Monday, June 15, 2026
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Ski Ingram’s “A Veteran’s Thoughts:” The Real Racists?

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June 15, 2026

The Real Racists?

Ski Ingram

By: Ski Ingram

Politicians have been lying to us for 250 years in order to get elected to office and most of us understand it as “politics as usual.” We rarely hold them to the promises they made. Fortunately, few political promises or lies affect our daily lives. There is one lie however, that affects us all more than any other and that is the lie about racism in America.

Racism is being used to marginalize groups of people and to gain power over them. Racism is also being used as a cudgel against people so they can retain that power. If more people knew the history of racism that power would disappear. I was surprised to learn that Anthony Johnson, a black man, was the first person, in 1621, to bring black slaves to America.

I was also surprised to learn that after the Civil War twenty-two black men from the South were elected to Congress in the Republican party in 1870. A short time later, after Jim Crow laws were enacted and other groups such as the KKK were organized, these Black Congressmen were forced out of politics. When poll taxes and literacy laws were enacted, it was almost impossible for black people to vote much less run for political office.

When Joseph Rainey, the first black Republican Senator, left Congress he stated, “When myself and colleagues shall leave these halls and turn our footsteps toward our southern homes we know not but that the assassin may await our coming as marked for his vengeance.”

In a few days Americans will be celebrating Juneteenth. June 19, 1865, is the day that former slaves in Texas learned that they were granted their freedom through the Emancipation Proclamation signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863. The former slaves only found out about their freedom when Union General Gordon Granger informed them that they were free. I believe it was racist for Texans to keep this information from the black population for 71 days after the war.

Few people know the name Margaret Sanger. She was a woman celebrated by southern politicians in 1916 after she founded the “Negro Project.” The goal of the project, as Sanger explained, was to eliminate “races like Orientals, Jews and Blacks.” Why do so few people not know about this woman and what she believed and promoted? Was she a racist? Were her followers racists? The Negro Project name was changed in 1939 to “Planned Parenthood” because as she stated, “We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population.”

Dr. Ben Carson stated, “Who started the KKK? That was the Democrats. Who was the party of slavery? Who was the party of Jim Crow and segregation? Who opposed the Civil Rights Movement? Who opposed voting rights? It was all the Democrats.”

It seems clear to me that there is a segment of Americans, of all races, who want to keep the lie of racism alive. These same people gain their power from the race issue. We have just learned that the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) is accused of paying hate groups such as the KKK to cause racial problems. They then condemn the KKK as racists and then ask for donations to fight the supposed hate. These donations make it possible for them to continue paying hate groups to cause problems and keep the myth of systemic racism in America.

In 1963 Reverend Martin Luther King gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech where he told the crowd of 250,000, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” Just a few days ago Dr. Alveda King testified before congress stating, “I still have a dream. I dream that one day we will move beyond black power and white power and embrace God’s power and human dignity.” I have that same dream.

Ski Ingram is a combat veteran and a patriot who can be reached at: www.Skiingram.com

Patriots for Liberty and Constitution to Continue Discussing “By the People” TODAY, June 15

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Patriots for Liberty and Constitution

June 15, 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.

Pocatello: Road Closure and Traffic Report for Week of June 15, 2026

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(Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

June 12, 2026 (Cover Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

The City of Pocatello’s Road Construction & Traffic Report for the week of June 15, 2026, has been published and may be read here.

