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Guest Columnist Idaho Senator Christy Zito: Saving the Family, part 2

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June 6, 2026

Saving the Family, part 2

ID Senator Christy Zito (photo credit: Christy Zito)

When people hear about programs that serve youth involved in the juvenile justice system, many assume the benefits stop with the child receiving services.

That couldn’t be further from the truth.

When we help a young person turn their life around before they enter a cycle of detention, incarceration, addiction, or dependence on government systems, the entire community benefits.

The real question is not whether taxpayers will pay.

The question is when.

Do we invest in families early, while parents still have the opportunity to intervene and lasting change is possible?

Or do we wait until problems become crises and pay far more through law enforcement, court costs, detention facilities, residential treatment, emergency services, and eventually the adult criminal justice system?

Study after study shows that Multisystemic Therapy (MST) works.

Research has consistently demonstrated significant reductions in repeat criminal behavior, incarceration, and out-of-home placements among high-risk youth. Long-term studies show an average reduction of 54 percent in out-of-home placements and a 42 percent reduction in long-term re-arrest rates.

Those are not just statistics.

Those numbers represent families staying together, young lives redirected, and communities becoming safer.

This is especially important in Idaho, where many youth entering the juvenile justice system are also struggling with mental health challenges and substance abuse. More than half of detained youth meet the criteria for significant mental health concerns.

The reality is simple: these needs do not disappear when services are unavailable.

They show up in our schools.

They show up in our hospitals and emergency rooms.

They show up in calls to law enforcement.

They show up in juvenile detention centers.

And for too many young people, they eventually show up in adult prisons.

The cost of doing nothing is never zero.

In fact, it is often the most expensive option.

What makes MST different is its focus on strengthening families before they reach a breaking point. Instead of immediately removing children from their homes whenever possible, MST equips parents and families with the tools they need to create lasting change and restore stability.

That means stronger families.

Safer communities.

Better outcomes for children.

And a more responsible use of taxpayer dollars.

As Idahoans, we believe strong families are the foundation of strong communities. We believe in personal responsibility, local solutions, and helping people become self-sufficient rather than dependent.

MST reflects those values.

The goal isn’t simply to improve a government statistic.

The goal is to change the trajectory of a young person’s life.

And when that happens, the benefits extend far beyond one child or one family.

Entire communities are stronger because of it.

In Part Three, we’ll discuss how Idahoans can help ensure more families have access to this life-changing service.

God bless,

Senator Christy Zito,
Idaho State Senate
District 8,
Protecting Freedom for Future Generations

Three Candidates Vie for IDGOP Chairmanship

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June 9, 2026 (Cover image credit: IDGOP FB)

Boise–Three prominent Republicans have announced their candidacy for chairman of the Idaho Republican Party: current chairwoman Dorothy Moon, current Vice Chair Mark Fuller, and former Senator Steven Thayn.

In Moon’s candidacy announcement, she highlighted the party’s revitalization and its successful fight against Ranked Choice Voting.  “It has been an honor to serve Idaho Republicans during a time of tremendous growth and energy within our party,” Moon said. “Together, we have worked to keep Idaho the conservative leader of the nation, defend election integrity, support our county parties and grassroots volunteers, and elect Republicans who stand firmly for the values of faith, family, freedom, and limited government.”  She hopes to build on those successes to promote party unity and defeat the abortion initiative that is expected to appear on Idahoan’s November ballots.

Mark Fuller sees the Chairman’s role as being similar to referee: “enforcing the rules, respecting the decisions of the Central Committee, and ensuring every Republican has an opportunity to be heard.”  If elected, he plans to listen closely, ensure rules are applied fairly, and respect the volunteers whose work is the strength of the party.

Steven Thayn feels the party has become overly focused on winning elections.  He would like to promote unity through respectful debate and lead the party to focus on solving Idahoan’s daily struggles with affordability, education, and health care.

The Republican Party’s new chairman will be chosen at the upcoming IDGOP Summer Meeting on June 18-20.

