GeForce RTX 30 and Radeon RX 6000 average prices fall as Ethereum price weakens and GPU availability improves – Notebookcheck.net

Reviews, News, CPU, GPU, Articles, Columns, Other

3D Printing, 5G, Accessory, AI, Alder Lake, AMD, Android, Apple, ARM, Audio, Biotech, Business, Camera, Cannon Lake, Cezanne (Zen 3), Charts, Chinese Tech, Chromebook, Coffee Lake, Comet Lake, Console, Convertible / 2-in-1, Cryptocurrency, Cyberlaw, Deal, Desktop, E-Mobility, Education, Exclusive, Fail, Foldable, Gadget, Galaxy Note, Galaxy S, Gamecheck, Gaming, Geforce, Google Pixel, GPU, How To, Ice Lake, Intel Evo / Project Athena, Internet of Things (IoT), iOS, iPad Pro, iPhone, Jasper Lake, Lakefield, Laptop, Launch, Leaks / Rumors, Linux / Unix, List, Lucienne (Zen 2), MacBook, Mini PC, Monitor, MSI, OnePlus, Opinion, Phablet, Radeon, Renoir, Review Snippet, Rocket Lake, Ryzen (Zen), Science, Security, Single-Board Computer (SBC), Smart Home, Smartphone, Smartwatch, Software, Storage, Tablet, ThinkPad, Thunderbolt, Tiger Lake, Touchscreen, Ultrabook, Virtual Reality (VR) / Augmented Reality (AR), Wearable, Windows, Workstation, XPS, Zen 3 (Vermeer)

Ticker

Here is the original post:

GeForce RTX 30 and Radeon RX 6000 average prices fall as Ethereum price weakens and GPU availability improves - Notebookcheck.net

Ethereum inventor wants to replace pregnant women with synthetic wombs – The Next Web

Crypto bros never tire of sharing their utopian visions, but their big brain ideas arent always embraced by the proles.

Vitalik Buterin, the co-founder and inventor of Ethereum, has become the latest victim of this insolence.

The 27-year-old had pitched a bold solution to the gender pay gap: synthetic wombs.

Synthetic wombs would remove the high burden of pregnancy, significantly reducing the inequality, he tweeted on Tuesday.

The proposal gained support from several tech bros but incurred the wrath of feminists.

They argued that biological gestation isnt the main barrier to gender equality. Instead, they pointed to the high costs of childrearing, limited governmental support, and widespread sexism.

Some pointed to the positive aspects of pregnancy or suggested that Buterin was disconnected from reality.

Buterins technoutopian solution emerged in a discussion started by the ultimate tech visionary: the self-described utopian anarchist, Elon Musk.

The Tesla tycoon had been expressing his long-held concerns about population collapse:

We should be much more worried about population collapse If there arent enough people for Earth, then there definitely wont be enough for Mars.

Synthetic wombs would presumably provide Musk with the workers that his Martian colony requires.

Musk and Buterin have several things in common. Both have founded lionized companies, joined the billionaires club, and cultivated the image of brilliant polymaths.

The duo is also capable of laughing at themselves in a weirdly self-aggrandizing sort of way.

Buterin last week asked for the most unhinged criticisms of him on Twitter. After 20 hours, hed received over 2,400 responses.

HT Molly White

Excerpt from:

Ethereum inventor wants to replace pregnant women with synthetic wombs - The Next Web

Ty Seidule on Exposing Robert E. Lee, Lost Cause Myths, White Supremacy, and Treason – History News Network

I grew up with a series of lies that helped further white supremacy. Thats uncomfortable. To see the real agony, think about the millions of people who lived their entire lives enslaved, knowing that enslavement would be the future for their children and their childrens children. Think of living with the violence of the Jim Crow era as an African American.

Ty Seidule, Robert E. Lee and Me

In his candid and searing recent memoir, Robert E. Lee and Me: A Southerners Reckoning with the Myth of the Lost Cause (St. Martins Press), retired US Army general and renowned professor of history Ty Seidule recounts his odyssey from youthful hero worship of Confederate General Robert E. Lee and an indoctrination in racist myths of the Lost Cause to acclaim as a historian devoted to challenging the poisonous white supremacist lies about slavery, the Civil War, African American inferiority, Jim Crow segregation, and the deified Lee.

As a distinguished scholar of history, a decorated soldier, and a native of the South, Professor Seidule writes with rare authority about race, the Civil War, and the myths and lies about the war that he learned from an education presented through the lens of racism and Confederate mythology. He explains how his early beliefs were shaped by white supremacist ideology that demeaned and dehumanized Black citizens. These racist views imbued Southern culture and were widely shared throughout the country in textbooks, popular periodicals, and the media, with movies such as the award-winning Gone with the Wind and Disneys Song of the South rife with degrading stereotypes of African Americans.

And Professor Seidule vividly describes his path to understanding and his emergence as a leader for historical truth and for a reckoning on race. He demolishes the myths about the saintly Lee and, based on extensive research and overwhelming evidence, concludes that Lee was a traitor to his country who fought to preserve slavery. And, as Professor Seidule describes the militarys veneration of Confederate leaders in naming of bases and other actions, he rejects honoring of those who fought to preserve slavery and committed treason in the effort.

He further details how he became a scholar of our deeply conflicted past, and how that study revealed the noxious, insidious influence of racist ideas that have poisoned white minds since the dawn of slavery. And he considers the timely and vexing issue of how otherwise seemingly admirable people could embrace the odious tenets of white supremacy and the oppression of others.

Professor Seidules powerful personal observations and insights are especially timely as our nation continues to suffer serious divisions on issues of race and democracy. He urges that understanding our past is critical to confronting and stopping the generational transmission of pernicious racist ideas.

Ty Seidule is Professor Emeritus of History at West Point where he taught for two decades. He served in the U.S. Army for thirty-six years, retiring as a brigadier general. He currently teaches history and serves as the Chamberlain Fellow at Hamilton College as well as a New America Fellow. He is the author or editor of six books of military history, three of which won distinguished writing prizes, includingThe West Point History of the Civil War. Also a leader in digital history, Professor Seidule created and co-edited the award-winningWest Point History of Warfare, the largest enhanced digital book in any field. His video lecture Was the Civil War About Slavery has had more than 30 million views on social media. He also serves as the vice chair of the Congressional Naming Commission, which will rename Department of Defense assets that honor the Confederate States of America. He graduated from Washington and Lee University and earned his doctorate at Ohio State University.

Professor Seidule generously responded to questions about his work and his new book by email.

Robin Lindley: Congratulations Professor Seidule on your candid new memoir Robert E. Lee and Me and thank you for considering questions. You have a distinguished background as a military historian and author. What inspired you to write your revelatory memoir now on your indoctrination in the myths and lies of the Confederate Lost Cause and your rigorous exploration of the reality of our history of racism and white supremacy?

Professor Ty Seidule: When I was at West Point, I chaired our memorialization committee. We created a new memorial room to the 1500+ Academy graduates who gave the last full measure of devotion to the nation from the War of 1812 to the present, including more than 100 alumni killed since 9/11. One decision caused a ruckus. Should the West Point graduates who fought and died in Confederate gray be included in the new Memorial Room? I argued, stridently, no! After all, Confederates abrogated their oath, killed US Army soldiers, and committed treason for the worse possible reason: to create a slave republic. Yet, I lost. The superintendent wanted to include the names.

I went home, defeated, to tell my wife. She asked me if I had told everyone why I was so passionate. Why the issues were so important to me? No, I told her. Im a historian. I tell other peoples stories. She told me if I wanted to convince anyone, I needed to be honest and tell my story.

Then, in 2017, Washington and Lee University invited me to give a talk in Lee Chapel, where Robert E. Lee is buried. I told my story and called Lee a traitor for slavery. The audience gave me a standing ovation. I realized that if I was honest about my own story, I might be able to convince others about the facts of the Civil War and the Lost Cause more readily. So, I decided to do what few historians do. Use my own story to try to reach a broader audience.

Robin Lindley: In your new book, you describe your virtual reverence for Robert E. Lee, and how your education as a child and young adult was imbued with Confederate myths and racist history. At one point as a child, you ranked Lee as an 11 out of a scale of 10, and ranked Jesus at five. How do you see the origins of your adoration of Lee? Did your parents and teachers encourage your embrace of Lost Cause myths and the veneration of Lee when you grew up in the 1960s?

Professor Ty Seidule: Every aspect of my life encouraged me to see Lee as the epitome of a Southern gentleman. I wanted to be a Virginia gentleman because that meant status. My first chapter book was Meet Robert E. Lee. Lee looked like a military god on loan from Mt Olympus, framed by a gigantic Confederate flag. Today, its hard to imagine just how reverential Lee was to the white South, especially in Virginia.

Robin Lindley: What was your view of the causes of Civil War and its outcome as a child and young adult?

Professor Ty Seidule: It wasnt something I remember thinking about. My culture focused on the romantic, underdog Confederates who fought nobly for a doomed cause. But honestly, I dont remember thinking or hearing anything about the cause, the purpose. That was the problem. The purpose of the war and the war itself werent linked.

Robin Lindley: You vividly describe your college experience at Washington and Lee Universitya veritable shrine to Robert E. Lee, who was seen as the paradigm of the Southern Christian gentleman. What did you learn about Lee and the colleges efforts to deify Lee, the former president of the college?

Professor Ty Seidule: The entire history of the school revolved around deifying Lee until very recently. Fundraising was successful for years by its association with Lee. Lee Chapel was called by the University in the 1920s The Westminster Abbey of the Confederacy. In fact, Lee Chapel is more a reliquary to a saint than a chapel. His basement office remains untouched from the day he died in 1870. Traveller, his warhorse, buried outside Lees crypt, often has apples left by tourists.

The fact that Lees statue lies on the altar in the Chapels apse clearly shows who is venerated and its not Jesus. When my wife saw it for the first time, she understood that the school literally worshipped Lee. Her reaction? Get me out of here!

Robin Lindley: It may surprise some readers that so many bases and other US military facilities are named for Confederate leaders. Why did the US military honor traitors to the US in this way?