Highlights include:

  • Street sweepers are currently performing their regular sweeping schedule.
  • The Street Services crew will be patching potholes and curb lines throughout the City.
  • Crews will be jetting and cleaning sewer mainlines throughout the City.
  • Traffic Services will be replacing aging signal heads and wiring at the intersection of North Arthur Avenue and West Custer Street on June 15, 16, and 17. Temporary stop signs will be in use.
  • Jerome Street between Olympus Drive and Appaloosa Avenue will be closed to all traffic on June 18 and 19, 2026, from 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM for water main work. Appaloosa Avenue between Jerome Street and Latah Street will also be closed to through traffic during these times.
  • The Water Department is replacing the water mainline on E Putnam St. Crews will work from 6:30 AM – 5:00 PM, Monday to Thursday.  Work is expected to continue for 4 weeks.
  • Work continues on the Benton Street Bridge over the Portneuf River April 15, 2026. West Benton Street remains closed between South Hayes Avenue and South Grant Avenue. Construction is anticipated to be finished by the end of September, weather and other unforeseen conditions permitting.
  • South Garfield Avenue between Center Street and West Lewis Street will be closed Saturday, June 20, for the 3rd Annual World Refugee Day Community Gathering at Lookout Point.
  • South Garfield Avenue between Center Street and West Lewis Street will be closed from 2 PM to 9 PM on Mondays for Curbside Cravings.
  • South Garfield Avenue between Center Street and West Lewis Street will be closed from 2:00 PM to 9:00 PM every Wednesday for the Revive @ 5 Summer Concerts.
  • South Garfield Avenue between Center Street and West Lewis Street will be closed from 6 AM to 3 PM every Saturday for the Portneuf Valley Farmers Market.

City of Pocatello Calendar for June 15-19, 2026

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, June 12, 2026; Cover Photo Credit: City of Pocatello)

City of Pocatello Calendar of Meetings ~ June 15-19, 2026

MONDAY, JUNE 15
Pocatello America250 Ad Hoc Committee Meeting, 5:00 p.m., Council Chambers
TUESDAY, JUNE 16
Community Development Block Grant Advisory Committee Meeting, 12:00 p.m., Council Chambers
Site Plan Review, 1:30 p.m., Iwamizawa Conference Room
Library Board Meeting, 4:00 p.m., 113 S. Garfield Avenue
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17
Pocatello Development Authority Meeting, 11:00 a.m., Council Chambers
THURSDAY, JUNE 18
Budget Development Meeting, 9:00 a.m., Council Chambers
Housing Alliance & Community Partnerships Mtg., 11:00 a.m., 750 N. 5th Avenue
City Council Clarification Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Council Chambers
City Council Meeting, 6:00 p.m., Council Chambers
FRIDAY, JUNE 19
Juneteenth ~City Hall Closed~

Bannock County Commissioners Meetings, June 15-19, 2026

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(Bannock County Commissioner’s Office Press Release, June 12, 2026)

Monday, June 15, 2026:

10:00 AM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Meetings possible Executive Session under Idaho Code §74-206(1)(a)&(b) regarding personnel with potential action following adjournment of Executive Session (action item)

1:00 PM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Meetings possible Executive Session under Idaho Code §74-206(1)(a)&(b) regarding personnel with potential action following adjournment of Executive Session (action item)

Tuesday, June 16, 2026:

9:00 AM Business Meeting (action items)

11:00 AM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Meetings possible Executive Session under Idaho Code §74-206(1)(a)&(b) regarding personnel with potential action following adjournment of Executive Session (action item)

1:00 PM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Meetings possible Executive Session under Idaho Code §74-206(1)(a)&(b) regarding personnel with potential action following adjournment of Executive Session (action item)

Wednesday, June 17, 2026:

9:30 AM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Meetings possible Executive Session under Idaho Code §74-206(1)(a)&(b) regarding personnel with potential action following adjournment of Executive Session (action item)

1:30 PM Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Meetings possible Executive Session under Idaho Code §74-206(1)(a)&(b) regarding personnel with potential action following adjournment of Executive Session (action item)

Thursday, June 18, 2026:

9:00 AM Work Session and Claims Meeting (action items)

The Work Session Agenda will be updated on Monday, June 15, 2026.

Friday, June 19, 2026:

The Bannock County Courthouse is closed in observance of Juneteenth.

(The information packets for the business meeting and work session can be found at http://www.bannockcounty.gov. Scroll down and click on “Agendas and Minutes” then click on the information packet for the meeting that you are interested in.)

