This episode is a snapshot of what it feels like to live in the political pressure-cooker right now—locally and nationally—where the chaos is constant, social media makes it worse, and people are genuinely asking if something terrible is around the corner. We talk through a string of recent flare-ups (public meetings boiling over, community controversies, and the way online outrage keeps everybody stuck in reactive mode), then pivot into what we *can* actually do with the time we’ve got: put candidates in front of voters, ask real questions, and create a record people can judge later.
A big chunk of the show is about the growing pattern of candidates avoiding debates—and why that matters. Neal Larson and Julie Mason explain the behind-the-scenes effort to host debates, including Senator Jim Guthrie canceling a scheduled debate with David Worley, and Ben Fuhrman repeatedly refusing to debate Julianne Young. Worley and Young join in-studio to lay out contrasts with their opponents—focused on committee “drawer” power, voting records, court-defense arguments, immigration enforcement, and accepting support connected to pro-abortion fundraising. The episode wraps with a broader warning: if Idaho Republicans campaign one way and govern another, it erodes trust and opens the door for Idaho to drift into a Colorado-style political shift—especially with looming ballot initiatives like abortion and marijuana legalization. (Also: a quick lawn-care detour, and a parody ad because we cope how we cope.)
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### Highlights
– Senator Jim Guthrie cancels a scheduled on-air debate; David Worley comes in anyway and discusses “drawer” politics and Senate procedure.
– Julianne Young says she prepared early for a debate format again this cycle, but Ben Fuhrman still won’t debate.
– Discussion on candidates taking money/appearing at a pro-abortion fundraiser and what that signals to primary voters.
– Concern over “values vs wallet” framing and the argument that some issues are worth defending in court.
– Reminder to voters: use tools like the Sunshine Report, saved debates/forums, and voting records—don’t let Facebook fights drive your ballot.
– Notes on upcoming events with Attorney General Raúl Labrador and end-of-show parody content.
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