
I’ve been thinking about traveling lately, but not because I have the money to travel. Instead, I’ve been thinking about WHY people travel, like Todd Frank’s recent visit to Cuba, where Nick Shirley recently did his citizen journalist LARP claiming he was almost kidnapped by “Cuban spies” or some shit. LOL.
The Cuba/Missoula connection wasn’t something even remotely on my radar at the start of the week, but after including the Cuba detail in Tuesday’s post about dark money, TIF money, and Todd Frank media quotes, I had two separate conversations that gave me two separate leads to try and understand the relationship between a land-locked mountain town and a politically contentious island nation, starting with an adventure travel company.

Lewis and Clark Trail Adventures, a Missoula company owned by Wayne and Gia Fairchild, offers an annual trip to Cuba if you have the money, and it isn’t cheap. Also, it isn’t the trip Todd Frank is on, since this annual trip happens during winter. For an idea of the cost, and what you get, here’s a screenshot:

When I called Lewis and Clark Trail Adventures a woman I assume was Gia answered the phone. She was confused about why I was calling and, frankly, so was I. Obama had thawed relations with Cuba in 2016, professional adventurers like Wayne and Gia saw opportunity, and now I was calling about it. Why?
When I saw the Time magazine article featuring Wayne Fairchild, and who wrote it, I got more curious about this adventurer and his interest in traveling to Cuba once a year. Here’s how the Time article, titled “Why the Lolo is Legend“, written by Terry McCarthy, begins:
Gray clouds move as low as smoke over the treetops at Lolo Pass. The ground is white. The day is June 10. It has been snowing for the past four days in the Bitterroot Mountains. Wayne Fairchild is getting worried about our trek over the Lolo Trail–95 miles from Lolo, Mont., to Weippe in Idaho, across some of the most rugged country in the West. Lewis and Clark were nearly defeated 200 years ago by snowstorms on the Lolo–the name apparently comes from Lawrence, a French-Canadian trapper killed by a grizzly in the area in the 1850s. Today Fairchild is nervously checking the weather reports. He has agreed to take me across the toughest, middle section of the trail–“but with this weather?”
When Lewis surmounted Lemhi Pass, 140 miles south of Missoula, on Aug. 12, he was flabbergasted by what was in front of him: “immence ranges of high mountains still to the West of us with their tops partially covered with snow.” Nobody in what was then the U.S. knew the Rocky Mountains existed, with peaks twice as high as anything in the Appalachians back East. Lewis and Clark weren’t merely off the map; they were traveling outside the American imagination.
To better understand what’s going on here you have to know the history of the Time-Life empire, established by Henry Luce, and his very close relationship with John Foster Dulles.
With Allen ensconced in Bern, John Foster started his own comeback toward the end of World War II. He had become close friends with the Time magazine publisher Henry Luce, who was busy championing the idea of an American Century. Both were pro-business, internationalist Republicans shaped by Calvinist principles—Luce, born in China, was himself the son of a Presbyterian missionary. Despite Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s initial misgivings, he ended up appointing John Foster to the American delegation to the negotiations in San Francisco in 1945, where fifty countries met, including the Soviet Union, to establish the United Nations. John Foster, who had begun to espouse a militantly anticommunist line, clashed with Andrei Vishinsky, the Soviet deputy foreign minister and former chief prosecutor at Stalin’s purge trials.
It also helps to understand the type of people who worked for Henry Luce at Time-Life, like C.D. Jackson. Here’s a page from The Cultural Cold War, by Frances Saunders:

With this context in mind, let’s consult the Wikipedia entry for Terry McCarthy to see if anything jumps out.

During his tenure at TIME (1998-2005), McCarthy served as the Los Angeles Bureau Chief and East Asia Correspondent in Shanghai. He wrote about China’s internet and car industries, the fall of Indonesian dictator Suharto and the death of Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot. From LA he did in-depth stories about the Green River serial killer in Seattle, the fight over new oil drilling in Alaska and the science of sharks. Immediately after 9/11 McCarthy went to Afghanistan to cover the ousting of the Taliban from Kabul, and in 2003 he covered the US invasion of Iraq. He set up TIME’s bureaus in Kabul and Baghdad. In both 2004 and 2005, McCarthy received an Emmy award for a joint ABC-Times News Series on Iraq.
McCarthy was foreign correspondent for ABC News in the Middle East, Asia and Latin America from 2006 to 2009. He was the Principal Baghdad Correspondent during the US surge in Iraq and covered the trial and execution of Saddam Hussein. He traveled down the Yangtze River in China, focusing on the economic, political and environmental impact of the man-made waterway. He covered life in Mexico City during the swine flu epidemic of 2009, and filmed inside the eye of a category 4 hurricane off Florida in a C 130 hurricane hunter. In 2008, he won an Emmy for the series Iraq: Where Things Stand for ABC World News with Charlie Gibson.
If you didn’t think floating rivers could be political, or tied to intelligence work, this context might make you think twice about the politics of travel and the value of reporting back what you see.
What did Big Sky High School kids hope to see when their teacher, Jay Bostrom, helped set up a Cuban adventure for Missoula teens? Did they hope to see things that would “challenge perceptions“?