Professor Ty Seidule: Yes. Several of our most prestigious army posts honor the enemy. The War Department named them during WWI and WWII when the army was a segregationist institution, and the South was a racial police state.

Black people did protest these names, but they had been violently excluded from voting and could not change it. But to me its outrageous that the US Army, the most diverse workforce in the country, honors the enemy. An enemy who fought for slavery and killed US Army soldiers. Some like Henry Benning and John Brown Gordon never served in the US Army. Others like Braxton Bragg, Leonidas Polk, John Bell Hood and other West Point graduates chose to fight against the country that educated them. Lee served in US Army for over 30 years before choosing treason to preserve slavery.

Robin Lindley: You had a distinguished teaching career at the US Military Academy at West Point. You note that Lee casts a long shadow there with numerous tributes to the Confederate general. What are a few examples of this admiration for Lee at West Point that struck you?

Professor Ty Seidule: I lived on Lee Road, by Lee Gate, in Lee Housing area. At West Point our barracks are named for Americas greatest military heroes, Washington, MacArthur, Eisenhower, Bradley, Scott, Sherman, Grant, and Pershing. We recently named our newest barracks after Benjamin O. Davis, Jr, the first Black West Point grad in the twentieth century. But one barracks bears Lee name. When was it named? The early 1970s. I counted more than a dozen memorials to Lee at West Point.

The first Lee memorial came about in the 1930s and the last in 2002. Thats part of what changed me. West Point was an anti-Confederate monument in the nineteenth century. No Confederates in the prestigious cemetery. No Confederates in the Memorial Hall. None on the towering Battle Monument to the US Army dead from the War of the Rebellion.

Duty, Honor, Country, West Points motto is anti-Confederate. West Point in the nineteenth century saw Lee and his Confederate comrades as traitors. Lee made a comeback when West Point moved towards equal rights and integration. And that really informed my understanding of Confederate memorialization. Its always about white supremacy.

Robin Lindley: Thanks for that striking observation. Youre a retired general and renowned expert on military history. Was Lee a good soldier and general?

Professor Ty Seidule: For years, I let the smell of gunpowder seduce me into answering that question. No more!

Lee chose treason to preserve slavery. His army kidnapped Black people during the Antietam and Gettysburg campaigns and brought them back for sale in Virginia. Lees army depended on enslaved people for much of their logistics cooks, teamsters, nurses, engineers, farriers, and servants. The Army of Northern Virginia was an enslaving army. And Lee desperately wanted more enslaved labor throughout the war. Think of that for a minute. What other army depended so thoroughly on enslaved labor for its logistics? Also, Lees army routinely executed Black prisoners of war. Too often, we look at the tactics of war and forget the purpose.

I cover Lee as a strategist and tactician only after I clearly talk about treason and slavery.

Robin Lindley: Lee was an enslaver. How did he treat enslaved people? Did he ever emancipate slaves or call for abolition of slavery?

Professor Ty Seidule: Lee was a cruel enslaver. He enslaved people from the time his mother died soon after his graduation until 1863. When Lees father-in-law died in 1857, Lee took control of three enslaved labor farms for more than two years (I wont call them plantations, which evoke images of the wind whispering through the Spanish Moss. Plantations are more Dachau than Disneyland).

Lees father-in-law recognized enslaved marriages and kept families together. Lee tried to maximize his profits at the expense of enslaved people by using the hiring system to break apart all but one family. He also ordered Wesley Norris and his sister whipped, telling the constable to Lay it on well.

As for emancipation, he once said that freedom would come on Gods time. He certainly fought for slavery, not emancipation. Lees actions are what count to me.

Robin Lindley: Your verdict on Lee is straightforward: He was a traitor who fought to preserve slavery. What was the most important evidence you considered in reaching this verdict?

Professor Ty Seidule: For treason: The US Constitution lists only one crime. In Article III Section 3: Treason againstthe United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort. No court convicted him, although he was indicted.

I write as a historian but also as a US Army officer who served nearly 36 years. Lee also abrogated the oath he had taken only three weeks earlier on his promotion to colonel. In fact, he didnt even wait three days to let his resignation process before he accepted a commission in the Virginia militia. Of the eight US Army colonels from Virginia in 1861, all West Point graduates, Lee and only Lee chose to fight for the Confederacy, chose treason.

As for slavery, thats easy. Everyone knew thats why the white South seceded. They told everyone. It wasnt a secret. If senior officers fought for the Confederacy (especially one as smart as Lee) they knew damn well what they fought for slavery. Then there are Lees comments after he heard about the Emancipation Proclamation on January 10, 1863, calling it,

A savage and brutal policy which leaves us no alternative but success or degradation worse than death, if we would save the honor of our families from pollution, our social system from destruction.

He fought for slavery because he believed in slavery.

Robin Lindley: Was there a moment or incident that sparked you to challenge your admiration of Lee and question the Lost Cause lies?

Professor Ty Seidule: Like many changes in life, it came gradually and then very fast.

First, my identity became army officer, not Southern gentleman. Second, I married a woman incapable of lying. My culture lied constantly. She really changed me. Third, I became a historian at West Point and then a historian of West Point.

I understood the Civil War was about slavery, but for too long, I held romantic notions of Lee. Then, when I started studying West Points memorialization of Lee, I just became outraged that tributes to Lee came at the same time as integration. That made me not just a historian but an activist for change.

Robin Lindley: How do you see views of the Confederacy and Lee evolving, if at all?

Professor Ty Seidule: Radical change! The US Congress created a commission to change the names of the army posts that honor Confederates, and then overrode President Trumps veto by a supermajority. I serve on that commission. Memorials to Lee in Richmond, Charlottesville, and the US Capitol are gone. Wow! I would not have taken a bet with high odds in my favor that those iconic statues would be taken down in one year.

In a very short time, many (but not all) Americans see the values of the Confederacy as antithetical to our values and that gives me hope. My home state of Virginia is leading the way.

Robin Lindley: You write powerfully of how you felt betrayed by your education, your indoctrination with the lies of the Confederate Lost Cause, adoration of General Lee, and more. What would you like to see todays students learn about our history?

Professor Ty Seidule: Everyone has a history. Every school has a history. Every town has a history.

I would love to see more students research their own lives. I taught a course on West Points history for years. We become better citizens, better people when we understand the history of where we live. And not just the myths, but the tough history: slavery, segregation, and redlining. A better understanding of our local history will, I think, make us more empathetic.

At West Point, our mission is to educate and inspire leaders of character for the nation who live the values of duty, honor, country. How do you teach character? Nothing works better than history. What we research and write can change our character, at least it did for me.

Understanding local history, through primary sources, made me a more empathetic and honest person.

And, for anyone teaching the Civil War, please, please have students read the Southern States Ordinances of Secession and Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens Cornerstone Speech. If you start with those documents, a teacher is on the right path.

Robin Lindley: I was struck that you received hate mail and even death threats in 2015 after you stated your viewand that of virtually all academic historiansthat slavery was the cause of the Civil War. How are readers responding to your candid new book on Lee and the Lost Cause?

Professor Ty Seidule: The reception this time is far better, mostly. For the 2015 video I did on the cause of the Civil War, the online comments ran at least 20 to 1 negative. Now, its probably 10 to 1 positive. However, I still have plenty of one-star reviews on Amazon. There also seems to be a few folks who make videos debunking my argument.

If I receive hate mail in any form, I take it positively. I hope that my writing is clear enough that no one would mistake my message: treason for slavery. The Lost Cause, Confederate monuments, Jim Crow laws, disenfranchisement, and lynching all created a system of white supremacy to ensure white political power. Of course, history is dangerous because it challenges our myths and identity. When I challenge peoples identity, the reaction can be ferocious, but Ive faced far tougher foes than on-line trolls.

Robin Lindley: Your book Robert E Lee and Me is bound to become a classic study and it deserves a wide audience. Is there anything youd like to add about your book or your insights on history and the time we live in now? Where do you find hope as a historian and professor?

Professor Ty Seidule: I have no shortage of hope. Through the political process, statues dedicated to white supremacy have come down all over the country. Remember that commemoration is about our values. These statues demise tells us that our values, at least in many places, no longer tolerate traitors who fought for slavery. The military is now in the process of ridding itself of Confederate commemoration. Now, of course, that doesnt mean weve ended racism; we still have far, far to go, but for me as a soldier and a scholar, its a start. The only way to prevent a racist future is to first understand our racist past.

Robin Lindley: Thank you Professor Seidule for your thoughtful comments and insights, and congratulations on your moving and powerful new book. And best wishes on your new position at Hamilton College.

Robin Lindley is a Seattle-based attorney, writer and features editor for the History News Network (history news network.org. His work also has appeared in Writers Chronicle, Bill Moyers.com, Re-Markings, Salon.com, Crosscut, Documentary, ABA Journal, Huffington Post, and more. Most of his legal work has been in public service. He served as a staff attorney with the US House of Representatives Select Committee on Assassinations and investigated the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. His writing often focuses on the history of human rights, conflict, medicine, art, and culture. Robins email: robinlindley@gmail.com.

Visit link:

Ty Seidule on Exposing Robert E. Lee, Lost Cause Myths, White Supremacy, and Treason - History News Network

Op-Ed: As Democrats push for federal takeover of elections, Wisconsin forbids ballot harvesting and absentee ballot drop boxes – The Center Square

In the runup to the 2020 election, several states altered their voting procedures under the guise of the pandemic. In most cases, these far-reaching changes were instituted by governors under the premise that they could unilaterally do so because the pandemic afforded them emergency powers.

Americans should be outraged over this because according to the U.S. Constitution governors do not have the authority to single-handedly change voting rules pandemic or not. Per Article 1, section 4, The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof.

In Wisconsin, Gov. Tony Evers tasked the Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC) with revising the rules for voting in the 2020 general election after his request to the state legislature to do the same was rejected.

However, according to a recent ruling from Waukesha County Circuit Court Judge Michael Bohren, the voting changes instituted by WEC for the November 2020 election are illegal.

Specifically, Bohren ruled that WECs guidance regarding absentee ballot drop boxes violated the Wisconsin Constitution, which states, voting by absentee ballot is a privilege exercised wholly outside the traditional safeguards of the polling place.