About BOCC Meetings

The Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) is comprised of the three elected County Commissioners: Ernie Moser (District 1, Chair), Jeff Hough (District 2), and Ken Bullock (District 3).

The BOCC generally meets twice a week: regular business meetings are on Tuesdays at 9:00 a.m. and work sessions are on Thursdays at 9:00 a.m. Meetings are generally held in the Commissioner’s Chambers at 624 E Center, Room 212, Pocatello, Idaho, unless otherwise noted. Times subject to change within 15 minutes of stated time.

During these meetings, the BOCC may: approve contracts, expend funds, hear testimony, make decisions on land use cases and take care of other County matters, and are open to the public.

Job Opportunites with Bannock County

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June 12, 2026

Booking Deputy
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Medicolegal Death Investigator
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Equipment Operator 2 – McCammon
Bannock County – McCammon
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Facilities Assistant
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Sr. Assistant Chief Deputy Prosecuting Attorney – Civil
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Deputy Prosecutor III
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Temporary 4-H Service Assistant
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

Seasonal Laborer
Bannock County – Pocatello
Read the full job description:  CLICK HERE!

For a complete list of available jobs… please visit our career site at: https://www.bannockcounty.us

U.S. Department of Education Approves Idaho’s Returning Education to the States Waiver

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(Idaho Department of Education Press Release, June 12, 2026)

Boise–Idaho will join a growing number of states receiving greater flexibility over the use of federal education funding following the U.S. Department of Education’s approval of Idaho’s Ed-Flex and ESSA waiver application submitted by State Superintendent Debbie Critchfield.

The waiver will allow Idaho to reduce administrative burdens while streamlining how local education agencies (LEAs) assess students and utilize, prioritize, and carry over federal funding. Specifically, Idaho’s ESSA waiver will:

  • Allow LEAs to carry over up to 100% of Title I, Part A funds every other fiscal year, enabling districts and charters to make longer-term investments in evidence-based academic supports and school improvement efforts.
  • Waive the 20% spending requirement for Well-Rounded Educational Opportunities and Safe and Healthy Students, as well as the 15% spending cap on technology infrastructure, for five years. This flexibility will allow LEAs to direct resources where they are needed most to support student achievement, well-being, and school safety.

In addition, Idaho has been approved for Ed-Flex status. Ed-Flex empowers states to waive certain federal requirements that may hinder local efforts to improve educational outcomes and better meet the needs of students.

Superintendent Critchfield initiated the waiver application with the support of the Idaho State Board of Education. It reflects months of collaboration with Idaho school districts and charter schools to identify federal requirements that could be streamlined while maintaining accountability for student outcomes. Following a public comment period and recommendations from the Idaho Federal Flexibility Workgroup, the Department formally submitted the waiver package for federal review.

“Approval of this waiver is the result of a deliberate effort to identify opportunities for greater local flexibility and then make the case that Idaho was prepared to use that flexibility responsibly,” Critchfield said. “It reflects the work of educators, school leaders, policymakers, and stakeholders across our state who helped shape a proposal designed around the needs of Idaho students.”

State leaders said the approval reflects Idaho’s longstanding commitment to local control and student-centered decision-making.

“Idaho has long demonstrated that local leaders, educators, and parents are best positioned to make decisions that help students succeed. The U.S. Department of Education’s approval of Idaho’s waiver is a win for local control, reducing unnecessary bureaucracy and giving schools greater flexibility to direct resources where they are needed most. By empowering districts to make longer-term investments in student success, we are freeing up more time and resources to focus on what matters most — helping Idaho students learn, grow, and thrive,” Governor Little said.

For Superintendent Critchfield, the waiver is aligned with Idaho values.

“In Idaho, we know the best decisions are made closest to students, families, and communities,” she said. “Our locally governed school system has demonstrated the value of local control for generations. This waiver gives districts and charter schools greater flexibility in how they use resources, administer assessments, and support student success.”