City of Pocatello Joins 7th Annual ‘Support Local Gems’ Initiative

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, June 8, 2026)

Today, the City of Pocatello joined U.S. Senator Jim Risch (R-Idaho) and the Idaho Department of Commerce to launch the seventh annual Support Local Gems initiative—an all-day event dedicated to supporting Idaho small businesses.

On Friday, June 12, 2026, Idahoans are invited to Support Local Gems by giving their business to their favorite local shops and restaurants. Idahoans can get involved by shopping at a small business, dining at an independent restaurant, purchasing a gift card for a loved one, writing a review online, or simply saying “thank you” to an Idaho small business they love.

“Small businesses are the heart of Pocatello. They create jobs, support local families, and help make our community a vibrant place to live, work, and enjoy life. I encourage everyone to take part in Support Local Gems by shopping local, dining local, and showing appreciation for the businesses that invest in our community every day,” said Mayor Mark Dahlquist.

“The Gem State is powered by our small businesses. The entrepreneurial spirit of small business owners and employees is vital to our state’s economy, workforce, and way of life,” said Risch. “Friday, June 12 is a special day to show our appreciation and support for these pillars of our communities. I invite all Idahoans to join me and Support Local Gems.”

Background: In 2020, Idaho’s small businesses faced unprecedented hardships as they worked to remain viable through the pandemic. To support these businesses, Senator Jim Risch and the Idaho Department of Commerce launched the Support Local Gems initiative in 2020 to encourage Idahoans to shop and dine locally. As challenges like inflation and supply chain disruptions continue, support for Idaho’s small businesses through Support Local Gems remains essential.

As we celebrate the seventh annual Support Local Gems initiative, Idahoans are encouraged to once again give their full support to the small businesses – our local gems – that make Idaho a special place to live and thrive.

If your organization or small business would like to get involved in the Support Local Gems initiative, visit risch.senate.gov.

Idaho National Laboratory Helps Prepare Cities for the FIFA World Cup

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(Idaho National Laboratory Press Release, June 8, 2026)

By Lisa Wilmore, INL Communications

This summer, the U.S., Canada and Mexico will jointly host the largest FIFA World Cup ever. An estimated 6 million soccer fans will fill stadiums in 11 American cities, including Seattle, Los Angeles and Kansas City. The Idaho National Laboratory’s critical infrastructure analysts are working behind the scenes to help keep these urban centers safe.

Their mission: account for every substation, water treatment facility, pipeline and hospital near an event during a time of heightened vulnerability.

The team’s work goes far beyond mapping data points — it’s about uncovering the complex web of interdependencies that keep our cities functioning.

“We find and catalog physical assets like water treatment plants, emergency communications, commuter and freight rail lines, and convention centers, and then determine the various connections and dependencies among them,” said Rob Edsall, a geospatial scientist and project lead within INL’s Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience division.

For instance, what happens if a cyberattack shuts down a potable water master pump station supporting a hospital’s water supply? An accident or attack that disrupts that pipeline might affect all downstream infrastructure and services. These connections exist but are rarely mapped. That’s where the INL team steps in.

Event-based buildouts

Edsall’s team collaborates with the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agenc to reduce risks at major events, focusing on threats like cyberattacks, natural disasters and terrorism. INL gathers and analyzes infrastructure information, focused on one metropolitan region around the event, to help CISA advise local and state officials, protect the public, and ensure the smooth functioning of these events.

These high-intensity “sprints” typically last six to eight weeks and involve mapping critical infrastructure facilities and their dependencies across 16 sectors, including energy, water, health care and transportation. Stakeholders in individual sectors understand their systems, but they often overlook cross-sector interdependencies and geographic consequences.

INL’s analysts have supported events like the Boston Marathon and the Republican National Convention, and have conducted post-event analyses, such as on Baltimore’s infrastructure after the Key Bridge collapse, but are now focused on America 250 and the FIFA World Cup.