Moreover, the Wisconsin Constitution notes, the privilege of voting by absentee ballot must be carefully regulated to prevent the potential for fraud or abuse; to prevent overzealous solicitation of absent electors who may prefer not to participate in an election; to prevent undue influence on an absent elector to vote for or against a candidate or to cast a particular vote in a referendum; or other similar abuses.

Suffice to say, creating a network of absentee ballot drop boxes is probably not the best way to prevent the potential for fraud or abuse.

Neither is ballot harvesting, which was also stricken down by Bohren.

Interestingly, Bohrens ruling comes as Democrats push national voting laws that would increase absentee voting and ballot harvesting, among many other provisions that would make it easier to vote under false pretenses.

Over the past few months, Democrats have argued that the federal government must circumvent the states by passing sweeping voting reform bills. Moreover, they have argued that anyone opposed to a federal takeover of state elections must be a racist.

Here is President Joe Biden, comparing those who oppose his call for the federal government to supersede state voting laws to infamous racists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Do you want to be on the side of Dr. King or George Wallace? Do you want to be on the side of John Lewis or Bull Connor? Do you want to be on the side of Abraham Lincoln or Jefferson Davis?

Biden failed to articulate how opposing his partys national voting bills actually makes one on par with the president of the Confederate States of America because that comparison is laughable on its face.

Biden also failed to mention that the vast majority of Americans agree with many of the commonsense rules states have in place to deter voter fraud. For example, recent polls show approximately 70 percent of Americans support voter ID laws, which Biden and Democrats claim is akin to voter suppression.

Whats more, in 2020, voting percentages among minority groups increased across-the-board.

Over the past several decades, great strides have been made in ensuring that all Americans eligible to vote are able to cast ballots. This achievement should be celebrated by all Americans, regardless of party affiliation.

As we enter 2022, with midterm elections on the horizon, it is imperative that states retain their sovereignty concerning voting procedures. Make no mistake, when elections are overseen by states rather than the federal government, the odds for corruption and election malfeasance are dramatically reduced.

In conjunction, the odds of a nationally disputed election and loss of confidence in American democracy are also less likely when elections are decentralized and run by states rather than the federal government.

Chris Talgo (ctalgo@heartland.org) is senior editor at The Heartland Institute.

See the original post here:

Op-Ed: As Democrats push for federal takeover of elections, Wisconsin forbids ballot harvesting and absentee ballot drop boxes - The Center Square

Letters to the editor for Sunday, January 23, 2022 – News-Press

Letter writers| Fort Myers News-Press

A recent article which quoted Fort Myers City Council member Fred Burson, stated that the coral-color parking garage is the "ugliest downtown building, and it doesn't fit in with the city's downtown image of grayish and white buildings nearby.""We would like it to complement all of the nearby facilities to create a charming downtown."

What Councilman Bursonand other like-thinkers don't consider is that with no originality and diversity, we are creating a monochromatic, look-alike area that resembles every other city.Fortunately, we have perhaps the last vestige of visual diversity already in place.Let's improve on what we have and let it draw attention to an otherwise increasingly mundane setting.

Since the mid-'90s, my wife and I have regularly visited Fort Myersand watched it grow.Every visit we noticed the very Florida color coral parking garage.Yes, it stood out, but it was a warm reception to the Fort Myers area.

Take advantage of what you have, and instead of destroying it, improve on its ability to garner attention, and make it an asset rather than a liability.Perhaps a large palm logo (for the City of Palms). Some of the most interesting features of an area are what some people may consider ugly, while others appreciate their aesthetic diversity.A little innovational thinking will, hopefully, keep us from being an all gray/white city.

William Bond, NorthFort Myers

Brandon Jetts guest opinion on the legacy of Martin Luther KingJr. was spot on. But one thing he failed to mention was what we here in a county named after Robert E. Lee can do to address racism and that is remove the portrait of the Confederate general that hangs so honorifically in the chambers of our County Commission.This portrait says a lot not only about the values of the county we live in but also the values of the men we have elected who sit under it.Failure to remove this portrait is disrespectful to our Black community and the many others who recognize the portrait as not-so-subtle support of the Confederate cause.It is time for this portrait to be taken down and for our county commissioners to lead the way.And the time is now.

Charlotte Newton, Fort Myers

Robert E. Lee was a son of Revolutionary War officer Henry "Light Horse Harry" Lee III. Lee was a top graduate of the United States Military Academy and an exceptional officer and military engineer in the United States Army for 32 years. Lee served throughout the United States, distinguished himself during the Mexican-American War, and served as superintendent of the United States Military Academy. He was the husband of Mary Anna Custis Lee, adopted great-granddaughter of George Washington, and Arlington National Cemetery is on their property. When Virginia's 1861 Richmond Convention declared secession from the Union, Lee chose to follow his home state, despite his desire for the country to remain intact and an offer of a senior Union command. During the first year of the Civil War, he served in minor combat operations and as a senior military adviser to Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

Gen. Robert E. Leedied a nationally recognized champion of peaceful American reconciliation.

Stop judging the historical figures of America's past by 21st Century values. These men were a product of the customs and culture of their times. It did not stop them from doing what, in good conscience, they thought was the right thing to do for their country.

At the end of the war these menswore a new oath of allegiance to the United States of America and the Constitution. As part of the healing, Lincoln, against considerable pressure, decided to not take draconian measures against his countrymen. He chose compassion and reconciliation over occupation.

Return Lee's monument to its rightful place.

Cookie Shepard, Fort Myers

Let's try and think logically for a minute and try to get past the emotion, rhetoricand outrage. You say you want freedom and you want the government to get outof your private life. You're against mask mandates and vaccine requirements, right? No government is going to tell you what you can and can't do! OK, got it.

Now, help me understand how it can possibly be OK for that same government to insinuate itself -- literally -- into a woman's body and tell her she cannot choose to have an abortion. A choice of the most private kind -- one that should be between a woman and her doctor.

So, all of you freedom fighters, either mask up and get vaccinated or GET OUT OF MY UTERUS!You can't have it both ways.

Ricki Baker, Naples

In Kathleen Passidomos blog about current legislative events, she reports that Senate President Wilton Simpson stated (we want Florida to) succeed without the heavy hand of the government telling (us) how to live.

And yet he IS the government and this Florida Legislature is considering a 15-week abortion ban for all women in the state. How is this not heavy-handed?

Lets be clear, this is very heavy-handed and totally hypocritical.

Jane Graham, Naples

Recent letters to the editor have claimed that President Biden is "the worst president in our history."The objective criteria for such profundity?Inflation is the highest ever (patently false), empty grocery shelves (not close to reality),Afghanistan (where four U.S. presidents have struggled with policy), and vaccine mandates (where the health of the population has become a cultural issue).

Have we become a country where the idea of shelling out $15 more on a tank of gas for our Audi SUVs requires pangs of sorrow from the rest of the world?Has the face of Americanow become a bunch of whiners, complaining about the sad situation where the grocery story is out of Raisin Bran and we have to settle for Cheerios?Is it really fair to condemn the current president for the tragedy of the Afghanistan exit, when four other U.S. presidents had presided over the inconvenient truth of the horrific loss of American and Afghan lives for 20 years?And finally, can a president be faulted for the cultural wars over vaccine mandates, when his sole purpose has been the well-being of the population in whose service he governs?

At least now we have president who actually governs. He engages his adversaries with respect; he passes legislation which will assist all Americans and not just the select few; and, amazingly, he has compassion and empathy for those he serves.

When a sitting president incites a mob to destroy the seat of U.S. democracy, watcheshis followers in their attempt to overturn a presidential election, and takes no action to stop the violence; those would be some valid criteria for the "worst president in our history."

Manny Cacciola, Fort Myers

To blame Biden for all the ills in our country conveniently forgets that inflation is worldwide, supply issues are worldwide, gas price hikes are worldwide. As much as I like Joe I dont think his reach extends that far. Many, if not most of these problems, are due to the pandemic, which doesnt seem to want to disappear when politicians wave their fairy dust. Dont forget to blame him when Russia invades Ukraine;after all, its his sons fault.

Philip Wyckoff, Fort Myers

Go here to see the original:

Letters to the editor for Sunday, January 23, 2022 - News-Press

US Security in the Shadow of Insurrection by Anne-Marie Slaughter & Heather Hurlburt – Project Syndicate

In the year since a mob of former President Donald Trump's supporters ransacked the US Capitol, America's political divisions have only grown deeper. Democrats and Republicans alike must recognize that without measures to shore up democracy at home, the country's international standing and security will continue to erode.

WASHINGTON, DC The anniversary of the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol has come and gone, and many Americans are deeply depressed that the countrys political divide has only deepened. Though most Republican Party leaders condemned the attack at the time, the GOP has since internalized former President Donald Trumps web of lies and falsehoods about the 2020 election, which he lost by seven million votes. Republicans have largely refused even to participate in the congressional investigation into the matter.

Subscriber Exclusive

A year after a sitting president tried to overturn the results of a fair and lawful election, the effort to identify and prosecute those responsible now must compete for attention with other security crises: Russian troops massing near Ukraine; Iran nearing the threshold of nuclear breakout; and humanitarian catastrophes in Afghanistan and Yemen. Faced with all this, American leaders will be tempted to draw a bright line between home and abroad. But doing so would be both risky and wrong.

Americas profound polarization reflects a society whose members no longer share a core understanding of what it means to be secure. Americans tend to have widely divergent experiences across racial, religious, and gender lines with US domestic security institutions. Trust in the US military and security forces used to be consistently high; now, it is falling, alongside trust in the rest of Americas government institutions. Americans no longer agree about who or what constitutes a threat, with Democrats much more likely to cite internal cohesion and political violence, and Republicans more concerned with traditional nation-state foes. Moreover, Americans are divided by ideology and age over whether people and ideas from elsewhere are an opportunity or a threat.

These divisions, and the resulting policy gridlock, would be bad enough in isolation. But the rest of the world is watching, and it sees a society that cannot agree on what democracy is, or on who belongs to the demos. In the World Banks Combined Polity Score index, the US has been downgraded from a longstanding score of ten, the highest for a democracy, to a five, meaning it is on the verge of anocracy: a democracy with authoritarian characteristics.