The impact of these changes on student achievement will be closely monitored through federal accountability requirements. States receiving these waivers must submit annual reports demonstrating progress toward long-term educational goals and positive outcomes for students.

“Idaho’s education system is strongest when we trust local educators and communities to meet the unique needs of their students,” said State Board of Education President Kurt Liebich. “This approval gives districts and charter schools additional tools to do just that while preserving our commitment to high expectations and student achievement. We appreciate Superintendent Critchfield’s leadership in advancing this opportunity for Idaho schools.”

“This is an opportunity for Idaho to make decisions based on the unique needs of Idaho students rather than relying on one-size-fits-all federal requirements,” added Critchfield. “I appreciate the U.S. Department of Education’s confidence in Idaho’s ability to use this flexibility responsibly and effectively on behalf of our schools, educators, and families.”

Guest Columnist Brian Almon: What Hath Trump Wrought?

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(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

June 12, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

What Hath Trump Wrought?

By: Brian Almon

Human beings have very short attention spans. Many conservatives were impressed by the shock-and-awe campaign of President Donald Trump’s first hundred days in office in 2025, but that now seems like ages ago. With Trump having engaged in conflict in Iran, and gas prices increasing as a result, it has become common to hear former supporters (as well as those who never supported Trump in the first place) say that the president’s second administration has accomplished nothing. I recently had a conversation with a libertarian who followed this line of thinking. To him, the only policy priorities were government spending and foreign wars, and therefore Trump has been a failure.

It got me thinking about what the president has actually accomplished in the first year and a half of his second term. It’s certainly not nothing, and things are clearly better than they would have been had Kamala Harris won the election. But what does that mean in practical terms? What has Donald Trump really accomplished since January 2025?

If your measure of success is limited to one or two issues, such as foreign policy and government spending, then it’s easy to dismiss him as a failure. But the coalition that carried Trump back to the White House in 2024 was much broader than that, and so are the goals and priorities that brought many Americans to his side.

Unlike libertarians, my number one priority is immigration, and President Trump has delivered on that issue. The southern border, which was effectively wide open during Joe Biden’s tenure, has been sealed, and construction of the border wall has resumed. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has been continuously engaged in deportation operations, not only prioritizing criminals but also those who are “simply” in our country illegally. The mobile app that the Biden administration used to allow illegal aliens to enter the country by claiming refugee or asylum status was repurposed to make it easy for those here illegally to voluntarily leave.

Numbers vary, but I’ve read that at least two million illegal aliens have left the country, whether by enforcement action or voluntary departure. Net migration to the United States was negative last year for the first time in recent memory, and new job gains since 2025 have gone primarily to American workers rather than illegal or foreign labor.

Beyond illegal immigration, the Trump administration has also been restructuring the immigration system as a whole, from the handling of asylum and refugee claims to raising the bar for companies seeking to hire foreign workers through H-1B and other visa programs.

Of course, it’s not enough, but it’s a start. Anyone who sets expectations impossibly high for the sole purpose of criticizing those who are fighting in the arena is not acting in good faith.

The Trump administration has also been working to eliminate DEI at all levels of government. Ever since the 1960s, a doctrine has emerged within government that requires discrimination based on race, ethnicity, sex, and even sexuality, supposedly to counter alleged white supremacy and privilege in our society. Businesses engaging in federal contracts were required to meet certain diversity benchmarks, colleges and universities gave extra weight to women and minorities, and even the military was pushing DEI and transgender ideology.

President Trump has reversed much of that through executive orders and a restructuring of government offices. The Justice Department issued a memo this week overturning half a century of the disparate impact doctrine, which allowed the government to penalize businesses, schools, and nearly any other organization in which people of different races, ethnicities, or sexes had different outcomes. The Biden administration sued gas station company Sheetz under this doctrine because its employee background checks rejected disproportionately more black applicants than white applicants. Trump ended that nonsense.