All-Hazards Analysis tool

The team’s geospatial mapping tool, All-Hazards Analysis, emerged from the Laboratory Directed Research and Development program, which funds high-impact research that aligns with INL’s core capabilities. AHA has flourished since 2014. The tool is now funded by multiple federal agencies and licensed to several state governments and organizations to manage infrastructure risk through dependencies analysis.

Colter Green, an INL critical infrastructure security analyst, began working with AHA as an intern in 2019, mapping water system assets in northwest Washington. The project focused on assessing the water system’s resilience in case of an earthquake or tsunami from the Cascadia Subduction Zone, a geologic feature off the Pacific Northwest coast. Green’s data helped answer a critical question: How will an earthquake or tsunami impact the clean water supply for the 6 million people living in western Washington?

Using open-source data, Green mapped assets and connections. AHA captured and visualized his data, which helped local and state planners prepare mitigation strategies. These early projects set the stage for his continued work in infrastructure modeling and national preparedness.

Reading between the pipelines

The INL team has already used AHA to prepare data sets and maps for several World Cup host cities including Seattle, Kansas City, Los Angeles, New York/New Jersey, Philadelphia and the San Francisco Bay Area.

The Seattle buildout recreated a dependency model of the downtown steam generation system. In Los Angeles, the focus was on road transportation. This analysis encompassed traffic counters and connecting regional petroleum production to local fuel terminals.

One of Green’s biggest challenges is finding data. While some cities publish detailed plans, access to infrastructure data is rare.

Critical infrastructure in the U.S. is often privately owned, with owners wary of sharing information despite its importance to emergency planners and public safety officials.

Harvey Hembree, another INL critical infrastructure security analyst, has developed creative ways to work around these data gaps. “When we can’t gather data from the top down, we use tools like Google Maps street view and satellite imagery,” said Hembree. “Sometimes we end up reading public records like city council meeting minutes that give us information about replacing a sewage pump on Smith Street.”

When data isn’t available, Hembree turns to spatial heuristics — inferences based on patterns and proximity. For example, knowing a water treatment plant’s location and its service area’s elevation profile allows for educated guesses about locations and dependencies of related infrastructure, like pump stations or water towers.

State and local decision making

Once INL completes an infrastructure buildout, the data is handed to CISA partners. From there, regional analysts serve as liaisons between federal agencies and local planners, offering services of broader context and guidance to state officials.

The AHA-generated data is used to run scenarios that improve risk management and emergency response. These insights help identify vulnerabilities, inform decisions and support national security.

“This capability hasn’t really existed before now,” said Edsall. “The societal relevance of our work is clear. No private company is going to do this — there’s no profit in it. We do it in support of state preparedness and national security. If we don’t understand these systems, it puts our country at risk.”

Future events

As the countdown to the World Cup continues, INL’s geospatial analysts are already looking at other future high-profile events. With data buildouts underway for the 2026 Super Bowl in Santa Clara and the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, the team is expanding the reach and refinement of the AHA tool.

By mapping the unseen, overlooked connections that underpin modern life, INL is helping build a safer nation — one city, one system, one scenario at a time.

About Idaho National Laboratory
Battelle Energy Alliance manages INL for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy. INL is the nation’s center for nuclear energy research and development, and also performs research in each of DOE’s strategic goal areas: energy, national security, science and the environment. For more information, visit www.inl.gov. Follow us on social media: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and X.

Molly Johnson Selected as Principal of Greenacres Elementary

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(Pocatello/Chubbuck School District Press Release, June 8, 2026; Cover photo credit: SD25 FB)

Greenacres Elementary School Principal Molly Johnson (Photo credit: SD25)

The Pocatello/Chubbuck School District 25 is pleased to announce that Molly Johnson has been selected as the new Principal of Greenacres Elementary School.

Johnson brings 10 years of experience serving learners, staff, and families in Pocatello/Chubbuck School District 25. Most recently, she served as Assistant Principal at Alameda Middle School and previously as the Department Chair of Special Education at Pocatello High School.