Around the world, those who have been inspired by leaders like Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr., are now haunted by images of the Confederate flag being waved in the halls of Congress. Allies whose ties to the US go back to World War II now see US elected officials embracing Holocaust deniers. Neither friend nor foe believes that the US can or will deliver on its long-term promises anymore, whether in the realm of vaccine distribution, climate accords, or nuclear deals.

If you are American and this description sounds exaggerated, you should look to your northern neighbor. In Canada, with which the US shares the worlds longest unfortified border, top media outlets marked the January 6 anniversary with a debate over, What to do about the likely unraveling of democracy in the United States. Back at home, American political scientist Barbara Walter, a leading global expert on civil wars, writes in a new book, Most Americans cannot imagine another civil war in their country. But this is because they dont know how civil wars start.

Our newest magazine, The Year Ahead 2022: Reckonings, is here. To receive your print copy, delivered wherever you are in the world, subscribe to PS for less than $9 a month.

As a PS subscriber, youll also enjoy unlimited access to our On Point suite of premium long-form content, Say More contributor interviews, The Big Picture topical collections, and the full PS archive.

Subscribe Now

Americans need to recognize that the erosion of their democracy is as much a foreign-policy matter as it is a domestic one. Those Republicans and Democrats who are still willing to work together on key international issues need to accept that this also requires working together to shore up core democratic norms at home.

Those norms are foundational to everything the US wants to achieve abroad. At a minimum, they include a rejection of violence and hate speech, strong protections for voting rights, and non-partisan election administration. Conservatives who urge the Biden administration to act tougher abroad should stop to consider what constant right-wing harping about the Big Steal looks like to the rest of the world. US leaders from across the political spectrum could send a far more compelling message by demonstrating a willingness to repair the cracks in American democracy. The capacity to do that has historically been one of Americas greatest strengths.

After all, we have been here before. A half-century ago, American democracy was tested by a president who was forced to resign and by a security establishment that misled the country into a catastrophic war. This prompted a broad effort to address systemic flaws. And while the solutions were imperfect, they nonetheless succeeded in restoring the prestige of US institutions for the next four decades both at home and abroad.

What might such an effort look like now? Senator Mike Rounds, a Republican from South Dakota, recently mustered the courage to buck Trump, telling ABC News: The election was fair, as fair as we have seen. We simply did not win the election, as Republicans, for the presidency. That is a good start. But without progress in tackling the full range of problems with US elections who gets to vote and how the votes are counted neither Republicans nor Democrats can hold their heads high in the court of global public opinion.

The responsibility doesnt lie only with Congress, of course. In its Interim National Security Strategic Guidance published last March, President Bidens administration made clear that, our role in the world depends upon our strength and vitality here at home. Since then, Biden has signed bills and implemented policies allocating billions of dollars to research and development in strategic industries, physical infrastructure, and a better social infrastructure.

Again, that is a good start. But suppose the administration took its own logic a step further and declared openly that threats to our democracy are also threats to our security? The Director of National Intelligence has already warned that violent political extremism a euphemism for domestic terrorism poses a greater risk to Americans than Islamist terrorism does.

With Americas crumbling political norms and violence-tinged factionalism, is it any wonder that only 17% of the worlds democracies view the US as a country to emulate? It is time for Americans, or at very least those who aim to represent the US in the world, to see themselves as others do, without excuses and rationalizations.

Continued here:

US Security in the Shadow of Insurrection by Anne-Marie Slaughter & Heather Hurlburt - Project Syndicate

How Black senators controlled the narrative on a historic day at the Capitol – Mississippi Today

Note: This analysis first published in Mississippi Todays weekly legislative newsletter.Subscribe to our free newsletterfor exclusive early access to weekly analyses.

Sen. Derrick Simmons sensed his Black colleagues were growing more and more frustrated.

During Jan. 21 debate of a bill that seeks to ban the teaching of critical race theory, white senators were arguing that the existence of systemic racism was a subjective myth. They argued that Mississippi children should not be taught about how racism permeates society, that the teaching of racism was similar to the teachings of Karl Marx.

The personal, emotional pleas of Black senators during the debate were being ignored by their powerful white colleagues.

So Simmons, a Black man from the Mississippi Delta who serves as the Senate Democratic leader, hatched an idea. One by one, he approached the desks of his 13 Black colleagues and got their approval.

When the vote for final passage was called, Simmons stood up and requested a roll call vote. That meant instead of a typical voice vote, each senator would be called upon individually to vote yea or nay.

As the Senate clerk began calling the roll, all 14 Black senators stood up and walked off the floor. The decision by Black senators all Democrats to walk out ultimately meant nothing for the final outcome since Republicans alone have enough members to pass any bill they want. But the symbolism of their decision ran deep.

In the state with the most sordid and violent history of racism, Black lawmakers employed a principal strategy of the civil rights movement organizing a walkout to protest passage of a bill that threatened the teaching of that very history.

It was an unprecedented moment in Mississippi history. In 1993, Black caucus members left before then-Gov. Kirk Fordice delivered his State of the State speech in protest of his policies. But no Capitol observer can recall an instance of members walking out in protest before a vote on a bill.

The greatness of America is the right to protest for what you think is right, Simmons told Mississippi Today. Together we believed that this was the right thing to do, to walk out. So thats what we did. We decided that nonsense wasnt worth our votes.

READ MORE: Every Black Mississippi senator walked out as white colleagues voted to ban critical race theory

One great irony: It couldve been a historic day for such different reasons.

A few minutes after the critical race theory bill passed, the Senate passed what would be the largest pay raise for public school teachers in decades a critical moment for the nations lowest-paid educators.

The teacher pay plan was Republican Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemanns top legislative priority in 2022, one he and his staff had worked on for months. Hosemann, who did not preside over the debate of either bill on Friday, sent a press release following the eventful day touting passage of that bill.

But Hosemann garnered few accolades about his teacher pay plan on Friday because the Black senators had complete control of the narrative of the day.

They owned the headlines across Mississippi, and television stations across the state led with B-roll of their walkout on primetime news. The walkout went national and international. Simmons appeared Saturday on MSNBC to discuss the implications of the bill and the historic decision by Black lawmakers to skip the vote.

The people who threw rocks at Ruby Bridges for trying to go to school are now upset that their grandchildren might learn that they threw rocks at Ruby Bridges for trying to go to school, Simmons said. To improve Mississippi and America, the truth must be told. White children, Black children, my children, your children should hear the history of slavery, the civil rights movement, the uncontrolled killing of Black Americans. They should hear that history and decide they want to make Mississippi a better place together.

Simmons continued: Racism is part of our history. We have to acknowledge it exists, and we have to talk about it.

Several Black senators went to the well before the final vote, laying out clearly where they stood on the bill and what they thought of its passing.

There are 14 Black senators in this chamber, and these 14 are telling you that this bill is morally wrong, said Sen. Barbara Blackmon, D-Canton. Yet you ignore the thoughts, positions of these 14 members of this body. So it must be something if all 14 of us feel or think that something is wrong with this bill.

Perhaps the most powerful plea made from the floor was from Sen. David Jordan, a freedom fighter during the movement. The 88-year-old Jordan taught for 33 years in Mississippi public schools and 20 of them in integrated public schools.

As Jordan put it, many white Mississippians didnt want him teaching their children. But he taught them the way hed taught all his students: by providing facts, science and truth.

Its sad weve wasted so much time on something thats not necessary, Jordan said from the floor before the vote. Mississippi has come a long way together. If anybody has suffered from racism, its people of color. We feel that we dont need this bill. We are satisfied without it; what do you need it for? We have been the victims of it (racism). We cannot continue, Christian friends, stumbling into the future backwards. Thats what this bill does for us. We have more important things to do. We need to show more cohesiveness and progress.

1) The consideration of critical race theory legislation stands to jeopardize relationships between white and Black legislative leaders.

In the Blackest state in America, where a major constituency is often ignored or left behind by policy passed in Jackson, these relationships are a very big deal. Black leaders have continued to project good will toward white leaders following the June 2020 state flag change. After decades of effort from Black lawmakers, white leaders finally chose to work with their Black colleagues to change the flag, the last in the nation featuring the Confederate battle emblem.

You couldnt help but to feel good after what we did together in June 2020, Simmons said. You had this mindset as a Mississippian that we can move forward in a spirit of being inclusive, not exclusive. And then here we are less than two years later, we allow what goes on in the nation (critical race theory debate) to come into the state to divide us. We had so much hope and optimism after the flag. But on Friday, you almost feel completely deflated.

2) What will the House do?

The Senate critical race theory bill was relatively mild compared to legislation proposed in other states. And the House is led by Speaker Philip Gunn, who has made his intention to address critical race theory very well known. Will the House bill be more restrictive in terms of what Mississippi teachers can or cant teach? Having seen the broad public outcry from the Senate vote, will House leaders accept the Senate version and move on to other issues?

Black caucus members in the House have a big head start now to prepare for how theyll respond to whatever happens. The debate will almost certainly be more dramatic in the House, where pretty much everything is more dramatic.

3) Is this all worth it?

This push to ban critical race theory is rooted in national political rhetoric a red meat issue pushed by out-of-state interest groups. Republican Sen. Mike McLendon, the bills author who defended it on the floor last week, said himself that his constituents pushed the issue based on what they saw on Fox News. McLendon nor any other politician can point to a single instance of critical race theory being taught in the state a fact confirmed by state education officials.

White Republicans are pushing this bill knowing definitively that it will hurt their relationships with Black colleagues and their Black constituents. That harm cuts deep, and it will linger for a long time. In November 2023, when those Republican lawmakers are running for reelection, will their constituents remember or even care about this hot-button issue thats gotten play on Fox News in recent weeks?

4) Mississippi teachers are, once again, caught in the middle of a major political fight at the Capitol.

Another great irony of all this is white legislative leaders are simultaneously pushing massive pay raise proposals for teachers while effectively telling them what they can and cannot teach. That reality could stand to further sow distrust of lawmakers among educators, who already deeply distrust lawmakers.

