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Guest Columnist Brian Parsons: A Letter To The Church In Idaho

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July 13, 2026

A Letter To The Church In Idaho

By: Brian Parsons


Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

I give thanks to my God always for you because of the grace of God that was given to you in Christ Jesus, that in every way you were enriched in Him—in all speech and all knowledge—even as the testimony about Christ was confirmed among you. Yet I write to you not with smooth words of comfort alone, but with urgent warning, as one who sees a storm gathering on the horizon.

**Brothers and sisters, hear the word of the Lord.**

Our Lord Jesus Christ issued this solemn warning: “See that you do not despise one of these little ones. For I tell you that in heaven their angels always see the face of my Father who is in heaven” (Matthew 18:10). He declared that pure and undefiled religion before God the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained from the world (James 1:27). God Himself is “a father to the fatherless and a protector of widows” (Psalm 68:5). We are commanded to defend the cause of the fatherless and plead the case of the widow (Isaiah 1:17). The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me’ (Matthew 25:40).

Yet a great moral failure has overtaken much of the church in our land. We have grown silent in the face of evil, fearing the departure of people from the pews more than the departure from sound doctrine. We have traded righteousness for popularity and compromised the clear teachings of Scripture for the sake of tax-exempt status and cultural acceptance.

**Behold, a new test is upon us: Proposition 1, the so-called “Reproductive Freedom and Privacy Act.”** This initiative seeks to enshrine in our state law the very destruction of the least of these—the unborn children whom God forms in the womb (Psalm 139:13-16). It is not freedom, but bondage to death. It is not privacy, but the shedding of innocent blood in the dark. And in this hour, many in the church remain quiet, lest controversy disturb the gathering or offend the culture.

We were lied to. We were told to ignore the command to “be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis 1:28) in pursuit of self-gratification, career, and comfort. The fruit of this deception is before us: smaller families, delayed adulthood, and rampant hedonism. By the time many find a mate, the optimal season for child-rearing has often passed, compounding the crisis. Our birth rates have fallen below replacement level. Idaho, like much of the nation, faces a dying and aging population. Our social safety nets strain under the weight, unable to backfill the workers needed to sustain the very systems that should care for the vulnerable. How will we support the orphans, the widows, the elderly, and the infirm when the next generation is missing?

Tragically, this devaluing of life will not end at the womb—it will march relentlessly onward. Look to Canada, where euthanasia through Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) has become one of the leading causes of death, now accounting for over 5% of all deaths in recent years, with tens of thousands euthanized annually. What began as a so-called “choice” for the unwanted unborn soon extended to the unwanted elderly and suffering. A culture that kills its children will not long cherish its aging parents or the vulnerable among us.

In this emerging age, Artificial Intelligence is rapidly replacing much of human toil in production and labor. While this technological shift brings its own challenges, it also grants us a profound opportunity to rediscover the sacred meaning and purpose of human reproduction. Let us once again value the family as the irreplaceable foundation of a thriving society, and give due credit to our ancestors, who wisely ordered their lives with a clear hierarchy of priorities: God first, family second, and country third. Their example calls us back to rebuild what has been eroded by selfishness and cultural deception.

**Church in Idaho, awake!** Do not repeat the failures of those who compromised in Corinth—divided, tolerant of sin, and worldly. Paul wrote to them with tears and urgency because he loved them. I write likewise. Repent of your silence. Do not fear man more than God. Stand boldly for the sanctity of life from conception to natural death. Engage this battle for Proposition 1 with prayer, truth-speaking, and courageous action. Teach the full counsel of God on marriage, family, fruitfulness, and the protection of the innocent. Raise up a generation that values life, that welcomes children as a heritage from the Lord (Psalm 127:3-5), and that cares for the least of these as unto Christ Himself (Matthew 25:40).

If we fail here, the millstone awaits not only those who actively harm the little ones, but those who stood by in indifference. Let it not be said of the church in Idaho that we exchanged the truth of God for a lie, or that we loved the praise of men more than the praise of God.

Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope. Be watchful, stand firm in the faith, be strong. Let all that you do be done in love.

The grace of the Lord Jesus be with you. Amen.

(This letter was summarized in modern English and restyled after Paul’s letter to the Corinthians using prompts to Grok AI.)