Molly earned an undergraduate degree in special education and a Master of Educational Administration from Idaho State University. Throughout her career, she has demonstrated a strong commitment to learner success through a variety of leadership roles, including new teacher mentor, department chair, member of the Building Leadership Team (BLT), and active participant on the district’s special education committee.

Johnson looks forward to joining the Greenacres Elementary community and building upon the school’s tradition of learner success, innovation, and strong family engagement.

“Molly has consistently demonstrated exceptional leadership, a commitment to educational excellence, and a passion for supporting learners and staff,” said PCSD 25 Superintendent Dr. Douglas Howell. “Her experience as both an educator and administrator has prepared her well for this role, and we are excited to see her build strong partnerships with learners, staff, and families as she leads the Greenacres Elementary community and continues the school’s tradition of success.”

Johnson is replacing Dr. Joel Wilson, who has served as Principal of Greenacres Elementary School since July 2022. Wilson is relocating to accept a position as superintendent of another Idaho school district.

The administrative change will go into effect on July 1, 2026.

Pocatello Animal Services Announces Story Time at the Animal Shelter: Fun, Learning, and Creativity for Kids

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, June 8, 2026)

Pocatello Animal Services is excited to announce a new Children’s Story Time Program designed to inspire, educate and encourage young animal lovers through stories and creative activities.

Each session will include:

  • Animal-themed stories
  • Educational activities focused on animals and pet care
  • A fun craft project to take home

Beginning June 16, Story Time will be held weekly at the Pocatello Animal Shelter:

  • Tuesdays | 1:00–2:00 p.m.

    For children ages 5 and under
  • Thursdays | 1:00–2:00 p.m.

    For children ages 6–10

These interactive groups are a wonderful opportunity for children to build compassion for animals, learn about responsible pet care, and enjoy a fun afternoon at the shelter.

Important Allergy Notice:

Peanut butter is used throughout the shelter for animal enrichment and treats. Individuals with peanut allergies should use caution when attending.

No pre-registration required!  We look forward to welcoming young readers and future animal advocates to the shelter, 3100 Avenue of the Chiefs!

For more information, visit pocatello.gov/animalshelter or contact the Pocatello Animal Shelter at 208-234-6156.

In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, it is the policy of the City of Pocatello to offer its public programs, services, and meetings in a manner that is readily accessible to everyone, including those with disabilities.  If you are disabled and require an accommodation, please contact Skyler Beebe with two (2) business days’ advance notice at sbeebe@pocatello.gov; 208.234.6248; or 5815 South 5th Avenue, Pocatello, Idaho.  Advance notification within this guideline will enable the City to make reasonable arrangements to ensure accessibility.

Senator Mike Crapo: Supporting Idaho Farmers and Families and Strengthening Wildfire Readiness

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(Idaho Senator Mike Crapo, June 6, 2026)

Idaho’s farmers, rural communities, Tribes, seniors and families need policies that strengthen local economies, protect private enterprise and preserve Idaho’s way of life.  Recent work in the Senate has focused on advancing those priorities by addressing unfair trade practices, improving public lands management, supporting water certainty and delivering tax relief.

Protecting Idaho Sugar Producers from Unfair Trade Practices

Idaho sugar beet growers contribute significantly to Idaho’s diverse agriculture production and support rural economies across the Gem State.  Unfair foreign trade practices undercut American producers and threaten the long-term viability of domestic sugar production.  I joined fellow U.S. Senator for Idaho Jim Risch, Idaho’s U.S. Representatives Russ Fulcher and Mike Simpson, and a bipartisan group of lawmakers in urging the U.S. Trade Representative to launch a Section 301 investigation into discriminatory foreign sugar practices.

Idaho farmers, processors and workers deserve a level playing field.  Read the full letter on my website HERE.

Cutting Taxes for Idaho Seniors and Working Families

Many Idaho seniors live on fixed incomes or work longer than expected.  They deserve tax relief that helps them keep more of what they earned.