There are more than 30,000 educators (plus their families and loved ones) in Mississippi. Thats a major voting bloc that could remember all this when legislative and statewide elections come up in 2023.

Central to our mission at Mississippi Today is inspiring civic engagement. We think critically about how we can foster healthy dialogue between people who think differently about government and politics. We believe that conversation raw, earnest talking and listening to better understand each other is vital to the future of Mississippi. We encourage you to engage with us and each other on our social media accounts, email our reporters directly or leave a comment for our editor by clicking the button below.

Republish This Story

Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.

X

by Adam Ganucheau, Mississippi Today January 24, 2022

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

See the article here:

How Black senators controlled the narrative on a historic day at the Capitol - Mississippi Today

Sports Bettings Next Big Election Battles Are in California – The New York Times

TEMECULA, Calif. Legal sports betting in the United States accelerated in 2021 as a flurry of states either overcame legislative logjams, as Ohio did just before Christmas, or signed off on online wagering, as New York did just after Election Day.

But those efforts are likely to pale in comparison to the all-out lobbying, campaigning and legal jousting in 2022 involving what a DraftKings executive recently called one of the holy grails in sports betting: California.

By November, Californians may be asked to vote on as many as four sports betting initiatives. Thats why deep-pocketed interests, including national sports books and Native American casinos, have been gearing up to spend $200 million to persuade voters in California to support their particular proposal or to reject the others.

One measure that has already qualified for the state ballot, sponsored by powerful tribes in California, would add sports wagering, but only in person, at tribal casinos or horse racing tracks. Online betting initiatives, now gathering signatures, dangle the prospect of making bets anywhere through the internet. Others offer a middle ground.

If one of the measures passes, nearly two-thirds of Americans will live in states that allow or regulate sports betting. And with California and New York on board, sports wagering would essentially be national in scope, fueling a market that Goldman Sachs recently estimated could grow to $40 billion in revenues in a decade from $900 million now.

Yet gambling expansion in California has often fallen short or been torpedoed by competing interests. Indeed, Californias card rooms, which primarily operate around larger cities and offer a more limited range of games, just filed a lawsuit to invalidate the qualified tribal measure.

Were never going to get sports betting figured out at any level unless California comes on board, Jason Giles, executive director of the National Indian Gaming Association, said at a recent sports betting conference at the Pechanga Resort and Casino in Temecula. That will be the game changer for the United States.

Since the Supreme Courts decision in 2018 to strike down a federal law banning commercial sports betting in states other than Nevada, more than 30 states have authorized sports wagering, including about a dozen in the last year. More than 20 states have gone live.

New York just started mobile sports betting after awarding licenses for it to two coalitions featuring marquee names, Caesars Sportsbook and Ballys Interactive. Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio signed a bill legalizing sports betting in late December. And legislators in Wyoming and Arizona, among others, quickly approved sports betting.

Look at this massive expansion across the country and where we are its becoming very mainstream, said Brandt Iden, a former state representative in Michigan who pushed to legalize sports betting in his home state. Iden is now head of government affairs for Sportradar, which collects and analyzes data for sports books. I talk to legislators who say, you know what, I dont support gambling, but everybody is doing it.

Of the holdouts, Texas considered several bills in 2021, and some lawmakers expect momentum when the legislature reconvenes in 2023. Florida, meanwhile, is a mess: A federal judge recently blocked the Seminole Tribes new sports betting app, and DraftKings and FanDuel are racing to gather enough signatures to get a referendum on the 2022 ballot.

In California, gambling mostly on slot machines and blackjack has been legal for two decades on tribal lands under compacts negotiated with the state. The state also permits gambling at horse racing tracks, which was legalized in 1933, and card rooms, which trace their lineage to poker-playing miners during the Gold Rush.

Any changes would require constitutional amendments through a voter referendum, or legislation backed by the voters.

Previous attempts have bogged down; online poker, for instance, failed in part because the tribes themselves were split. But now there appears to be less resistance on moral and philosophical grounds.

If we think about progressive legislation, or legislation to protect consumer welfare, California lies at the forefront, whether we want to talk about minimum wage or privacy protection, said Marc Edelman, a law professor at Baruch College who has written extensively on sports gambling. If California legalizes sports gambling it becomes very unlikely that another state would arise as the consumer-oriented opposer of sports gambling.

This time, the push to expand gambling began before the pandemic, from a coalition of 18 tribes that have dominated casino gambling in the state.

Across the United States, tribal gambling generated $27.8 billion in revenue in its fiscal year from Oct. 1, 2019, to Sept. 30, 2020, despite the pandemic. California is the biggest state, with 66 tribal casinos on federally recognized lands, mostly far from the coast, yielding about $8 billion, with much of that coming from slot machines.

Under the tribes initiative, which is backed by a political action committee that has raised more than $13 million, sports wagering would be permitted at tribal casinos and horse tracks. Roulette and games played with dice, such as craps, would also be allowed under the proposal, which qualified for the ballot in May 2021 after collecting more than one million valid signatures.

One thing that is not included is online betting, because the initiative is intended to be a very measured, incremental step, said Mark Macarro, tribal chairman of the Pechanga Band of Luiseo Indians in Riverside County.

We think this is the right thing to do for tribes and tribal sovereignty, he said at the conference here. Theres enough skittishness out there about what could happen to brick-and-mortar facilities.

The initiative would also create a new civil enforcement tool allowing anyone suspicious of any illegal gambling operations to file lawsuits. It is this provision that has fueled two separate but related efforts by Californias card rooms to defeat the tribes, and to get their own sports betting measure passed.

California has more than 80 card rooms ranging from pub-like places with a few poker tables to sleek behemoths with 270 tables accompanied by restaurants and plentiful A.T.M.s. Collectively, they employ 23,000 people in urban areas, many of them Asian, Black and Hispanic, and pump in $300 million in federal, state and local tax revenues each year, according to the California Gaming Association, a trade group.

Many municipal budgets rely heavily on the card rooms to finance vital services and bolster juvenile justice and other programs, said Mayor Tasha Cerda of Gardena, which has two card rooms. She has backed an initiative that would permit sports betting at the card rooms, tribal casinos and racetracks, as well as allow for internet sports betting. That initiative has raised $450,000 to date. Meanwhile, some of the bigger card rooms have poured more than $24 million into a No campaign against the tribes initiative.

During a recent tour of Hollywood Park Casino in Inglewood, adjacent to SoFi Stadium, the host of the Super Bowl next month and the College Football Playoff national championship in 2023, Deven Kumar, the casinos general manager, estimated sports betting could increase revenues already hurt by the coronavirus pandemic by 20 percent to 25 percent. He and James T. Butts Jr., Inglewoods mayor, warned that the tribes civil enforcement provision could drain their existing business by up to 75 percent, compounded by the inevitable legal costs.

They are attempting to make gambling a monopoly at the expense of others, Butts said. They are not the disenfranchised group they once were. The minority majority cities deserve the opportunity for equity as well.

In the city of Hawaiian Gardens, where the Gardens Casino supplied 68 percent of the tax revenues in the 2019-20 municipal budget, Keith A. Sharp, the casinos general counsel, said sports betting could transform Sundays at the casino now mostly empty into bustling periods where customers could wager on N.F.L. games while also playing baccarat or other games.

If the card rooms were hobbled, however, Nary Chin, a longtime card dealer and single mother of four, said she feared for her future.

I learned English in the card room, not school, said an emotional Chin, who immigrated from Cambodia in 1984. I am very grateful. This is my home. If I didnt have this job, I dont know what Id do.

The third initiative comes from online sports books, including DraftKings and FanDuel, that want to enter California for the first time and offer online betting.

The measure requires those companies to partner with tribes, and its supporters say voters can pass both their initiative and the tribes in-person one. Most of the states profits would be dedicated to homelessness measures, and to the tribes themselves. It would also allow betting on nonathletic events, like award shows and video game contests, but not youth sports or elections, according to the nonpartisan Legislative Analysts Office.

We view brick-and-mortar as very complementary to mobile, Jonathan Edson, FanDuels senior vice president for business development, said at the sports betting conference.

California is one of the holy grails in sports, added Jeremy Elbaum, senior vice president for business development at DraftKings.

The supporters, buffeted by an initial $100 million from seven sports books, have lined up mayors in Long Beach, Oakland, Fresno and Sacramento, plus advocates working to combat a homeless crisis. They are confident they will collect enough signatures to be certified by the June ballot deadline.

We are focused on ongoing stable revenue to fund the key programs that we know we need, said Tommy Newman, vice president for engagement and activation at the United Way of Greater Los Angeles. If were honest, this is regulating and capturing value from something that is happening, for people in communities that absolutely need the investment.

In November, a fourth initiative arrived supporting both online and in-person betting, backed by a different group of tribes, including the Rincon Band of Luiseo Indians and the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians.

Out-of-state and international gaming operators want to rewrite the balanced system California has created so that the future belongs to them, paying a pittance to serious local and statewide social problems, and trying to divide the Tribes by offering temporary riches to a few while taking future growth opportunities away from the rest, the tribes wrote in their application to the California attorney general.

A lawyer for the tribes, Scott Crowell, did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Some gambling analysts believe that a plethora of initiatives may confuse voters, who may just say no to everything. Another wild card is a lawsuit filed in December by two card rooms claiming that the qualified tribal initiative violates the state constitution, which says initiatives can focus only on one subject, because the tribes are trying to add retail sports betting as well as add more table games.

Still, no matter the outcome of the lawsuit or the ballot measures, many sports and technology companies are building audiences through free-to-play games, contests, fantasy sports and national marketing campaigns, even in states where sports betting has not yet been cleared, said Rob Phythian, founder and chief executive of SharpLink Gaming, a technology company.

Teams like the Minnesota Vikings have hired companies like SharpLink to build fantasy games. That could be consequential in California, where there are 19 teams in the N.F.L., M.L.B., N.B.A., N.H.L. and W.N.B.A. by far the most of any state.

Were just a bridge to betting, Phythian said. Its sort of like training the muscle.

