
Tina Peters deserved her conviction, just not a prison cell
If it helps, imagine that a woman like Peters had instead committed a crime on behalf of a leftist cause.

If it helps, imagine that a woman like Peters had instead committed a crime on behalf of a leftist cause.

The fraud in Senate Bill 260 was so evident that the case should have been an easy one for the taxpayers

The parents of the then 17-year-old are suing the town, as well as three Elizabeth police officers for damages.

The brief argues Boulder is trying to “usurp federal authority,” using the courts to dictate national energy policy.

The ADF attorney representing Chiles say Colorado state government is once again infringing on protected speech.

If you happen to mess up and break one of Colorado’s many rules, what kind of due process can you expect?

Wasting water is explicitly prohibited, and ‘beneficial use’ explicitly defined, in the laws of every western state.

A focal point of the investigation is McLaren’s relationship with Cameryn Cass, a female reporter covering the case.

The county, with a population of roughly 29,000, is not served by Xcel as an energy provider.

Weiser speculates there is further cooperation with ICE agents among Western Slope agencies.

The Camp IdRaHaJe legal fight is what you get when the state assigns idiots to write regulations.

The Colorado Supreme Court has negated state constitutional limits on taxes, debt, and corporate privilege.
Politics is a game of narrative. Whoever controls the narrative wins.
Sure, the truth is interesting. But truth doesn’t sell. It takes time to uncover, assuming people care enough to go digging for it.
Narratives are easier. They’re simple, comforting and come pre-approved by the crowd.
Groupthink isn’t just easy. It’s safe. The truth, on the other hand, requires work and enough bravery to risk being out of step with people who judge you.
And we’re busy. So, we outsource our thinking to the media, entertainment and schools, and go with whatever story they hand us.
Take this one: “Teachers are underpaid.”
It’s airtight. Say it at a cocktail party and everyone nods like they’ve just solved poverty.
But start factoring in full compensation packages, insurance, pensions with guaranteed lifetime payouts, a work calendar with summers off, fall and spring breaks, and two weeks for whatever they call Christmas these days, and suddenly the narrative gets…well, frayed.
Sidenote — studies confirm for an employee to afford a pre-paid retirement plan with the same guaranteed payout of a teacher’s pension, one’s salary would have to be increased about 27%.
Here’s another: “Fossil fuels are destroying the planet.”
That one has moved beyond narrative into religion. Question it and you’re not debating policy, you’re committing heresy. You will be canceled.
But here’s the part that never makes the sermon.
Roughly 2.3 billion people still cook over wood or dung. If we move them to portable propane stoves it would remove as much greenhouse gas as if we ended all air, rail and boat traffic combined.
Oh, not that it matters, but it would save women in impoverished nations about four hours a day toiling to collect fuel for the fire.
So, fossil fuels could save our climate. But the power of narrative will keep it “in the ground” choking our economy, potentially keeping the globe warming. But at least third-world chicks will never advance. So, we got that.
Narratives aren’t designed to inform you. They’re designed to manipulate you.
Which brings us to political lying season. Again.
The stories being planted right now as the legislature argues “budget cuts” will be set to bloom just in time for the fall election. And the anti-taxpayer choir is already warming up for its heart-rendering performance of “The State Needs More of Your Money.”
The script never changes.
There’s a crisis. It’s urgent. It’s not their fault. And fixing it requires reaching deeper into your pocket.
A couple years ago, Kyle Clark from 9News was one of the first to poke a hole in that script during the Proposition HH debate.
“Governor,” he said, “We know you’re smart. I hope you don’t think we’re stupid.”
That moment mattered. It cracked the narrative just enough for others to question it. HH went down by 20 points.
Turns out, when the story collapses, so does the manipulation.
Which is why this year’s push will be all about getting the story right.
Ending TABOR refunds won’t be sold as a tax hike. It’ll be “for the kids,” even though school enrollment is dropping fast.
A graduated income tax won’t be about chasing Colorado’s most innovative to a low- or no-income tax state. It’ll be about “fairness.”
And don’t forget the transit undead. We need a round of statewide trolley taxes to get us a train named after a drag queen. “And on stage 3, give it up for CoCo!” Forget about two decades of neglecting our roadways. It’ll be about “the future of transportation,” somehow with technology from the 1800s.
The details don’t matter nearly as much as the storyline.
Their schemes stand no chance unless they can develop an unchallenged storyline: The budget cuts will hurt the most fragile, and the budget crisis wasn’t their fault.
They will make sure the budget cuts really do hurt the most fragile. And they’ll never take responsibility for bloating the Medicaid roles 200% with people who are not disabled.
Your mission, if you choose to accept it, is a spot when and how they and their allies develop and test their narratives over the truth.
Watch which programs get highlighted. Watch which words get repeated. Watch how quickly blame is redirected.
Because if the narrative holds, the tax increases follow.
But if it cracks, even a room full of politicians can suddenly discover fiscal restraint.
Jon Caldara is president of Independence Institute, a free market think tank in Denver.

Colorado’s Electric Utilities join a new RTO. What are the sources of power coming from, and what will that mean for the state and ratepayers? PowerGab Hosts Jake Fogleman and Amy Cooke discuss this and more.
Show Notes:
https://i2i.org/colorado-joins-the-southwest-power-pool-now-what/
https://x.com/SimonMahan/status/2039723579294527581/photo/1
https://leg.colorado.gov/initiative_files/1343/download
Because the grid could use a backup plan.
Yes, we’re giving away a Predator Generator.
No, this is not a drill.
Yes, it’s because reliability apparently isn’t fashionable anymore.
Starting with the first show of 2026, drop a funny, clever, or pithy comment in the show’s comment section.
That’s it. No forms. No fine print to initial. No ESG questionnaire.
At the end of the session, we’ll select our top 3–5 favorite comments.
Then you vote on the winner.
Democracy still works here. Mostly.
Winner announced on the last show in May 2026.
One comment.
One generator.
Because when the grid wobbles, satire won’t keep your lights on — but a Predator Generator will.

Why is it the left needs to constantly go out and protest? And why is it getting so, well, mean? Wayne Lagusen of Wayne’s Word gives us an answer.