Brian Parsons is a locally and nationally published columnist and the current vice chair of the Bannock County Republican Party. He’s a proud husband and father, saved by Grace, and an unabashed paleoconservative. You can follow him at WithdrawConsent.org or find his opinion columns at the American Thinker, in the Idaho State Journal or in other regional publications.

UPDATE: Crash Near Inkom Causes Major Traffic Delays

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(Idaho State Police, July 13, 2026)

BANNOCK COUNTY – On Monday, July 13, 2026 at 9:30 a.am., a 2023 Freightliner Cascadia semi-truck and trailer being driven by a 55-year-old male from Calgary, Alberta, was traveling southbound on I-15 near milepost 56, just south of Inkom, Idaho. The semi-truck struck the guardrail and came to rest across the southbound lanes of travel.

The driver of the vehicle was wearing a seat-belt and was not injured.

The southbound lanes of I-15 were blocked, and crews alternated north and southbound traffic for approximately two and a half hours while they worked to clear the scene.

This crash is under investigation by the Idaho State Police.

ORIGINAL RELEASE:

BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho – Idaho State Police is investigating a crash involving a commercial vehicle that occurred at 9:30 a.m. on Monday, July 13, 2026, southbound on I-15 at milepost 56.

At this time, southbound lanes remain blocked and crews are working to alternate northbound and southbound traffic around the scene. Drivers can expect delays and a back-up of traffic throughout the area until the scene is cleared.

Check Idaho 511 for updates on traffic delays.

AG Labrador Secures Record Amounts for Idaho Consumers

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(Attorney General’s Office Press Release, July 13, 2026)

BOISE, ID — Attorney General Raúl Labrador announced that his Consumer Protection Division (CPD)  returned a record amount to Idaho consumers through voluntary dispute resolution, without the need for lawsuits or court orders in the first six month of 2026. After Labrador reorganized the division in mid-2025 to strengthen investigations and consumer outreach, CPD mediations returned more than $1.1 million to Idaho consumers by the end of 2025.

This year is already on pace to exceed that total, with more than $956,000 returned to consumers through the end of June 2026. The last eighteen months have returned more money to Idaho consumers through voluntary mediation than all previous years combined since the Office began tracking these numbers in 2017. The division also brought 49 consumer protection enforcement cases in 2025, compared to 8 in 2023 and 17 in 2024, a 600 percent increase.

“My Consumer Protection Division is making a real difference for Idaho families and honest businesses,” said Attorney General Labrador. “These numbers show what this office was built to do: hold bad actors accountable and give Idahoans a fair shot at resolving disputes without the cost and delay of a courtroom. I’m proud of this team, and we will keep fighting for every Idaho consumer and good-faith business in the marketplace.”

The Consumer Protection Division receives complaints of every size involving fraud and marketplace deception, from contractor fraud worth tens of thousands of dollars to reports of misleading advertising. A team of three investigators, three attorneys, and support staff handles more than 2,000 complaints a year, submitted by phone, mail, online, and through the newly launched ReportScamsIdaho.com.

Voluntary mediation resolves disputes without a formal finding that the law was broken. It gives consumers and businesses a chance to compare facts, communicate directly, and reach a solution that preserves the marketplace relationship between them.

When a business’s conduct rises to a violation of the Idaho Consumer Protection Act, the Attorney General pursues formal enforcement, which can result in court judgments, penalties, and Assurances of Voluntary Compliance requiring businesses to correct their practices. The division also litigates multistate cases and class actions, including settlements involving tobacco, opioid manufacturers, and pharmaceutical price-fixing.

Commercial Vehicle Safety Division to Conduct High-Visibility Enforcement during Operation Safe Driver Week

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(Idaho State Police Press Release, July 13, 2026)

MERIDIAN, Idaho — Idaho State Police is participating in Operation Safe Driver Week, a nationwide traffic safety campaign taking place this week to reduce crashes through education and high-visibility traffic enforcement.

As part of the all-hands-on-deck enforcement effort, Commercial Vehicle Safety Specialists will conduct increased patrols across Idaho, focusing on unsafe driving behaviors by both commercial motor vehicle drivers and passenger vehicle drivers. The emphasis will target behaviors that increase crash risk, including:

  • Speeding
  • Following too closely
  • Distracted driving
  • Improper lane changes
  • Failure to obey traffic control devices
  • Aggressive or reckless driving
  • Failure to wear a seat belt

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, driver behavior is a contributing factor in approximately 94% of traffic crashes in the United States.