Go here to read the rest:

Sports Bettings Next Big Election Battles Are in California - The New York Times

Gov. Charlie Baker would be happy to sign sports betting bill if state lawmakers pass one this session – masslive.com

Gov. Charlie Baker on Monday said hed gladly sign a bill to legalize sports betting in Massachusetts if state lawmakers pass one this session as he closes out his second term.

Speaking with reporters at the State House a day before his final State of the Commonwealth address, Baker said closing the deal on a bill that would open a burgeoning market to Massachusetts is one of several things hes hoping for in 2022.

There are many things that would make me happy before I leave office, if I have the chance to sign them, Baker said. One of them would certainly be a sports betting bill. Lieutenant Gov. [Karyn Polito] and I filed one several years ago, and filed it again after that. I know its a difficult issue with a lot of elements to it. And it would be my hope, of course, that our colleagues in the House and Senate would find a way to get to yes on that before the end of the legislative session.

He acknowledged sports betting is just one of many issues that state lawmakers and his office are working on, including a bill addressing mental health that he described as a critically important.

Sports betting is now legal in 31 states and Washington, D.C.

In a virtual discussion last fall with state Sen. Eric Lesser, who introduced a sports betting bill last year, gaming attorney Daniel Wallach noted that four out of the five states that border Massachusetts allow sports betting.

Some analysts and state lawmakers say the state is effectively giving away tens of millions of dollars in potential tax and licensing revenue as Massachusetts residents drive across state lines to place their bets.

Varying House and Senate proposals have called for offering sports betting licenses for casinos, race tracks and mobile apps that run digital sports books.

Last year, state Rep. Jerald A. Parisella told MassLive that retail operators and mobile partners could seek nearly a dozen combined licenses, leading to at least $70 million in application and licensing fees alone.

Earlier this month, nearly 90 bars, restaurants and private clubs pressed the Massachusetts Senate to legalize sports betting this year.

The business owners made the case that a boost in revenues tied to sports betting could help them better overcome the COVID-19 pandemic. And legalizing sports betting at local businesses is crucial, they said, to ensure customers are not lured away to casinos.

In a letter to all 40 state senators, the group of business owners and managers endorsed a sports wagering bill from Sen. Adam Gomez, writing it would increase tax revenue for Massachusetts, bolster geographic fairness for residents who do not live near casinos, and provide a safe option for betting.

Related Content:

Original post:

Gov. Charlie Baker would be happy to sign sports betting bill if state lawmakers pass one this session - masslive.com

Ways to make money online through sports betting – The Sports Bank

Sports betting is no longer an outcast in society. Nowadays, it is more common to place bets on football games, golf tournaments, and the Super Bowl than ever before.

Sports betting has become so mainstream that some even consider it a job. The question isnt whether or not you should bet on sports; rather, the question is how you can get started and make money while doing it, as well as enjoying free bets. If you are looking for more information about sports betting, check out freebets.org.uk.

Here are the best ways to make money from online sports betting:

When youre new to the gambling scene, its easy to jump on websites that are questionable. However, if you want your money and information protected at all times there is no better choice than using an established site with positive reviews from users like yourself.

Sports betting sites are the best when it comes to betting because you can bet on sports with confidence knowing that your information is safe at all times.

No matter what type of online gambling site you choose in terms of sports betting, there is always a bonus code that can be used. Bonuses are the best way to make money because they provide you with an extra boost of cash without requiring any action on your part.

In order for this strategy to work effectively its important not only find reputable sites but also ones where bonuses come often and are easy to use.

Cash game sports betting is the most profitable because it requires no skill and can be done with little effort on a daily basis without knowing anything about each team or sport being played.

Cash games are simple; you place money into an account, pick a team to win, wait for the results and collect your money. The higher percentage of cash you put in versus what you take out equals more profit over time.

This may seem like a risky strategy but its actually one of the best ways to increase overall profits. This is because youre placing bets on teams that are less likely to win, which means there will be higher payouts if they do happen to pull off a victory.

For example: Lets say Atlanta Falcons and New England Patriots are playing in the Super Bowl. If youre betting on Atlanta, which is a favorite to win and has better odds than New England; there will be lower payouts if they actually happen to lose while bets placed with New Englands underdog status may have higher payouts in case of an upset victory.

Live sports betting is also a great way to make money because it is like playing the stock market without having to worry about getting in over your head. The downside of live betting is that you dont know the outcome until after each game, so theres no chance for profit if one team fails miserably and blows out their opponent.

Online gambling is meant for entertainment purposes only, so theres no need to take losing hard or get too wrapped up in the game while betting on sports online.

It doesnt matter if your favorite team loses a football game; just get back up, try a different strategy and keep betting on sports as much as possible. Thats the best way to make money from online sports betting.

It doesnt matter if youre just starting out or have been in it for years, there are always ways to increase your profits and manage risk effectively when gambling on football games, golf tournaments and other sporting events of interest. The key is to be smart, use the right tools and keep things fun so your bankroll will increase overtime.

To conclude the article, we would also like to mention that while some people gamble for fun and enjoyment, others end up spending more than they can afford, or use gambling to distract themselves from everyday problems. This is not healthy and we want to make sure that you know that theres lots of support available, both online and in case you decide to visit one of the specialized centres. You can check out Begambleaware.org for more details. Happy betting!

See the original post:

Ways to make money online through sports betting - The Sports Bank

Sports betting: The 49ers have had the Rams number lately – The Philadelphia Inquirer

Had to laugh when it was pointed out that San Francisco quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo is 15-4 against the spread when his team is the underdog.

More like his defense is 15-4 ATS, was a common response.

This season, the 49ers are 4-1 against the spread as underdogs, with more impressively four wins outright. Theyve beaten Dallas, Green Bay, and the Rams twice.

The Rams, who will host Sundays NFC championship, blew a 17-point lead to San Fran on Jan. 9 and nearly had one of the all-time playoff gags on Sunday before beating Tampa Bay at the buzzer. They were just 7-9 against the number as a favorite, but covered four of their last five at home. The exception being the game against the 49ers.

Three other things to know about the 49ers-Rams (Sunday, 6:30 p.m., Fox29):

The 49ers have won the last six meetings. The last two played in Los Angeles were on walk-off field goals by Robbie Gould, who drilled the winning kick at the buzzer Saturday night to beat Green Bay.

The Rams have been favored in the last four meetings by an average of about 3.5 points, which is where this Sundays line generally opened. The over/under is 46.5.

Garoppolo is 4-1 in his career as a playoff starter. He has two touchdown passes and five interceptions in those five games, and is on the verge of taking the 49ers to the Super Bowl for the second time in three years. Thats hard to do.

The Chiefs opened at -6.5 in some places, -7.5 in others. That could be a crucial difference for both bettor and bookie. The line had settled into Chiefs -7 by Monday.

READ MORE: Joe Banner: Eagles should move on from Jalen Reagor this offseason

The big move was in the over/under, which opened at 50.5, but quickly jumped to 54 shortly after Sunday nights track meet when the Chiefs eliminated the Bills, 42-36, in overtime.

Three other things to know about Sundays game (3 p.m., CBS3):

Kansas City is 11-1 after starting the season 3-4. At one point, the Chiefs were +1600 to win the Super Bowl. They are the clear favorites today.

K.C.s only loss in that span was at Cincinnati on Jan. 2. The Bengals were 3.5-point dogs and won it with a 20-yard field goal by Evan McPherson in the final seconds. The Chiefs led, 28-17, at the half, and the over (51) hit early in the third quarter.

The Bengals have covered their last five as road underdogs with outright wins at Pittsburgh (+3), at Baltimore (+6), at Denver (+3), and at Tennessee (+4). They lost at Cleveland in the final week of the season while resting most of their regulars, but still covered the +5.5-point spread.

BetMGM/via SportsOddsHistory.com

Feb. 8, 2021, vs. Jan. 24, 2022

Cincinnati: Was 80-1, is 8-1

Kansas City: Was 6-1, is approximately 1-1

L.A. Rams: Was 12-1, is 2-1

San Francisco: Was 16-1, is 9-2

READ MORE: Thats on us to continue to build: Eagles GM Howie Roseman assesses Jalen Reagor, wide receiver corps

NFL: The Chiefs are +120 to win the Super Bowl, but Patrick Mahomes to win Super Bowl MVP is +180.

NFL: A money-line parlay on the four winning teams this weekend would have paid out somewhere around 30-1. Had the Bills (up three with 13 seconds left and kicking off) beaten the Chiefs, that payout would have been about 37-1.

College basketball: A FanDuel customer turned a $10 four-team parlay (in-game) into $64,170 with four college basketball underdogs on Saturday. Three needed to win in overtime on the road, including Army erasing a 27-point deficit in the first half to shock Navy.

NHL: Just how rough has it been for the Canadiens? On Jan. 1, they played at Florida and the Panthers were -650. It was the highest line for a hockey game many in the industry had ever seen. Over the weekend, Montreal played at Colorado and the line was even higher; the Avs were -700. Montreal forced overtime, but Colorado won it. It was the Avalanches 11th win in 12 games. Montreal had eight wins all season entering Monday.

NHL: File this away for later in the week: Overs are 18-6-1 in Florida Panthers home games. Their next is Thursday against Vegas, which has an 11-5-0 mark for the overs in road games. Florida entered the week second in the league in goals per game (4.00). Vegas is sixth (3.46).

There were two NFL games on Saturday, 11 in the NHL, three in the NBA, 130-plus in mens college basketball, plus the Aussie Open, and a full UFC card.

Days like today are the ones you just want to get through no matter how as a bookmaker, tweeted Rex Beyers, risk manager of SuperBook in Las Vegas. The informed players have a significant edge based solely on sheer volume of games where we have to put up a number and wont have all the pertinent info.

Read the original:

Sports betting: The 49ers have had the Rams number lately - The Philadelphia Inquirer

New Jersey leads the nation in online sports betting. Here comes New York. – POLITICO – POLITICO

In its first weekend, the four online sports operators in New York took in $150 million in wagers, and 650,000 unique player accounts were set up which grew to 1.2 million accounts by the end of the first week, according to GeoComply, a software provider that ensures location for sports bettors. Thats more than New Jersey and neighboring Pennsylvania combined for the same period.