We at Reality Tours love sending high school aged groups to countries all over the world- it’s an incredible opportunity for young people to learn more about our global neighbors, themselves, and the issues shaping global society today. Recently, a high school group from Missoula, MT traveled to Cuba under a People-to-People license with Global Exchange as a Travel Service Provider. Below, a student and chaperone share their insights as they challenged their perceptions about the island nation and gained new ones.
To see how Cuba made an impression on one young, malleable mind, here’s one of the quotes from one of the students:
Later in the trip we had the opportunity to visit the Che Guevara Mausoleum. Che’s face was everywhere we went, plastered on buildings, clothing, books, and other souvenirs. Che valued education and his ideas were reflected by the Cuban people. All of the young people in Cuba were very aware of their history and had pride in their roots. I think that’s something that’s lacking in the United States. History, government, and current issues are not a priority in education.
That’s right, youngster, public education in America (using Robert Maxwell’s text books) isn’t designed to teach you truth, it’s designed to indoctrinate you as a peasant.

If the idea for local educators is to use the privilege of movement to spend money in a Communist country in order to weaponize kids to then righteously push collectivist propaganda at home, then these Cuban youth trips appear to VERY successful, and if you don’t think this is the case, then FUCC you!

What the hell is this? It’s the fruits of indoctrinating kids, as documented by Sociologist, John Foran, under the title, “Five Days that Shook My World, Part One: The Making of a Critical Thinking Community“. Here’s some context:
I spent five days in June at a most unusual gathering. Unusual, because unlike the many academic conferences, the workshops, the handful of “symposia” I’ve attended, this one seemed right on the mark, existentially and politically, for our moment.
Dubbed B.Y.O.B., for “Bring Your Own Brain,” and put on by a collective of students from Big Sky High School in Missoula, Montana who go by the hashtag #freeusfromclimatechaos (FUCC, in case you don’t get the biting but playful humor at the heart of their critique), this had been nine months in the making, assisted by their Spanish teacher, Jay Bostrom and a crew of adult allies from their school and mentors from the local activist community affinity group the ZooTown Zaps.
It was, in fact, a pretty credible incarnation of a North American, youth-led experiment with Zapatismo; recall that to the thousands of queries the Zapatistas have received from activists over the past twenty-three years about what they should be doing, the consistent answer has been: “Go and do what we do, but in your own way, in your own place of origin, your own home, your own community.”
Let me interpret what I think the Zapatistas are really trying to say here: STOP your privileged poverty porn visits like we’re zoo animals you can pet for a few Pesos and go fix your own shit, which, I will add, includes understanding that, in 2026, quoting Chomsky is quoting a member of the child-fucking class.

In 2017, Brianna Canning, like the rest of us, had no clue that Noam Chomsky was connected to a psychopath who would rape her in a second, then let his pals, like the daughter of that text book guy, Robert, cover it all up. But it’s not 2017, and now we need to know how close and casual that relationship was.

With all this talk about Cuba, including what might happen to Americans at any moment with their money, what’s up with Alberta? We’re almost there.

Just like the attention drawn south by blowing up “Narco boats”, I’ve been thinking about America’s northern border, and Trump’s declaration of Fentanyl as a “weapon of mass destruction“, since December, when the Executive Order was declared. With known Fentanyl super labs getting busted in Vancouver, I’m pretty sure there’s a long-run I-15 ratline between Montana and Alberta, with the added benefit of having an Air Force Base in the neighborhood, knowing what’s now known thanks to Seth Harp and his book, The Fort Bragg Cartel.

It should also be noted (before I finish this virtual travelogue) that Alberta is in the midst of a political resurgence of a historic urge toward independence. For an overly-simplified explanation from Wikipedia, this is worth considering:
In the lead up to the 2025 federal election, politicians and activists in Alberta voiced that a win for the Liberal Party, which by then had been in power for almost 10 years, would considerably increase support for Alberta independence. The rise in support for the Liberal Party was in part a response to the call by United States President Donald Trump for all of Canada to be annexed into the United States. While still opposed by the majority of Canadians, support for annexation is greater in Alberta, as some residents see greater cultural and economic connections with the United States than they do with Eastern Canada.
The final data-point is just a picture of a map of Montana, but there are place-names I now find interesting, like Dutton, Dunkirk, and Santa Rita, the Patroness of Impossible Causes.

And thus ends our educational trip, boys and girls! Thanks for allowing me to be your cynical guide, and don’t forget to tip.





















































