Idaho
Idaho bar celebrates 'Heterosexual Awesomeness Month' in response to LGBT pride month
‘Naked parade perverts should go to jail’
As much of corporate America embraces LGBT pride month, one Idaho bar is taking a different approach by recognizing “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month.”
Old State Saloon, a bar in Eagle, Idaho, created an X account earlier this month. The account’s cover photo features a background image of the American flag and the symbols for male and female. The bar boasts on its X account that it is “The World Heterosexual Headquarters.” As of Saturday afternoon, the account had over 42,700 followers.
The establishment’s Facebook page indicates that the business opened in February 2023. Support for the Christian faith figures prominently on the social media account, with one post from Thursday proclaiming, “Make America Godly Again!”
The business announced on Facebook last week that “June will be OSS’s inaugural Heterosexual Awesomeness Month!” It urged the public to “come join us all month to celebrate heterosexuals, for without them, none of us would be here!”
“Each Monday will be Hetero Male Monday and any heterosexual male dressed like a heterosexual male will receive a free draft beer,” Old State Saloon added. “Each Wednesday is Heterosexual couples day and each heterosexual couple will receive 15% off their bill.”
A subsequent Facebook post revealed that the celebration of “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month” will also feature “Her Happy Hour Thursdays,” which allows heterosexual women to enjoy happy hour prices all day. “Her Happy Hour Thursdays” join “Duo Deal Wednesdays” and “Hetero Male Mondays” as the business’ main deals of the month.
The business states on its website that its celebration of “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month” has led to threatening backlash and “theft of our property, vendors refusing to fulfill our orders for ingredients, wedding catering [cancellation], libel, slander — even the owner being falsely accused of being a sex offender!”
Despite celebrating heterosexuality, Old State Saloon insisted that “we love our LGBTQ+ patrons” and vowed that its owners “will not be changing our mind and give into the group of those who are responding with vitriol.”
Despite the slander and threats the business has endured for celebrating heterosexuality, the establishment appears to have achieved financial success as a result of its decision not to kowtow to secular ideology. The business reported on Facebook this week that it experienced its “biggest Monday sales EVER” while noting in an X post that Old State Saloon saw its “highest Wednesday in sales ever by 3x!” Two days later, Old State Saloon told its Facebook followers that the restaurant had “SOLD OUT OF FOOD” while offering the option to “bring food from outside.”
In addition to the deals on food and alcohol available to heterosexual patrons, Old State Saloon is selling special merchandise during its “Heterosexual Awareness Month.” T-shirts with the American flag and the symbols for male and female, as well as T-shirts with a picture of a glass of beer emblazoned with the Old State Saloon logo accompanied by a caption reading “Beer for Breeders” and “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month” are available for $28.
A look at the bar’s upcoming calendar suggests that “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month” is not the only event taking place in June at Old State Saloon designed to appeal to conservative or Christian audiences. The restaurant also has “Christian Singles Mingles” on Thursdays, Bible studies on Sundays and “Open Carry Coffees” on Saturdays.
Old State Saloon’s website reveals plans to construct “a physical location specifically for traditional and faith-based events,” specifically a “Community Event Center where conservatism can be appreciated, including Hetero Awesomeness Month-style events every year.” The business said it’s raising funds on the crowdfunding platform Give Send Go in an effort to create such a venue.
As of Saturday afternoon, the crowdfunding effort has raised more than $14,340. A poll on Old State Saloon’s X account asking if it should put on a “Heterosexual Awesomeness Parade” shows that 95.9% of the 1,431 respondents are in favor of such an idea, while 4.1% oppose it.
The “Heterosexual Awesomeness Month” celebration at Old State Saloon comes as many corporations and major organizations in the U.S. are fully embracing LGBT pride month in an effort to show support for LGBT ideology. For example, most National Football League teams are celebrating pride month on their social media accounts. Some have even changed their profile pictures to the team’s logo bathed in the rainbow colors that have come to symbolize the LGBT movement.
LGBT pride month, recognized by LGBT activists every June, features pride parades that often consist of participants dressed in sexually explicit clothing, if not outright nudity. Old State Saloon has expressed displeasure with this custom, declaring in an X post that “Naked parade perverts should go to jail.”