And with twice the population of New Jersey, New York, with its 20 million residents, is likely to eventually eclipse the title New Jersey has held since 2019 as the sports betting capital of the nation after its revenue surpassed Nevada and its sprawling Las Vegas sports books.

"With a product as we have, I would expect we leapfrog over New Jersey, said state Sen. Joseph Addabbo (D-Queens), who sponsored the sports betting measure in New York. But it is about sustainability and the long term."

Its taken four years for sports betting to go from a dark market vice, relegated for most Americans to bar bookmakers and risky offshore gaming sites, to an accepted pastime in the vast majority of the country.

And New Jersey was the most aggressive to get into the market after winning and losing a number of lawsuits along the way, helping it to cement its national lead as other states sought to catch up.

Sports betting has been legalized in more than 30 states, with 18 having some form of online wagering. It has quickly become a cash cow for states and local governments followingthe 2018 Supreme Court ruling overturning a federal ban that essentially gave Nevada a legal monopoly on the industry.

In New Jersey, the amount bet on sports exceeded $1.3 billion last October alone, a national record, and all but $100 million of it came from online wagering, even with the state's nine casinos in Atlantic City and three racetracks offering in-person betting.

In New York, four upstate casinos have offered in-person betting since 2019, but the revenue has been paltry compared to the early weeks of online betting.

And the industry is in its infancy.

California is eyeing a referendum in November to likely decide whether it will enter the burgeoning sector, and Ohio is expected to have online sports betting in 2023.

In two of the other largest states, Florida and Texas, sports betting remains uncertain. A federal judge last month rejected Florida's bid to legalize it through the Seminole Tribe of Florida, leaving the state also with the possibility of a referendum in November. In Texas, lawmakers might reconsider it in 2023 when state lawmakers return to Austin.

Goldman Sachs last March estimated that online sports betting and internet gambling revenues in the U.S. may grow from $900 million a year to $39 billion by 2033.

New York's entry into the mobile industry may serve as a key guide of the room for growth.

GeoComply found that just 9 percent of New York players had placed bets previously in New Jersey and that nearly 88 percent of New York customers were brand new to the sites.

In other words, there appeared to be enough interest in New York to limit the impact in New Jersey.

The momentum of New Yorks sports betting launch has continued, and it is mostly homegrown, said Lindsay Slader, the company's managing director of gaming, in a statement.

Indeed, New Jersey averaged 12.6 million transactions the two weekends before New York's launch and 13.1 million the two weekends since, the company said.

"New Yorks launch of mobile/online sports betting is likely to only impact patrons living close enough to the New Jersey border to make travel from New York to New Jersey for the purpose of wagering convenient," said Jane Bokunewicz, the faculty director at the Institute of Gaming, Hospitality and Tourism at Stockton University in Galloway, N.J., in an email.

How sustainable the rush in New York will be is uncertain. The state expects tax revenue to grow from $375 million in coming fiscal year to $518 million by 2027. And, like with regular casino gambling, the ultimate size of the market for sports betting could be limited.

Still, New Jersey said it is well-positioned to stay competitive with New York for one key reason, in particular: taxes.

New York's tax rate on mobile sports betting providers is 51 percent, among the highest in the nation, compared to 14.25 percent in New Jersey.

And New Jersey's sports wagering revenue, which is what is left after payouts to winners, has showed no signs of slowing: It doubled between 2020 and 2021 to a nation-leading $816 million, state records show.

The lower tax rate should give New Jersey operators an opportunity to offer new incentives to lure back New York customers, said James Plousis, chair of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission.

"Theres no doubt about it, it will have some impact, but I think were well positioned," he said. "The tax environment in New jersey is much better than in New York."

For Atlantic City, which struggled for years after casinos began opening in other East Coast states, mobile sports betting and other internet gambling games New Jersey has allowed give the resort town another way to build revenue without having to draw gamblers to its hotels.

In 2021, internet gambling and sports betting represented 46 percent of the total gaming revenue in New Jersey, putting it nearly on par with all the revenue the casinos brought in from traditional gaming, records show.

Perhaps the biggest impact so far has been in the physical sportsbooks in New Jersey. Attendance has been down at the Meadowlands Racetrack sportsbook, a mere 10 miles from midtown Manhattan and by far the largest one in the state.

Owner Jeff Gural, who also owns a sportbooks and horse track in the Southern Tier region of New York, said he expected more of a hit on the mobile side of the business rather than the in-person toll side at the Meadowlands.

But he also wondered how long New York's rise will last. Many customers were probably lured in by big promotions, such as $300 in free bets offered by Caesars.

"I think we have to see what happens six months from now when all the free money disappears," Gural said.

Visit link:

New Jersey leads the nation in online sports betting. Here comes New York. - POLITICO - POLITICO

IGTs Joe Asher: How to forge a career in the sports betting industry – SBC Americas

IGTs President of Sports Betting, Joe Asher, has advised those that are looking to start or forge a career in the betting industry to pick up a little bit from everybody as there is a lot of opportunity in the market.

Speaking at the 2021 SBC Summit North America conference and expo at the Meadowlands Exposition Center in New Jersey, Asher stated that while the betting industry isnt for everyone, it can be a great way to spend a career.

Asher commented: Starting out, I think its about working hard, trying to do the right thing, paying attention to detail, and making sure you take the opportunity to learn from people, both the people you are working with or the people in your company, but also people who work in other companies that you come in touch with.

Thats what Ive done and you pick up a little bit from everybody. Not everything is the way that you want to do it perhaps, but you learn an awful lot along the way and ultimately you decide what you want to do.

I think theres a lot of opportunity in this industry going forward so I was probably born a generation too soon.

Asher also reflected on the SBC Summit North America event, the panel session which he participated in, and his Hall of Fame induction, which he called very humbling while also adding that it is a great honor to receive such recognition alongside other greats in the sports betting industry.

To watch the full interview, click HERE.

See the original post:

IGTs Joe Asher: How to forge a career in the sports betting industry - SBC Americas

BetMGM raises 2022 revenue outlook as U.S. sports-betting takes off – Reuters

General view inside a deserted Ladbrokes shop in Harpenden as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Harpenden, Britain, March 18, 2020. REUTERS/Peter Cziborra/File Photo

Register

Jan 19 (Reuters) - BetMGM raised its 2022 revenue forecast to more than $1.3 billion from $1 billion on Wednesday and said it expects a core profit in 2023 as the U.S. sports-betting joint venture between MGM Resorts and Britain's Entain expands.

The online sportsbook for betting on NFL American football and NBA basketball was in the spotlight last year when both MGM and DraftKings (DKNG.O) tried and failed to take over Entain (ENT.L).

Gambling companies have been looking to capitalise on the growing U.S. sports-betting market, while online gaming has also taken off since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

Register

BetMGM said it was gaining market share in line with its long-term target of 20%-25% in U.S. sports-betting and iGaming.

The U.S. venture, which is the No. 2 operator for sports betting and iGaming, has grown steadily and challenged FanDuel owner Flutter , the No.1 player in the American market, with its owners expected to invest another $450 million in 2022.

Shares in Entain rose 1% and New York-listed MGM inched up 0.2% by 1443 GMT.

Peel Hunt analysts said on Tuesday BetMGM was key to their valuation of Entain, saying the venture could be sold at the right price or could be the key reason why MGM makes another approach for the British bookmaker.

Entain's boss said in November that BetMGM was one of the reasons why DraftKings' $22 billion offer to buy the British firm fell through as MGM would have sought to take full control of the joint venture. read more

BetMGM's net revenue is expected to be about $850 million in 2021, up nearly five times from 2020, while its core loss is seen in the range of $420 million to $440 million.

Register

Reporting by Yadarisa Shabong in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri and Alexander Smith

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read the rest here:

BetMGM raises 2022 revenue outlook as U.S. sports-betting takes off - Reuters

Get A Grip The Week In Sports Betting: A Journey Across The United States – Sports Handle

Its information overload everywhere, and theres not time enough to sleep and eat and stay fully apprised of whats happening on this crazy blue dot of ours (two out of three aint bad). Heres the weekend Sports Handle item, Get a Grip, recapping the weeks top U.S. sports betting stories, highlighting some fresh news, and rounding up key stories.

New York has dominated the sports betting headlines for almost all of 2022, but we wont stop looking ahead. Legal sports betting in the United States will continue to proliferate, but where does your state stand?

Drama surrounding Florida gaming expansion continues to escalate

Missouri pro teams, casinos make deal to back sports betting

Maryland mobile sports betting launch timeline still murky

Wagering bill remains on Maines Appropriations Table, but its unclear what happens now

Iowa has taken in $13 million in wagering revenue and has to figure out how to appropriate it

First peer-to-peer wagering platform launches in Tennessee

Indiana could bring in $100 million in tax revenue per year in a mature iGaming market

Nevada regulators approve digital identity verification for casino accounts

A recently introduced bill seeks to freeze the states 51% tax rate on sports betting

Addabbo joins chorus of those criticizing Caesars for its lack of response

Sportsbooks continue to spend millions on radio advertising

and Colorado plans to offer wagering on all the events

For NCAA basketball, women have received more money in NIL deals than men

DraftKings is offering pre-nomination Academy Awards markets

Parx mini-casino expected to open in late 2022

Indiana Grand is now Horseshoe Indianapolis

Tennessee becomes eighth state to reach $3 billion mark with $342 million wagered in December

Michigan sportsbooks set another monthly handle record in December

Sportsbooks didnt do as well in December, but that didnt hold Pennsylvania back from record

Video gaming terminals generated nearly $720 million in tax receipts for Illinois in 2021

Michigan online casinos shattered a previous monthly record by nearly 11%

COVID and competition from newcomers impact PA casino revenue

Private operators wishing to do business in Ontario will require geofencing solutions

BetMGM confirms plans to participate in Ontarios open market

Ontarios government could lose $550 million per year by shifting to an open market

Ontario plans to ease some COVID restrictions as early as Jan. 31

Borgata again king among AC casinos in 2021

Almost $100 million in development is on the books for Ocean Casino

Colorado fixed-odds horse racing talks will continue in February

A few sports betting bills have been introduced in Virginia since the start of 2022, including one that would prevent operators from excluding bonuses and promotions from gross gaming revenue after their first year of business in the state. That piece of proposed legislation is HB1103, and it figures to draw some pushback. The bill, which was introduced by Mark Sickles, also wouldnt allow operators to carry over losses on a monthly basis.

