Who are the real outsiders in North Idaho when it’s seen as a far-right haven?
“These people have prepared themselves — these are their homes — that’s how everybody feels. I’m not sure any of us are prepared for what’s to come.”
The Inlander’s Daniel Walters joins us to explain how far-right influencers made Coeur d’Alene’s Pride in the Park a national flashpoint.
Spokane’s county commission is getting bigger and more representative. Here’s why that’s important.
Newsrooms often give one of the most emotionally demanding and delicate jobs in journalism – the crime beat – to our least experienced and supported young reporters.
We talked to leaders about the lessons learned from recent protest movements in Spokane, and what’s next in the long fight to protect abortion access.
We talk about the expected overturn of federal abortion protections, and how this seismic shift in rights might just be the beginning.
Two of the Patriot Front members arrested in Cd'A over the weekend have ties to Matt Shea and his church.
We talk with a local game designer about the unique place video games have among art forms.
Today we’re continuing our discussion of productive disagreements, and we’re joined by Inga Laurent, Professor of Law at Gonzaga who studies, theorizes and helps implement restorative justice practices in court systems and outside of judicial settings like schools.
During Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander Heritage Month, a coalition of organizations pushes for disaggregation.
In the US, it’s supposed to be “innocent until proven guilty,” but it’s a routine part of our criminal legal system to imprison people while they await trial, causing them to lose their jobs, housing, access to transportation and more.