Good morning, RVA! Itās 71 °F, and, while today looks hot and humid just like the rest of the days, NBC12ās Andrew Freiden says itās the āleast badā day of the week. Iāll take it! You can expect highs in the 90s and (probably) dry skies throughout the afternoon. Drink some water, eat a popsicle, and do what you gotta do to stay cool out there.
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Last night, the people of Kansas ārejected an amendment to the state constitution that would have specified āKansas does not require government funding of abortion and does not create or secure a right to abortionāā by a huge marginā59% voting no, and just 41% voting yes. Kansas is, of course, a very red state, with 56% of people voting for Donald Trump in 2020. Hereās the interesting part to me: The state also ran a gubernatorial primary last night for both parties and while about 451,000 folks voted in the Republican primary, only about 375,000 folks voted to restrict abortion. To me, that says there are lots and lots of Republicans out there who are unwilling to ban abortions and Republican politicians should be real careful running on an anti-abortion platform or advancing legislation restriction abortions. Thatās just my take, though, and weāll get to see how it plays out here in Virginia in a couple of months when abortion will almost certainly be the topic of the next General Assembly session.
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Hereās something wild from Ned Oliver at Axios Richmond: āOne of City Councilwoman Reva Trammellās biggest campaign donations in 2020 came from a shell company founded by a now-convicted drug traffickerā¦It was the third-largest donation to her campaign. In June, authorities revealed the man behind the company was Nikike Tyler, a Henrico resident who pleaded guilty that same month to wholesaling millions of dollars worth of heroin, cocaine and fentanyl throughout the region.ā
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Mayor Stoney released some more information about the Cityās gun buyback program. Folks who bring guns by the event, which takes place on August 20th, will get gift cards to Amazon, Foot Locker, Walmart, or Krogerā$250 for an assault weapon, $200 for a handgun, $150 for a rifle, and $25 for inoperable guns. Say what you will about the effectiveness of gun buybacks, Iām sympathetic to how little Virginiaās localities can do to limit gun violence with legislation and appreciate the Mayor trying to use what resource he has available.
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Turns out Iām not the only one thinking about the long term sustainability of Richmondās municipally-owned gas utility! Kevin Cianfarini and Erik Shilts have a really interesting column in the Virginia Mercury about how City Council should get involved and halt any future natural gas infrastructure expansion. Thereās a lot to unpack here (like how little oversight there is into how the Department of Public Utilities spends its money), but hereās the gist: āWhen customers choose to adopt electric appliances and disconnect from the gas network, preexisting bond debt necessitates utilities imposing price hikes on a shrinking customer base. As service costs rise, more people choose to go electric. This feedback loop is commonly referred to as a utility death spiral. As technology advances and heat pump adoption accelerates, Richmond Gas Worksā death spiral will be swift and severe, stranding bond debt that it cannot pay.ā My gas furnace is the final remaining gas appliance in our house, and when it goes belly up, Iāll definitely replace it with a heat pump and disconnect from the gas network. I canāt be the only one moving in this direction, and it makes a ton of sense to me for to be extremely skeptical of any expense paid to expand our publicly-owned natural gas infrastructure.
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Oh now this is interesting: WRVA reports that Lost Cause truther Ann McLean is now āoff the State Historic Resources Board following controversial comments made on WRVA about secession and the Civil War.ā This follows the news of another one of Youngkinās appointments resigning, this one from the stateās LGTBQ board, due to his history of making horrible and offensive public comments. These sorts of unprofessional and inappropriate people are almost certainly appointed to troll liberals, but they each, ultimately, do have some sort of role in the functioning of our government so itās not all just for funnsies. I wonder if a series of major, public missteps like this will have any sort of actual impact on how the Governor governs or if the act of appointing them in the first place was the entire point.
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Today, the Science Museum of Virginia will (virtually) host Dr. Alexa Halford for the museumās Lunch Break Science series. Dr. Halford is a Space Weather Physicist (!) at Goddard Space Flight Center and will give a lecture on how space weather impacts our planned return-to-the-moon missions (aka the Artemis Missions). I am really, really excited about people walking around on the moon in my lifetime, and it seems like Artemis is finally going to make it happen. In fact, NASA plans to launch an (uncrewed) Orion spacecraft around the moon and back this fall! So cool! Lunch Break Science is free, no reservations requires, and, just a note, this event is a hybrid event (you attend in-person, Dr. Halford attends via Zoom on the big screen).
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First, Iām not on BeReal because Iām nervous about giving pictures of my face to a social media company with no discernible business model. Second, BeReal is fascinating. Itās basically a social media network created because social media networks are horrible and badāseems like a strange way to solve that problem.
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Meanwhile, young people are turning to another breed of apps that promise more intimate online interactionsātreating social media as an extension of private group chats. One of them is BeReal, a French app thatās taken American college campuses by storm and is currently the most popular free app in Appleās US App Store. Its 20 million downloads suggest its approachāgetting people to share the more mundane moments of daily life, like going for a walk in the park or lounging on the couch watching Netflix on a Monday nightāis resonating with users. But can an app really facilitate authenticity and help users bypass the envy economy? After all, the imperative to make money has historically pushed both social-media companies and their most popular creators to pair up with brands that turn every post into a commercial. I recently joined BeReal and recruited a few friends to see if the app could deliver on its promise to help us be more genuine online.
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A cicada found under a melon flower.
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