Operation Safe Driver Week is an annual initiative led by the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance in partnership with law enforcement agencies across North America to improve driver behavior and reduce crashes, injuries and fatalities.

President Trump Honors the Life and Legacy of Senator Lindsey Graham

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(White House Press Release, July 13, 2026)

President Donald J. Trump reflected on the life and legacy of Senator Lindsey Graham following his sudden passing this weekend. Speaking in several interviews, President Trump spoke of his close friendship with the longtime South Carolina senator and heralded Senator Graham’s sharp political instincts, his courage in important moments, and his deep commitment to the country.

  • President Trump described the loss as deeply personal: “He’s a tough one to lose. He was great — he was unique in every way… I just can’t believe it. He was like a member of the family to me. It’s very tough, actually. He was such an advocate.”
  • President Trump reflected on his final conversation with Senator Graham: “It’s devastating. I thought he was fine. He called me last night… What a terrible loss it is. He was a great politician. He was a natural. There are very few of them. He was a natural politician. He got along with everybody.”
  • President Trump singled out Senator Graham’s passionate defense of Brett Kavanaugh as a standout Senate moment: “I think his finest moment was his defense of Brett Kavanaugh, who’s terrific guy and was treated very, very unfairly by the Democrats… I think it was a top ten, maybe a top five, moment in the history of the Senate. It was an incredible display, and he did it from the heart. He felt strongly about Brett, and he did it from the heart — and it turned that whole thing around.”
  • President Trump praised Senator Graham’s political skill and ability to build relationships: “He got along with everybody and yet, he was a tough cookie in a lot of ways. Honestly, he was a great politician. People don’t realize what a good politician he was… This man was a great politician. He really got it.”
  • President Trump reflected on Senator Graham’s broader legacy: “We lost a great man. He was a great man. He was a great politician, and he was a kind man… The real loser was the United States of America. We lost a great person, a kind person, a very smart person… Everything for him was about work. It was about loving the country.”

Community Invited to Zoo Idaho for Cougar Kitten’s Name Reveal with Mayor Mark Dahlquist, Friday, July 17

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(City of Pocatello Press Release, July 13, 2026; Cover photo credit: City of Pocatello)

Zoo Idaho’s cougar kitten will officially receive her name during a special community reveal by Pocatello Mayor Mark Dahlquist Friday, July 17, at noon at Zoo Idaho, 3000 South 2nd Avenue.

Following a public naming contest that generated more than 500 name suggestions, Zoo Idaho staff narrowed the choices to three finalists: Roxanne, Purrsephane, and Clawdia. The community was then invited to vote online for their favorite name with a $5 donation per vote.

The campaign received more than 600 votes and raised over $3,000 to support the cougar’s renovated habitat.

The event will also mark the first time the cougar kitten is introduced to the public in her newly renovated exhibit.

The cougar arrived at Zoo Idaho with two other orphaned kittens from Wyoming after losing their mother. Shortly after arriving, all three kittens were diagnosed with feline panleukopenia. Despite extensive veterinary care, only one kitten survived.

As a rescue facility, Zoo Idaho regularly provides care for orphaned, injured, and non-releasable native wildlife. The community naming campaign and the renovated habitat celebrate not only the cougar’s remarkable recovery but also the community’s support for wildlife conservation. Zoo Idaho invites the public to join in welcoming the resilient young cougar to her new home and celebrating the official announcement of her name.

“Every animal at Zoo Idaho has a story, and this cougar’s story is one of resilience,” said Zoo Idaho Manager Peter Pruett. “She overcame tremendous odds, and thanks to the support of our community, she’ll now have a beautiful new habitat to call home. We’re excited to welcome everyone as we reveal her name and celebrate this remarkable chapter.”

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.

The Simpson Standard: Federal Funding, Business, and Ag

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(U.S. Representative Mike Simpson, July 12, 2026)

It was great spending the week in Idaho’s Second District. I had several important meetings and discussions with constituents across the state. I was thrilled to attend the Fort Hall Fire Department’s new station ribbon cutting, a community funding project I proudly secured federal funding for.