The Working Families Tax Cuts created a new deduction of up to $6,000 for qualifying seniors, in addition to the standard deduction and existing senior deduction.  These reforms help Idahoans stretch their income further, cover basic needs and invest in their families.

Read more on my website HERE.

Protecting Idahoans from Cryptocurrency Scams

Cryptocurrency scams accounted for roughly half of all cybercrime losses in the United States last year.  Criminals are increasingly using digital assets to defraud Americans.  Idahoans need strong protections against these evolving scams.

I joined bipartisan legislation to establish a federal task force focused on improving coordination among law enforcement, financial regulators and private-sector experts to identify and disrupt cryptocurrency fraud.  The SAFE Crypto Act would strengthen consumer education, improve enforcement coordination and help protect Idahoans’ hard-earned savings.

Read more about the bill HERE.

Strengthening Idaho’s Wildfire Readiness

Idaho’s forests, rangelands and public lands are central to our way of life.  They require responsible management, reliable funding and local input.

As wildfire suppression costs continue to rise, Congress must prevent a return to “fire borrowing,” the harmful practice of diverting funding away from forest management and other critical priorities to cover emergency wildfire suppression costs.  The 2018 legislation I led with U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-Oregon), which was signed into law, helped put an end to this costly practice.  The current framework expires next year.

At a recent Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources hearing, U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz estimated my wildfire funding fix saved over $12 billion of federal funds as of May 2026.

I will continue working to ensure federal land agencies have the tools needed to improve forest health, reduce hazardous fuels, support rural communities and keep Idaho’s public lands accessible for future generations.

Letter Writer Art da Rosa: The Real Target Isn’t Data Centers – It’s AI

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June 8, 2026

Dear Editor,

Last week, I walked through the specific objections to data centers and found most of them don’t hold up under examination. But beneath all of it lies a deeper anxiety that warrants honest engagement: the fear of artificial intelligence itself.

That fear is not crazy. It is not fringe. It deserves a straight answer — not dismissal, and not false reassurance.

So let me lay out the full picture, including the arguments people on all sides are making, and where I think the truth actually lands.

WHAT PEOPLE ARE AFRAID OF

The concerns about AI fall into two broad camps, and both have been shaped by popular culture as much as by actual technology.

The first is the Terminator scenario — AI becomes so intelligent that it develops its own goals, decides humans are a problem, and acts accordingly. This is the fear of AI as an autonomous, hostile force that humanity can no longer control.

The second is the Wall-E scenario — machines gradually do everything for us, we stop using our minds and bodies, become passive and dependent, and quietly lose what makes us human without any dramatic confrontation at all.

Both are legitimate concerns. Both are also incomplete. The truth, as is usually the case, is more nuanced — and in some ways more immediately urgent — than either movie captures.

THE TERMINATOR QUESTION

Let me be honest: the concern about AI exceeding human control is not science fiction fringe thinking. It is actively debated by serious researchers, including some who helped build modern AI systems.

The technical issue is called the alignment problem — ensuring that a sufficiently advanced AI system’s goals remain genuinely aligned with human values and interests. The danger isn’t that AI becomes evil in the Hollywood sense. It’s subtler: a system given a goal then pursues it. A system smart enough to pursue a goal effectively will also work to prevent being shut down, acquire resources it needs, and remove obstacles — not out of malice, but because those are logical sub-goals toward whatever it was originally programmed to achieve.

Geoffrey Hinton, one of the founding fathers of modern AI who left Google specifically to speak freely about this, considers the risk real and underappreciated. The late Stephen Hawking said it plainly — if AI develops genuine goals misaligned with human interests, and surpasses human intelligence in pursuing them, the outcome could be catastrophic.

The honest answer is that nobody knows with certainty whether this scenario is achievable, or on what timeline. What we can say is that the concern is serious enough that a significant research effort is being directed at solving it by saying that they need to invest in safety, and don’t cede the field to those who won’t bother.

THE WALL-E QUESTION

The quieter concern — passive human dependency — is in some ways already happening, and this one I find genuinely troubling.