Ryan Foley is a reporter for The Christian Post. He can be reached at: ryan.foley@christianpost.com
Idaho
Idaho’s new education tax credit has fewer reporting requirements than similar programs
A key selling point of Idaho’s new private education tax credit was that it would open doors for students who couldn’t otherwise attend private school. But it’s uncertain whether data that would test this claim will be made public after the first round of credits goes out next year.
The Parental Choice Tax Credit’s authors wrote data reporting requirements that are leaner than those tied to similar programs in other states. For instance, the new law doesn’t require the Idaho State Tax Commission — the agency responsible for administrating the refundable tax credit — to report how many recipients were already enrolled in private school.
This data would help answer one of the most hotly contested questions surrounding the program: whether the nearly $50 million in state subsidies would benefit families that need help attending private school, as supporters argued, or whether it would be a tax break for families that could already afford private school, as opponents claimed.
While all nonpublic school students can apply for the credit, priority will be given to applicants that earn 300% or below the federal poverty level — about $96,000 in household income for a family of four.
In Iowa, Oklahoma, Florida, Arkansas, North Carolina and Arizona — states with “universal” private school choice programs, like Idaho’s, that are open to all nonpublic students — most subsidies have gone to students that didn’t previously attend a public school.
“In other states they have found that the more transparency there is, the more data is released, the more damning it is for the voucher programs,” said House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel, D-Boise, who’s pushing for a repeal of Idaho’s credit. “The more it reveals that, in fact, this is all a means of lining the pockets of the very wealthy, who already have their kids in private schools and who were perfectly able to pay for it already.”
Bill sponsor doesn’t oppose additional data release
House Bill 93, the tax credit legislation, directs the Tax Commission to compile a report with eight data points on the program’s rollout. The report, which is due to the Legislature before the 2027 session, must include:
- The number of tax credits provided.
- The number of parents who applied.
- The average credit in dollars.
- The number of credits distributed to households below 300% of the federal poverty level.
- The number of parents who requested an advance payment rather than a tax credit.
- The “geographic area” of parents applying.
- The number of eligible students on a waiting list to receive a credit.
- The list of the categories of qualifying expenses that were claimed for reimbursement.
The bill forbids the Tax Commission from including “any personally identifying information of eligible students, their parents, or their households.” The Idaho Public Records Act also protects personal tax information collected by the commission.
But neither HB 93 nor public records law restrict the Tax Commission from releasing additional anonymous data — on income, residency or previous school enrollment.
Rep. Wendy Horman, a co-sponsor of HB 93, said the reporting requirements were designed to inform a “data-driven approach” to potentially growing the program, if demand justifies it. And they’re meant to ensure that applicants earning 300% or below the federal poverty level receive a credit. These students are the “focus” of the program, said Horman, R-Idaho Falls.
Horman said she “doesn’t have any problem” with the Tax Commission releasing data on how many tax credit recipients switched from public school to a private or home-school. But she noted that some families who attend online public schools, such as the Idaho Home Learning Academy, consider themselves home-schoolers, even though they attend public schools.
“You would just need to be cautious about assumptions you’re making,” she said. “If they made the switch, I would consider that a different class of public school students, if you will, than traditional brick-and-mortar students.”

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Tax Commission mum on data
Whether this data will be publicized is now up to the Tax Commission. The commission will know how many recipients were existing non-public school students, and how many switched from a public school to a private setting with the tax credit’s help.
Idaho Education News obtained, through a public records request, a draft of the tax credit application that’s scheduled to go live Jan. 15. While not finalized, the application includes 19 sections that ask a range of questions, from basic biographical information to details about the private schools where tuition would be reimbursed.
The questionnaire also asks whether the applicant previously attended a public school and requests the date on which the applicant started attending a nonpublic school.
Click here to read the draft.
Last week, a spokeswoman said the commission is “committed” to publicizing information beyond what HB 93 requires. However, she declined to answer questions about specific data.
“The Tax Commission will provide the report as required by law, and we’re committed to providing other publicly available information as it becomes available as long as it doesn’t expose any personally identifiable taxpayer information,” Renee Eymann, senior public information officer for the Tax Commission, said by email.
For now, the commission is focused on “ensuring the application process goes smoothly” before it opens next month, Eymann added.