Indeed, the entire Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department had become focused on over-correcting for pre-1960s racism by using every lever of the law to target America’s traditional majority culture. President Trump appointed Harmeet Dhillon to run this division, and she has spent her tenure cleaning it from top to bottom.

President Trump also gutted the USAID program, which was responsible for spreading a radical left-wing ideology throughout the world. There was also a little-known group within the Justice Department called the Community Relations Service (CRS), which was originally meant to calm racial and ethnic tensions but had become responsible for shaping public narratives following high-profile racial incidents. Did you ever notice how many times the family of a white victim of violent crime issued statements urging people not to see a racial angle to the incident? That was CRS at work, even as incidents involving black victims such as George Floyd were used to amplify racial strife. President Trump shut this nonsense down last year.

The Trump administration has also reversed the tide of transgender ideology. Some of the nation’s largest hospital systems have declared their intention to stop providing drugs and surgeries for minors who claim gender dysphoria—something that almost certainly would not have happened under a Harris administration. Idaho’s own Alex Adams, appointed by President Trump to lead the Administration for Children and Families, has been working to stop states from discriminating against Christian families who wish to adopt or foster orphaned children but do not believe that boys can become girls and vice versa.

President Trump told the Libertarian Party in 2024 that they should endorse him and win for once. He made one promise to the Libertarians, that he would pardon Ross Ulbricht, who was convicted under Barack Obama for operating a dark web marketplace, and he followed through. Ross is home. Trump has also reduced the federal workforce to its lowest level since the days of Lyndon Johnson. You’d think they’d give him some credit.

The federal government has grown exponentially over the past century, but President Trump is doing more to reform it than any Republican since Calvin Coolidge. He and his team are changing the rules to make it easier to remove or reassign career bureaucrats, including those who used their positions to resist Trump’s priorities during his first term.

While many of Trump’s initiatives have come through executive orders—and could therefore be reversed if a Democrat wins the White House in 2028—he has also advanced a large number of legislative priorities through the One Big Beautiful Bill. Working within a narrowly divided Congress, and with Senate Democrats threatening filibusters on much of the agenda, the administration still secured passage of key elements of its program, including the permanent extension of tax cuts, increased funding for ICE, work requirements for Medicaid, provisions supporting school choice, and more.

This is still just scratching the surface. President Trump is working to bring manufacturing back to America, make our country energy independent by prioritizing nuclear research and expanding domestic energy production, revitalizing big cities that have been torn apart by crime, homelessness, and Democratic mismanagement, and reorienting the federal government away from persecuting Americans and toward protecting them instead. That last point might be the most important achievement of all. Everything the president and his administration are doing takes time and energy, and they are being continuously harassed and stymied by left-wing judges and activists. But by taking the thumb of government off our backs, they are giving states and local communities room to do what they need to do.

Instead of the Biden Department of Education telling Idaho public schools that they must accommodate a child’s “gender identity,” the Trump Department of Education is winding down and returning control to the states. Instead of the Biden Department of Justice arresting peaceful anti-abortion activists, the Trump Department of Justice is using the same law to arrest those who angrily invaded a church service in Minnesota. Instead of the Biden IRS auditing your Venmo account, the Trump IRS is helping identify those who are in our country illegally and reporting them for deportation.

Donald Trump is not perfect—no man is. I disagree with plenty that he does—he needs to end this war in Iran yesterday, for example. Yet where my libertarian friends err is in comparing his presidency to the ideal that lives perfectly in their imaginations, something that no administration could possibly come close to matching. The choices facing the American people in 2024 were Donald Trump and a chance at American renewal, or Kamala Harris and a continuation of our national decline.

Our country wasn’t broken overnight, so we won’t make America great again overnight either. But with Donald Trump in the White House, and a strong team around him, we have a fighting chance to save our civilization.

That’s all we can hope for right now. The rest is up to us.