Additionally, I had the opportunity to sit down with members of the Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry (IACI) earlier this week. Many of you know that IACI represents hundreds of Idaho employers across agriculture, manufacturing, construction, and several other industries. It was great having a conversation with these business leaders and giving them a Washington update.

In case you missed it: I recently cosponsored the Securing Agriculture’s Workforce Act, legislation aimed at making key improvements to the accessibility and cost of agricultural labor through the H-2A visa program.

Bringing Home Taxpayer Dollars 

As Idaho’s only appropriator, it is my honor to fight for meaningful projects that benefit our communities. I can do this through community project funding. A few years ago, I secured funding to reconstruct the Shoshone Bannock Tribe Fire Station. And this week, I was excited to attend the ribbon-cutting and to see firsthand how this critical funding can benefit the safety and prosperity of our communities. 

This project will provide high-quality essential services to protect the lives and property of the Fort Hall reservation residents, employees, and visitors, as well as the surrounding communities.

Meeting with Idaho Business Leaders

I enjoyed meeting with Idaho business leaders and discussing Idaho’s future and current events in Washington with the Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry (IACI).

IACI does a great job of representing several critical businesses and industries in the state. It’s always an honor to meet with them!

Securing Agriculture’s Workforce Act

Ask any farmer or rancher, especially in the dairy industry, and they will tell you about the labor crisis they face. After years of working to build consensus to address this critical issue, I’m confident that the Securing Agriculture’s Workforce Act is the legislative fix we need.

President Trump has demonstrated the courage to act on this issue and has a proven record of protecting America’s farmers while removing violent criminal illegal aliens who have no place in our country. Read more about this bill here.

Last Opportunity to Score a Bighorn Tag

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(Idaho Fish and Game, July 13, 2026)

Idaho Department of Fish and Game and the Idaho Wild Sheep Foundation are offering you another chance to hunt bighorn sheep in Idaho — the 2026 Idaho Bighorn Sheep Lottery Tag!

Monies generated by this bighorn sheep tag are used to support wildlife disease research. With your help, progress can be made in conquering devastating diseases that affect bighorn sheep. As a result, we will succeed in increasing the bighorn population within Idaho and throughout the west.

Application Information

  • No license required to purchase entries
  • Once-in-a-lifetime rule waived for this tag
  • 2026 Tag is valid for Unit 11 controlled hunt
  • “Tickets” are controlled hunt applications and all controlled hunt rules apply
  • No limit to the number of tickets purchased per individual
  • One individual per order
  • Tickets are non-transferable
  • Ticket orders must be received by Monday July 20, 2026

1 ticket for $20 each; 6 tickets for $100; 14 tickets for $166.75; 25 tickets for $250

Crash Near Inkom Causes Major Traffic Delays

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(Idaho State Police Press Release, July 13, 2026)

BANNOCK COUNTY, Idaho – Idaho State Police is investigating a crash involving a commercial vehicle that occurred at 9:30 a.m. on Monday, July 13, 2026, southbound on I-15 at milepost 56.

At this time, southbound lanes remain blocked and crews are working to alternate northbound and southbound traffic around the scene. Drivers can expect delays and a back-up of traffic throughout the area until the scene is cleared.

Check Idaho 511 for updates on traffic delays.

511.idaho.gov

Guest Columnist Brian Almon: Who Is Todd Achilles, Anyway?

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(Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

July 9, 2026 (Cover Image Credit: Gem State Chronicle)

Who Is Todd Achilles, Anyway?

Democrats once boasted that they were the party of the American working man. The union employees who built America’s cars, the salt-of-the-earth farmer, and the tradesman were once the backbone of the Democratic Party. Yet over the past few decades, the party has all but abandoned the working man in favor of a coalition of ethnic and sexual minorities, first-generation immigrants, Muslims, and anyone else who seeks to remake the United States of America in their own image. Donald Trump won the Rust Belt states of Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania because he spoke directly to the men and women who had been left behind by both parties since the end of the 20th century.

Over the past few election cycles, Democrats have tried to elevate candidates which they believe can serve as simulacra of the working class men who once voted reliably Democratic. They tried Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, but he turned out to be a total dweeb. Graham Platner in Maine was supposed to be a man’s-man progressive Democrat, but he just withdrew from his Senate race following numerous accusations of sexual assault. They’re promoting James Talarico in Texas in the same manner, but he just comes across as effete and milquetoast.

