This episode is a wide-ranging conservative tour of the Idaho fights shaping the cycle, moving from the classroom to the state budget to City Hall. It opens on education — stalled teacher contracts, the state superintendent’s traveling listening sessions, and the first year of Idaho’s school choice program and education tax credit — and treats them as a single argument about whether a government-run system can reform itself without competition.
From there the discussion widens into where the money goes. It walks through a school district accused of buying land at nearly twice market value from a seller tied to a board member, superintendent raises outpacing teacher raises, and Boise’s rising property taxes. It then takes up a roughly billion-dollar federal rural health transformation grant whose first Idaho dollars, the episode argues, went to administering the grants rather than to rural health itself.
A recurring theme ties the segments together: spending that, by the episode’s reading, has no built-in brake — taxpayer money funding an America 250 celebration even as the state projects a deficit, and Boise dollars spent on what the discussion frames as a DEI agenda. The education tax credit, by contrast, is presented as a rare dose of competition costing about half what public schools spend per student.
Underneath the individual stories runs a structural claim drawn from Milton Friedman: when the people authorizing spending bear none of the cost and capture all of the credit, programs only grow. The episode points to the Idaho Freedom Index, a revived “pork report,” and a new local-government accountability index as the proposed counterweight — measurement and public pressure rather than trust in the system to police itself.
It closes on outreach: a growing out-of-state readership, a foundation gala built around the country’s 250th anniversary, and a forthcoming Idaho radio venture — all pitched as ways to keep Idahoans informed about where their tax dollars and their state are headed.
0:01 Welcome and What’s Stirring in Idaho
The episode opens on the wide slate of Idaho freedom-and-liberty issues ahead, framing the conversation around tracking government waste, fraud, and abuse and rooting out corruption wherever it turns up. It sets the tone for a fast-moving roundup that will run from schools to the state budget to Boise City Hall.
1:10 Teacher Contracts and the Education Listening Sessions
The discussion starts with a district that reportedly spent 100 hours negotiating a single teacher contract without resolution, then turns to the state superintendent’s traveling education listening sessions and what they reveal. The episode reads declining enrollment as a sign that school choice is already working, and digs into the funding-formula fight: districts want money tied to students enrolled rather than daily attendance. The deeper point is about incentives — pay on enrollment alone, the argument goes, and a district has little reason to care whether students actually show up or whether the teaching is any good, while administrators in these sessions only ever ask for more.
8:19 Milton Friedman and the Case for School Choice
Asked how he would fix the system, the episode reaches for Milton Friedman’s free-market argument, using the food and computer industries as examples of markets producing results no central planner could have imagined. The structural claim is that the profit motive rewards whoever serves customers best, and that public schools lack exactly that pressure. Idaho’s new education tax credit is presented as a first dose of competition — worth roughly half what public schools spend per student — and the resistance to it is framed as “moving their cheese.” With teachers rated 98% proficient while student proficiency sits near 32%, the episode argues only redundant administrators and unmotivated teachers have anything to fear from choice.
14:37 Land Deals, Raises, and Rising Property Taxes
The segment lays out the episode’s case studies in school-district waste: a district said to have bought land at nearly twice market value from a seller related to a board member, and that same district handing its superintendent a raise larger than the one given to teachers. It then notes that many districts, facing declining enrollment, are now making smaller budget asks — credited to the pressure of school choice. The thread continues into Boise, where the episode cites an 18% property-tax increase by the school district the prior year, held flat this year, even as the city asks for more.
17:03 The Accountability Machine: From Freedom Index to Local Government
Here the conversation turns to the tools meant to push back. The episode credits a legislative scorecard with shifting how lawmakers vote and with electing more conservative legislators, then describes expanding that approach downward: a new local-government accountability index for cities and counties, a newly hired policy analyst dedicated to local issues, and a revived “pork report.” The pitch is that the same measurement and public ranking applied to the legislature can be aimed at city and county budgets.
19:18 America’s 250th and Taxpayer-Funded Celebrations
Marking the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the episode recounts the July 2 vote, the July 4 signing, and John Adams’s letter to Abigail Adams predicting national celebration. It then pivots to its objection: funding patriotic celebration through what it calls coerced taxation. The episode claims Idaho’s America 250 advisory council received more than $800,000 in taxpayer money and that the Secretary of State asked for roughly $10,000 more, against a projected state budget deficit — contrasting all of it with privately funded community fireworks.
23:20 The Boise Library Video and the City’s DEI Spending
The episode takes up a Boise library video that drew online backlash — described, on the strength of internet claims the show itself flags as unverified, as hosted by a transgender presenter — and argues the city’s mayor responded by announcing millions for library outreach. From there it broadens into a charge that Boise spends taxpayer dollars on what it frames as a DEI agenda, from pride displays on flagpoles to decorations on city trees and parks, calling the running fight with the legislature a distraction from basic city services.
25:24 Blue Cities as a Cautionary Tale
Boise’s trajectory becomes the launch point for a roll call of cities the episode holds up as warnings — New York, Denver, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. It points listeners to a viral concession video it attributes to a defeated Los Angeles mayoral candidate, then circles back to worry that Boise, once comparable to an earlier Salt Lake City, is drifting the same way through over-regulation and over-taxation rather than focusing on roads, low taxes, and room for business.
27:54 The Rural Health Transformation Grants
The episode digs into rural health transformation grants tied to the federal “big, beautiful bill” — a promised billion dollars to Idaho over five years, with roughly $186 million in the first year. Its central complaint is structural: the very first grant, about $1.3 million, went to standing up a committee to administer the grants rather than to rural health itself. The discussion walks the task force’s makeup — agency directors, the Adjutant General, the State Board of Education, workforce officials, and legislators it labels big spenders — and notes the absence, by its reading, of rural doctors or tribal representation. Against a $14 billion state budget, the closing line is that there is no free money: it comes back as taxes or inflation.
32:01 The Foundation’s July Gala and Keynote Lineup
A brief promotional turn invites listeners to a local-government accountability site to report waste, then previews a July 18 celebration at the Boise Center built around the country’s 250th anniversary. The Babylon Bee’s editor-in-chief is announced as keynote speaker, alongside a women’s-rights activist, with tables reportedly more than half sold.
33:17 Growing the Audience and the Idaho Radio Project
The close reflects on a readership now reaching well beyond Idaho, with out-of-state comments rolling in, and restates the mission: an “action tank” holding government accountable and pressing to cut property taxes, regulation, and the overall tax burden so families can afford to stay. It ends by previewing a forthcoming Idaho radio venture — pitched as a call-in complement to the podcast and newsletter — before the sign-off.






