6.1.2026 – Biden Spin, School Choice Battles

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Neal Larson opens the show in “real life” mode—he’s heading out later this week for a short Seattle trip with his wife and teenage daughter, and he’s openly taking listener suggestions for hidden gems beyond the obvious stops. He also shares a weekend movie detour: seeing *Michael* (the Michael Jackson biopic) with his daughter, recommending it primarily as an entertaining, nostalgic ride for Gen X—strong performances, music, and choreography—while noting it feels “sanitized” and likely influenced by the Jackson family (including Michael being played by his nephew, Jafar). He then pivots to what he sees as the bigger cultural/political theme of the day: Democrats and major media figures continuing to act like Joe Biden’s cognitive issues were a one-off “debate moment,” with Jill Biden’s book tour re-lighting the fuse. Neal argues the public was knowingly gaslit, and that Democrats are now stuck trying to thread the needle—admitting mistakes without admitting the full deception—while also pretending Kamala Harris’ loss was shocking.

Julie Mason joins and the conversation sharpens into a broader theory: is the left lying because they believe their own narrative, or because destabilizing people with obvious untruths is a power play? They speculate about 2028—why Democrats keep floating names like Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom, and Pete Buttigieg, and why Newsom’s “California-brand” politics (and even his on-camera mannerisms) may not translate in swing states. From there, the show moves into Idaho-centric policy and accountability: the parental choice tax credit (House Bill 93), transparency demands around the program, and the frustration that critics often demand intense scrutiny for school choice while ignoring larger pots of government money that escaped the same oversight (including past COVID-era spending questions). They argue the fight keeps getting dragged back to money and institutions—especially unions—when it should be about outcomes for kids, including room for micro-schools and flexible models that don’t have to mirror traditional public schools. The hour wraps with listener texts/calls, a quick lawn update (the “four-step lawn program”), appreciation for the audience, and a call for 20–30 second “Greeting to America” audio submissions ahead of the 250th anniversary celebrations.

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