In the Mountain West, home to archetypes including Paul Bunyan, Kit Carson, and Jim Bridger, that conundrum is amplified by the toxicity of the Democratic label. In the eyes of working families in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming, Democrats are weirdo liberals from California and Colorado. Some progressives seem to have decided that defeating Republicans requires running a regular white guy on an independent ticket. Just this week, the Montana Free Press reported that progressive PACs are pulling out of the U.S. Senate race even as Democratic power brokers throw their support behind independent candidate Seth Bodnar. The Montana Republican Party characterized the situation this way:

Democrats’ solution? Run Seth Bodnar as a phony “Independent” and hope that voters won’t discover his personal ties to the Obamas and Clintons…or that he was groomed to run by Jon Tester and Chuck Schumer…or that Bodnar’s campaign is being run by Tester’s former staffers.

Clearly, rather than returning to sanity the Democrats have instead opted to repackage and resell their failed policies and candidates as fake Independents, all the while hoping voters won’t connect the dots.

A similar strategy is at play in Idaho. To his credit, Todd Achilles doesn’t come across as a dweeb like Tim Walz, as effete as James Talarico, and he doesn’t appear to have the sordid past of Graham Platner. He’s a U.S. Army veteran, a technology professional, a policy wonk, and a husband and father. Yet there is one problem for his independent campaign for the U.S. Senate, and that is his voting record.

You might have received a text message from the Achilles campaign attempting to imply that he is actually more conservative than Sen. Jim Risch, the Republican incumbent. One citizen was even told that Achilles is conservative and a former Republican.

This rhetoric doesn’t match his record. Having served parts of two terms in the Idaho House of Representatives as a Democrat, Achilles can’t hide his true positions. A small sampling of his votes in the Legislature illustrates the point:

  • He voted against House Bill 32, prohibiting mask mandates by government agencies.
  • He voted against House Bill 93, the Parental Choice Tax Credit.
  • He voted against House Bill 98, which would prohibit taxpayer subsidies for teacher’s unions. This policy was eventually enacted in 2026 as House Bill 516.
  • He voted against House Bill 135, which would bar illegal aliens from taxpayer-funded welfare programs.
  • He voted against House Bill 668, which would prevent taxpayer dollars from supporting transgender surgeries.
  • He voted against House Bill 710, requiring public and school libraries to stop allowing children access to obscene materials.
  • He voted against House Bill 753, which would have set the most basic level of enforcement against illegal aliens. He voted against similar legislation, House Bill 83, in 2025.
  • He voted against Senate Bill 1198, prohibiting state colleges and universities from requiring DEI programs for students or staff.
  • He voted against Senate Bill 1210, the Medical Freedom Act.

In short, despite Todd Achilles attempting to portray himself as an independent alternative to the two-party system, he is very much a creature of Democratic ideology. His donations over the past two years have gone almost exclusively to Democrats at the state level, though he did donate to liberal Republicans Sean Coletti and Lori McCann, along with a few others. His national donations have gone almost exclusively to Democrats as well. Finally, as chairman of Veterans for Idaho Voters, Achilles was one of the prime movers behind the ranked-choice voting initiative, which Idahoans defeated in 2024 by a 70-30 margin.

You might have seen billboards throughout Idaho contrasting the 58-year-old Achilles with the 83-year-old Jim Risch. This narrative is a centerpiece of Achilles’ campaign—that, at 83, Risch is too old to properly represent the people of Idaho. However, in a glowing profile by the Post Register earlier this year, Achilles expressed his hope that he could work with other supposedly independent senators like Angus King of Maine and Bernie Sanders of Vermont to broker legislation. However, like Achilles, King and Sanders are essentially Democrats in all but name, and, like Risch, both men are in their 80s—King is currently 82, while Sanders is 84.

To Todd Achilles, 83 is too old for the Senate—unless you’re a leftist, in which case it’s fine.

In the years I watched him in the Legislature, I found Todd Achilles to be intelligent and well-spoken, though a bit hot-headed at times. He’s come across as friendly and personable in the handful of direct interactions we’ve had. His campaign is attempting to speak the language of conservatism—his most recent Substack post calls out “corporate socialism”—yet his record is what it is. It’s that record—not any slick campaign branding—that offers the clearest indication of how he would serve in the U.S. Senate.

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