Virginia Consumer

Polite Control: The Virginia Way (Part 2)


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This one is tough to talk about. When I moved to Virginia over a decade ago, I didn't realize the school books were different, but they were, and that's how history goes untold. We need to know what happened to prevent it from happening again.

Civility has always been Virginia’s brand — but what happens when “politeness” becomes the cover story for a group of lawmakers with proximity to scandals?

In this episode, Andie unpacks the modern misuse of The Virginia Way, tracing its roots from Douglas Southall Freeman’s segregationist ideology to the current political rhetoric of civility.

She connects the dots between the EnRichmond Foundation collapse, unlicensed construction cover-ups, and the officials who keep popping up across all categories.

Behind the southern charm lies a strategy — one designed to protect power, not people.

  • How The Virginia Way became code for control

  • The EnRichmond Foundation collapse and missing nonprofit funds

  • Attorney General Jason Miyares’ failed oversight

  • Delegate Carrie Coyner’s connection to alleged unlicensed subcontracting and the EnRichmond Foundation through RudyCoyner Law

  • The link between Hutcherson, LASR Construction, and state-managed cemeteries

  • Douglas Southall Freeman’s role in shaping Virginia’s “polite” segregation

  • Why the Commonwealth’s culture of civility still shields misconduct today

  • The modern echo — from DPOR suppression to selective prosecution

The Virginia Way was never about civility. It was about perpetuating the evils of segregation without consequence.


  • Axios Richmond: Inside the EnRichmond Collapse

  • WTVR News: Internal Docs Reveal EnRichmond Fallout

  • Encyclopedia Virginia: Douglas Southall Freeman

  • The Virginia Way — Freeman Archive (PDF) 2021 Edition

  • Unfolding History: Douglas Southall Freeman and the Lost Cause Legacy

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Virginia ConsumerBy Virginia Consumer