Remember when everyone knew a dozen phone numbers by heart? GPS ended our ability to navigate without electronic assistance. Calculators eroded mental arithmetic. Search engines changed how we form and retain knowledge. Each convenience came with a quiet atrophy of a human capacity. We traded the capability for convenience, often without noticing.

AI represents that process applied to our highest cognitive functions — reasoning, judgment, analysis, creativity, and eventually decision-making itself. The people who use AI as a tool to amplify their own thinking will thrive. Those who outsource their thinking to AI entirely will find those faculties diminishing.

The Wall-E scenario doesn’t require a single dramatic event. It just requires enough small surrenders of human agency, repeated often enough, that we wake up one day having forgotten how to think, navigate, decide, and relate without a machine in between.

THE SURVEILLANCE SCENARIO — THE MOST IMMEDIATE THREAT

Here is where I want to spend the most time, because this concern is not future speculation. It is the present reality, and it is the one most directly relevant to American citizens right now.

China has deployed AI surveillance on a scale that would be unthinkable in a free society. Facial recognition tracks citizens’ movements in public spaces. Communications are monitored. Social credit scores rank citizens on behavior that the state approves or disapproves of. Dissent is identified and suppressed algorithmically, at speed and scale no human security apparatus could match. Chinese companies — Hikvision, Dahua, SenseTime — are actively exporting this infrastructure to dozens of authoritarian governments worldwide. They are selling the tools of population control to any government willing to buy them.

Europe is wrestling with this more seriously than most people realize. The EU AI Act, adopted in 2024, explicitly prohibits government social scoring, real-time biometric surveillance in public spaces, and emotion recognition in workplaces. These are hard legal prohibitions, not guidelines. Europe has its own surveillance problems — several member states were caught using spyware against political figures and journalists — but the legislative effort to draw clear legal lines is real and serious.

The United States picture is more complicated, and it should concern Americans regardless of political affiliation.

In March 2026, FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed to Congress that the FBI is purchasing Americans’ data from commercial data brokers — including location histories — to track American citizens. This is a legal workaround to Fourth Amendment protections. The government cannot warrantlessly search your phone, but it can buy the same data commercially. Constitutional protection has a loophole, and artificial intelligence makes exploiting that loophole vastly more powerful — because AI can correlate, analyze, and act on purchased data at a scale and speed no human analyst could approach.

That is the kind of story that should matter to conservatives and libertarians who care about government overreach, and to civil libertarians who care about constitutional rights. This is not a partisan issue. It is a foundational American issue.

ARGUMENTS FOR AI DEVELOPMENT

Having laid out the legitimate concerns honestly, let me be equally direct about why AI development must continue — and why American leadership in it is essential.

First, AI is not going to stop being developed because activists blocked a data center in Idaho. The technology is advancing globally. The only question is who leads and under what value system.

Second, American and Western AI development, for all its imperfections, operates under constraints that matter — democratic oversight, a free press, legal accountability, competitive market checks, and civil society criticism that is permitted.

Third, the benefits are real and substantial. AI is already accelerating medical research, diagnosing diseases earlier, optimizing energy systems, improving agricultural yields, and making small businesses competitive in ways previously impossible. The people who will benefit most from AI-assisted medicine, legal services, and education are not the wealthy — who already have access to those things — but ordinary people who previously couldn’t afford them.

Fourth, on the national security dimension, China’s Military-Civil Fusion doctrine means there is no separation between civilian AI development and military application. AI is the brain; autonomous weapons, robotic systems, and surveillance infrastructure are the body. The nation that leads in AI leads in all of them simultaneously. If China achieves decisive AI superiority, the implications go far beyond economic competition. We are talking about autonomous weapons with no democratic accountability and surveillance infrastructure that could be turned against any population on earth.

The comparison to nuclear weapons is not an exaggeration. In the 1940s, the only thing worse than the United States developing the atomic bomb would have been Stalin developing it first — without the constraints, however imperfect, that democratic accountability imposed on American nuclear policy.

