Virginia’s educational woes as Terry McAuliffe takes over as gov

When the Virginia Chamber of Commerce handed Governor-elect Terry McAuliffe its “Blueprint Virginia” at the chamber’s yearly Economic Summit in Williamsburg, there weren’t many surprises. The ‘blueprint’ asks the soon to be governor to place a greater emphasis on science, technology, engineering, math (also known as STEM) and health instruction at all levels of education. The blueprint also “calls for vigorous efforts to retain Virginia military assets and support military families and veterans.”

Blueprint Virginia is the Virginia Chamber of Commerce’s plan for economic development and business leadership, and it was received with open arms by Terry McAuliffe. According to one source, McAuliffe informed over 600 business leaders in attendance during the summit that the blueprint will be a “valuable resource” as McAuliffe’s administration develops Virginia’s economic plan for the next 48 months.

While the Virginia Chamber of Commerce isn’t exactly a bastion of progressivism, it certainly realizes the importance of ensuring that Virginia’s next generation of job seekers actually have the skills necessary for America’s increasingly sophisticated economy.

Unfortunately, for all of the hours that many U.S. children spend receiving instruction, the U.S. ranks low in the STEM disciplines compared to other countries around the world. Longer term, what this trend means is that as more STEM jobs open up, there won’t be enough American workers who have the skills or knowledge to take them. Enter workers from other countries…

In my humble opinion, it’s not Duck Dynasty or any of the other mind-numbing shows on TV that are adding to America’s education woes, it’s the way that we as Americans approach education. More work, more hours spent in instruction, and standardized tests have continuously failed the test of effectiveness. It’s time to reevaluate how we as Americans approach educating our country’s youth.


Virginia’s business community and Gov.-elect Terry McAuliffe appear to be fully aware of Virginia’s weakness in the STEM disciplines. The only questions are will the latter have the political will to shake Virginia’s educational system into high gear and will the former put its money where its mouth is by offering incentives for students to enter into and complete STEM lines of study? 

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

The story we’ll never know: Gus Deed’s and the need for mental health expansion

As has become readily apparent, Gus Deed’s stabbing of his father, state Sen. Creigh Deeds, and subsequent suicide has highlighted the reduction in Virginia funds for mental health programs.

According to a report by the Times Dispatch, Gus Deed’s had undergone a psychiatric exam performed under an emergency custody order on Monday, “but was ultimately released because there were no psychiatric beds available for his use in western Virginia.” In other words, the tragic events that occurred on Tuesday could have been prevented.

Ironically, as America as a whole has witnessed numerous mass murders and murder-suicides over the last year alone, states are actually reducing the amount of psychiatric services that they provide their citizenry. According to a 2012 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center (TAC), “Many states appear to be effectively terminating a public psychiatric treatment system that has existed for nearly two centuries.” 

Apparently, not enough people have died to warrant an expansion, or at the very least a stay, of America’s mental health services.

The report found that between 2005 and 2010 Virginia reduced 15 percent of its public psychiatric beds. Good Ol’ Governor Bob McDonnell asked for even more cuts in mental health programs in 2012.

Although America and many Americans seem to adhere to the belief that each individual’s ‘mental problems’ are their own responsibilities, the simple truth is that some individuals with mental health problems require professional psychiatric attention, attention that can only be usually afforded through public programs.

And contrary to the common belief that reliance upon some external ‘other’ (i.e., someone or something other than our selves) will somehow lead one further away from individual self-reliance, seeking professional help can oftentimes be the key to progressive self-reliance. That is, the domino theory that relying on other individuals and/or institutions will continue to perpetuate ad infinitum is only true to the extent that we choose to accept it as truth.


We’ll never know if Gus Deed’s murder-suicide could have been prevented, but we can at least hope that similar incidents in the future can be prevented if state governments expand their mental health programs so that patients who clearly need professional help won’t be turned away. 

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Cuccinelli’s defeat theory turns individual responsibility on its head, another Cuccinelli contradiction

In the first edition of tales from a sore loser, Virginia Attorney General and loser of November 5th’s race for governor, Ken Cuccinelli, suggested that Sen. Mark Warner will be vulnerable during the 2014 election because of the perceived flaws of the healthcare reform legislation. In other words, Cuccinelli could be positioning himself for a senatorial run against Mark Warner in 2014.

According to Cuccinelli, “There is no such thing as an unendangered Democrat who promised, as Mark Warner did, on video, sitting in his Senate office, ‘I would not vote for a health-care plan that doesn’t let you keep health insurance you like.’ ” On the other hand, there is no such thing as an unendangered Republican who compares abortion to slavery.

Unfortunately, Cuccinelli may not have learned much from his gubernatorial loss to Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe. Fortunately for Virginia, Cuccinelli may not have learned much from his gubernatorial loss to Terry McAuliffe.

Instead of graciously accepting his defeat in the November 5th election, Cuccinelli sounds like a man deeply embittered by a ‘race’ he apparently thought he should have won. In his interview with the Washington Post, Cuccinelli claimed McAuliffe lied his way to victory.

Cuccinelli also went on to say, “Truth still has a lot of value, but apparently it’s somewhere between zero and $15 million.” It’s ironic that Republican politicians only find money to be a bad thing when it’s used against them. And if Cuccinelli thinks the gubernatorial race witnessed a large infusion of greenbacks, he might be astonished by the amount of money that could flow into Sen. Mark Warner’s coffers during his reelection bid.


Cuccinelli didn’t lose the race for governor due to any nefarious methods used by McAuliffe or any corrupt out-of-state cash for favors bargains. Cuccinelli lost the election because Virginians don’t want a governor who is more interested in writing books and grandstanding than serving the public interests. Virginians don’t want a governor more interested in dividing the political parties than finding a common ground. Cuccinelli lost because Cuccinelli is…Cuccinelli, and if he runs against Mark Warner, Cuccinelli may once again prove to be his own worst enemy.