About Brian Almon

Brian Almon is the Editor of the Gem State Chronicle. He also serves as Chairman of the District 14 Republican Party and is a trustee of the Eagle Public Library Board. He lives with his wife and five children in Eagle.

Editor’s note:  This article originally appeared in the Gem State Chronicle.  I encourage our readers to visit their website and consider subscribing.  Find this and other informative articles at the Gem State Chronicle here: About – Gem State Chronicle

Trump Announces Signing of Iran Deal

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June 14, 2026

Washington, D.C.–President Trump posted the following statement on his Truth Social account this afternoon:

The Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete. Congratulations to all! I hereby fully authorize the toll free opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and, simultaneously herewith, authorize the immediate removal of the United States Naval blockade. Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow! President DONALD J. TRUMP

Letter Writer Art da Rosa: China, AI, and Why America Cannot Afford to Lose this Race

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June 14, 2026

Dear Editor,

Last week, I talked about the objection to data centers is really about objecting to AI. To understand why American AI leadership matters, you need to understand why China is pursuing AI with such urgency — and what they intend to do with it.

China has a serious demographic problem. Decades of the one-child policy produced a population that is aging rapidly and shrinking in its working-age core. By mid-century, China faces the prospect of a dramatically smaller workforce trying to sustain a massive economy and a powerful military. For Beijing’s leadership, this is an existential challenge.

Their answer is AI and robotics.

If machines can do the work of millions of missing workers — in factories, in logistics, in administration, in military operations — then a shrinking population becomes a manageable problem. AI isn’t just a technology priority for China. It is a national survival strategy.

This explains the scale of their investment and the urgency of their timeline. China has committed hundreds of billions of dollars to AI development, set explicit national goals for AI dominance by 2030, and structured its entire technology sector around achieving them.

Now here is the part that should concern every American, regardless of political affiliation.

China operates under a policy called Military-Civil Fusion. This means there is no meaningful separation between civilian technology development and military application. When a Chinese company develops a more capable AI system, that capability is available to the People’s Liberation Army. When Chinese AI advances in facial recognition, logistics, or autonomous systems, those advances serve both economic and military objectives simultaneously — by design, not by accident.

This is not speculation. China has already deployed AI-powered surveillance infrastructure domestically on a scale that would be unthinkable in a free society — tracking citizens’ movements, monitoring communications, assigning social credit scores, identifying and suppressing dissent. And they are actively exporting this surveillance technology to dozens of other countries, providing authoritarian governments worldwide with tools to control their own populations.

The robotics dimension makes this even more consequential. AI is the brain. Autonomous systems — robotic manufacturing, autonomous vehicles, drone swarms, unmanned military platforms — are the body. The nation that leads in AI leads in all of these simultaneously. Military advantage in the coming decades will belong to whoever can field the most capable autonomous systems at the greatest scale.

There is also a fusion energy angle to China’s ambitions that rarely gets discussed. China’s fusion research program is advancing simultaneously with its nuclear weapons program — the same physics, the same facilities, dual applications. America’s fusion research, by contrast, is transparently civilian and internationally collaborative. The nation that achieves commercial fusion first gains not just energy independence but a decisive technological and military edge.

If China achieves decisive AI superiority, the implications go far beyond economic competition. We are talking about autonomous weapons systems with no democratic accountability. Surveillance infrastructure that could be turned against any population on earth. Economic leverage that would make current trade disputes look trivial.

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. AI represents a similar civilizational inflection point.

America winning the AI race is not about national pride. It is not about making tech companies rich. It is about ensuring that the most powerful technology in human history is developed by people operating under democratic values, legal accountability, and genuine ethical constraints — rather than by a government whose primary domestic use of AI is suppressing its own citizens.

Though one has not been proposed, if Jefferson County approves a responsibly built data center, it is, in a small but real way, part of that equation.

Next week, I want to bring this closer to home — how AI disrupts the economic assumptions that have governed American life since the founding, the fear of increased surveillance, and what that means for communities like ours.

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