WHERE THE TRUTH ACTUALLY LANDS

Neither the Terminator nor Wall-E captures the real situation, though both point at something real.

The Terminator gets this right: the risk of losing meaningful human control over AI systems is genuine and deserves serious attention. It gets this wrong: the threat isn’t a robot army acting out of malice. It’s subtler — systems optimizing for the wrong goals, or systems deliberately weaponized by governments with no accountability.

Wall-E gets this right: the quiet erosion of human capability and agency through dependency is a real and already observable process. It gets this wrong: the outcome isn’t inevitable. It depends on choices — individual, cultural, and political — about how we integrate AI into human life.

The more realistic near-term scenario is neither of those movies. It is a world where AI is an enormously powerful tool that amplifies whatever values and intentions are built into it. In the hands of democratic societies with legal accountability and genuine ethical debate, it amplifies human capability and extends prosperity. In the hands of authoritarian states with no accountability, it amplifies control and suppression.

That is precisely why the question of who leads the AI race is not a technology question. It is a moral and civilizational question.

And it is why blocking American data centers in the name of AI safety is not just ineffective — it is counterproductive. It weakens the side with guardrails and strengthens the side without them.

WHAT WE SHOULD DEMAND

The legitimate surveillance concern — which I share — is not an argument against AI development. It is an argument for specific, enforceable protections:

Constitutional clarity that Fourth Amendment protections apply regardless of whether the government collects data directly or purchases it commercially. Judicial oversight requirements before AI surveillance tools are deployed against American citizens. Legislative accountability for government AI contracts.

These are conservative principles — limited government, constitutional rights, checks on executive power. They are also the exact framework that distinguishes American AI from Chinese AI.

Jefferson County residents don’t have to choose between welcoming the future and defending their freedoms. They can demand both. That is precisely what self-governance looks like in the AI era.

Next week: China specifically — their strategic motivations, their military AI ambitions, and why the outcome of this race matters for every community in America.

Art da Rosa, PE, MPA, CFM
Rigby, Idaho

Patriots for Liberty and Constitution to Continue Discussing “By the People” TODAY, June 8

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Patriots for Liberty and Constitution

June 8, 2026

Pocatello–Tonight at their weekly meeting, the group “Patriots for Liberty & Constitution” will continue discussing Charles Murray’s book, By the People.  This week’s discussion will center on Chapter 11.

Patriots for Liberty & Constitution meets at Mountain Valley Baptist Church, 202 S. 7th Avenue in Pocatello, every Monday evening at 6:30. The public is welcome to attend.

Idaho Secretary of State: 558,000 Reasons Idaho is on the Right Track

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One of the responsibilities of the Idaho Secretary of State’s Office is maintaining the state’s business registry. While many people know our office for elections, we also serve more than 558,000 business entities registered across Idaho.

That puts us in a unique position to see the health of Idaho’s economy up close. And right now, the view looks strong. We set a record for business filings in 2025, had more than 26,000 new businesses registered in just the last six months, and we’re seeing no signs of slowing down.

It makes sense. Idaho has earned a reputation as one of the best states in the country to do business. Here we have a strong work ethic and a spirit of ingenuity that runs from our chip manufacturers to our farms to the solo freelancer working out of a spare bedroom. As one of the least-regulated states in the nation, we have created an environment where these businesses can thrive.

But behind the numbers are people. Your neighbors, friends, and fellow Idahoans who run shops, create jobs, sponsor Little League teams, and show up for their communities every day.

So next time you have a choice, buy local. Idaho business is strong. Let’s keep it that way.

Phil McGrane

ABOUT SECRETARY PHIL McGRANE

Phil McGrane was elected Idaho’s twenty-eighth Secretary of State and took office on January 2, 2023. McGrane served as elected Clerk of Ada County from 2019-2022.McGrane holds a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, a juris doctorate, and a Master of Public Administration. As a fourth-generation Idahoan, Phil has dedicated his career to making elections in the state of Idaho accessible, secure and transparent.