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Arizona releases quarterly reports
The Arizona Department of Education publishes data on its education savings account (ESA) program in quarterly reports. The reports include a percentage of new ESA enrollees who haven’t attended a public school.
When the $985 million Arizona program became universal two years ago, 79% of new recipients hadn’t attended a public school. Today, 43% of new ESA enrollees are existing private- or home-school students.
Previous school enrollment data is necessary to test one other claim from advocates for private school choice: that subsidizing privately educated students is cheaper than supporting public school students. Spending between $5,000 and $7,500 per-pupil through Idaho’s tax credit program is lower than the $8,830 that the state spends per public school student.
But savings will only come from tax credit recipients who switched from public school to a private setting. Students who were already educated privately will be a new cost to the state.
Arizona also releases data on the ZIP codes of families receiving an ESA. This led to a ProPublica analysis that found wealthier ZIP codes have higher rates of students receiving ESAs than poorer ones.
While HB 93 requires the Tax Commission’s report to include “geographic” data, it doesn’t say how specific the data should be by reporting a state, county, city or ZIP code. Horman said it’s open to the Tax Commission’s interpretation.
The commission, meanwhile, was silent on its interpretation.
Evidence of learning not required up front in application
The Tax Commission did confirm one thing in response to questions from EdNews last week: Parental Choice Tax Credit applicants won’t have to include a portfolio of learning materials.
HB 93 requires that tax credit recipients either attend an accredited school or maintain a portfolio with evidence that the student is learning English, math, science and social studies. But the bill wasn’t clear on when the portfolio would need to be available.
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During an October town hall, Sen. Lori Den Hartog, a co-sponsor of HB 93, said the Tax Commission was planning to ask for the portfolio through the application process, even though the bill’s authors intended the portfolio to be required only in the event that a recipient is audited.
“The Tax Commission has been telling families that they’re going to need to submit these things up front,” Den Hartog said during the Oct. 22 town hall in Garden City. “We had felt a little differently and didn’t think the law was crafted that way.”
This doesn’t appear to be the case anymore. The draft application doesn’t include a question about the portfolio, and Eymann said Tuesday that the portfolio or evidence of school accreditation “must be made available upon request.” She didn’t address a question about what has changed since October.
Idaho
Future USS Idaho nuclear submarine received by the Navy, dubbed ‘Gem of the Fleet’
GROTON, Connecticut — Last week, the future USS Idaho nuclear submarine was delivered to the U.S. Navy at its facility in Groton, Connecticut.
The nuclear-powered submarine is set to be commissioned in spring 2026, sailing the world for the next 30 years.
Before it commissions this upcoming spring, the USS IDAHO crew will undergo training and mission exercises.
Virginia-class submarine program manager Captain Mike Hollenbach comments on how driven Idaho is in the military space.
“Idaho represents the hard work and tenacity of shipbuilders, industry partners and Navy personnel to deliver the best undersea warfighting platform to the fleet.”
The future Idaho submarine will be the fifth Navy ship to be named for the state of Idaho. The first one, a wooden-hulled storeship, was commissioned in 1866.
Idaho
Two bus drivers, four students hospitalized after school buses crash head-on in Idaho
PAUL, Idaho (KUTV) — Two bus drivers and four students were transported to hospitals in various conditions after a head-on collision between two school buses in southern Idaho.
Officials with the Idaho State Police said they responded to a crash near Paul in Minidoka County early Monday morning, extricating a driver from a bus.
Both drivers were airlifted to a hospital, and four injured students were transported by ambulance or car to local hospitals for treatment. Police believe the students’ injuries are not life-threatening.
MORE | School Bus Crashes:
Two bus drivers and four students were transported to hospitals in various conditions after a head-on collision between two school buses in southern Idaho. (Credit: Idaho State Police)
Police said the crash occurred just before 6:15 a.m. on State Highway 25. There were a total of 17 students on the two buses, all of whom have been reunited with their families.
Officials did not release information on where the students attend school.
The crash comes just days after two school buses were hit by a pickup truck in central Utah, sending 18 people to the hospital and resulting in the death of the truck driver.
The majority of the Wasatch Academy students in the Utah crash have since returned from the hospital, according to school officials.
Utah officials believe the three-vehicle crash may have been caused by fatigued driving. The cause of the Idaho crash is still under investigation.
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