Another bill, SB576, would allow Virginia sports bettors to wager on colleges based in the state. Currently, bets on schools like the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech are prohibited within state lines.

Finally,SB96 aims to prohibit sports betting and casino operators from using Virginia or the Commonwealth in advertising materials. If the proposed legislation becomes law, operators could incur fines of $50,000 for failing to comply.

Bennett Conlin

On Wednesday, DraftKings announced that it had gained market access in Washington state as the sports betting partner of the Tulalip Tribes, which operate two casinos in close proximity to each other about 35 miles north of Seattle.

In a press release, DraftKings said its plans for the sportsbook at Tulalip Resort Casino include a 50-foot video wall and more than two dozen kiosks and eight ticket windows. Meanwhile, DraftKings is still early in the planning phase for its sportsbook at Quil Ceda Creek Casino, the other Tulalip property. Once the first of these sportsbooks opens, Washington will become the 19th state in which DraftKings is operational.

Among the other big-name players to gain entry in the state, BetMGM opened its sportsbook at Emerald Queen Casino in Tacoma in late December, while Caesars (Muckleshoot Casino) and FanDuel (Suquamish Clearwater Casino) have yet to open although a FanDuel spokesperson told Sports Handle that theyre looking at February and working with regulators to settle on a precise date. While these operators are well-known for their mobile products, only onsite mobile is permitted in Washington, where the entire sports betting industry is controlled by the tribes.

Mike Seely

Southland Casino Racing became the first Arkansas sportsbook to report a loss in a month unaffected by the pandemic since its July 2019 launch after the Arkansas Racing Commission reported that the venue paid out nearly $160,000 more than the $3.6 million in wagers accepted for December.

Southland is the largest of the three retail sportsbooks in Arkansas, having accounted for 46.1% of the $67.7 million in wagers placed in the Razorback State in 2021. Oaklawn posted losses twice in 2020 during the pandemic, losing $115 in May on $509 in handle and $19,633 on $179,315 in July. Southland had posted double-digit win rates in 12 of the previous 14 months before Decembers -4.4% hold, and the rough close to 2021 dropped the venues win rate for the year to 11.9%, approximately two-thirds of a percentage point lower than the 12.6% overall hold in the state.

Chris Altruda

At the beginning of 2022, Rep. Cedric Burnett introduced HB184, a bill aimed at allowing mobile sports wagering in Mississippi. The state currently allows retail sports betting, while mobile betting isnt yet allowed, but the state may opt to legalize mobile betting in part to keep pace with Louisiana.

Earlier this week, Sen. Philip Moran introduced SB2462, which also would legalize mobile sports betting. Both HB184 and SB2462 would allow digital sports betting and racebooks within the state.

Bennett Conlin

LETS MAKE A DEAL: Better Collective enters partnership with New York Post [SBC]

HOW MUCH NOW?: BetMGM to receive $450 million investment [Front Office Sports]

GOLDEN STATE: The political battles over sports betting in California [New York Times]

BETTING AGAINST YOURSELF?: Leading Parx jockey suspended [Paulick Report]

PITCHMAN: Rush Street names Bobby Valentine brand ambassador [CDC]

NEW VENTURE: DraftKings alumni launch early-stage fund [Forbes]

BIG SCREEN: Three Rivers Casino installs largest sports betting screen in Oregon [Indian Gaming]

Read more:

Get A Grip The Week In Sports Betting: A Journey Across The United States - Sports Handle

Mobile sports betting expected to soar ahead of NFL divisional playoffs – RochesterFirst

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) Put your money where your mouth isor maybe where your phone is.Now that mobile sports betting is live in New York State, locals are prepping their bets for the Bills divisional playoff game this weekend.

Christian Damico said hes putting everything on our hometown team.

Really excited for the Bills game, I think were going to beat the chiefs. I went to Kansas City last year for the AFC Championship game so I know how its going to be there this weekend and its going to be a good game, Damico said.

The Governors 2023 state budget briefing book revealed $150 million was bet on sports during the first weekend that mobile sports betting went live two weekends ago. Just this week it was reported that New York is likely to surpass New Jersey for the top spot in the national mobile sports betting market. This is according to a company that most of the legal sports betting industry uses to verify their customers are where they say they are.

They are constantly asking for the Wi-Fi password. You have to be in a location in New York to be able to place the bets on the app. Some out of towners, their phones wont work because they have to be logged in to a Wi-Fi network to place a bet, said pub owner, Tom OCallaghan.

OCallaghans Pub on Monroe Avenue has adjusted some of the offerings at the bar to meet the needs of those who are betting this weekend.

We have video billboards that will show the odds of all the games, both college and professional that will just stream throughout the bar on two different TVs. Anyone looking for their odds can check the boards right there or go right to their apps, OCallaghan said.

Online sports betting was originally legalized in New York as its expected to bring in big money for the state.Lawmakers said they anticipate the industry can generate around $500 million in tax revenue.DraftKings was one of the first sports betting companies to be legalized in New York. Johnny Avello is the Director of Race & Sports Operations for DraftKings and said mobile sports betting being legalized in New York State is a huge win.

The bets that came in from New York were astounding, just huge numbers. New York was right there at the top of our betting numbers. We knew that New Yorkers like to gamble and they sure showed it over that weekend, Avello said, And when we do get to Sunday, the bills arent the first game either. Thats the last game of the divisional playoffs. For us at DraftKings, a lot of things will be tying into that game and I know that the bills fans are excited and theyre going to be betting their team and all the props we have to offer.

If you plan on stopping by OCallaghans Pub this weekend to watch the game or place some bets, be sure to buy a drink or two.

Were giving away some Josh Allen jerseys, some memorabilia, jackets, and a ton of bills cozies, OCallaghan said, All you have to do is come in and buy a beer, we enter you to win just by spending money here.

The bills game starts at 6:30 pm on Sunday. The only place you can watch it is on WROC-TV.

Visit link:

Mobile sports betting expected to soar ahead of NFL divisional playoffs - RochesterFirst

What You Need To Know About Sports Betting Laws In WA – The Daily Collegian Online

So how does sports betting actually work? Sports betting is one of the most rapidly expanding entertainment industries on the planet. The act of wagering on the results of a sports game is known as sports betting. The consequence could be easy, like which team will win the game, or it can be much more complex, namely by how many goals a team will score.

In todays fiercely competitive sportsbook industry, there are a variety of betting scenarios accessible, and knowing which bets fulfill which aims is a good way to increase your chances of winning. There are various ways to make money gambling on athletic games, ranging from sharp spread wagers to speculative wagers.

Over a year ago, in March, Governor Jay Inslee actually signed it into law, legalizing sports betting and casinos in Washington, DC. Only in-person and digital online gambling on local casino grounds is permissible under the new gambling permit that was authorized in 2021. In Washington, there is no national mobile sports gambling, and it is unclear whether this will ever change. Even though sports betting and in-live casinos are permissible in Washington, there have unfortunately come to a lot of limits with this new law. The law states that all bets have to be placed and accepted by the local casinos and that is only if the client is physically present at the casino. This means that in-app sports betting is only allowed if you are placing a bet on a local sports team and so far, nobody seemed to have made any real effort to compel this law. Who knows if they ever will?

Currently, about 20 local casinos have been approved so far. In 2021, Washington State became the first legislature to allow a new sports wagering law. Most sports wagering state regulations are contained in the Gambling Act, which also includes extra money trafficking and sport authenticity requirements to protect betting and sporting events taking place in the state and across the continent. We came across an informative source that outlines the best online sports betting sites in Washington, which take bets from Washington residents, a how-to guide for starting real-money wagers, and a comprehensive breakdown of legal gambling alternatives in The Evergreen State. Includes rankings and reviews.

Washington has become one of the only states in the globe that have very tight, limited restrictions on their residents regarding sports betting as well as casinos. If you live in Washington and are thinking about establishing a casino, well... you are definitely in for a long ride. For starters, you have whats called an Internal fee of about 70,000 euro that covers the casino management service, you will have integrity monitoring, storage of data for sports gambling, and last but not least, geofence and geolocation monitoring and much, much more.

SportsBetting AG is a leading online sportsbook site that is consistently recognized among the top businesses that are recommended year after year. Their online sportsbook services are available in every state in the United States. This casino offers game lines such as point spreads, betting line odds, as well as prop bets, wagers, and other betting choices for many major professionals, schools, and even recreational sports such as the WNBA, NHL, and many others.

Whenever line hunting for your next legally available sports wager, we recommend checking out the BetUS sportsbook, which offers chances on all major events taking place around the world and allows players aged 18 and above to join. BetUS intends to use bitcoin as a form of payment - which is quite rare to find when looking at other sportsbooks. While they, unfortunately, do not provide the same wide range of options as other online sportsbooks in each of their respective divisions, they do offer a broad array of betting odds and continually provide the best value for your money.

Launched in 2010, Bovada has become an extremely independent and successful sportsbook. Bovada provides excellent customer service as well as gambling lines on the most popular sports throughout the entire globe. Bovada provides insurance for the most prominent collegiate and pro sports throughout the world. The Prop Builder at Bovada gives players hundreds of alternatives for each and every wager, and the live bet converter also shows you just how much you stand to earn on all of your selections.

To summarize, even though sports gambling and in-live casinos are authorized and completely legal, Washington may not be the greatest place to visit if you are a gambling connoisseur. There are better places you can visit if you want to visit beautiful casinos and place your wagers on the best sports team like India, known for its top-rated casinos and its best sportsbooks.

Originally posted here:

What You Need To Know About Sports Betting Laws In WA - The Daily Collegian Online

Penn Interactive expands its sports betting app, and changes company culture along the way – Technical.ly

When Allison Saillard joined Penn Interactive as a senior project manager, she knew she was taking a gamble.

Headquartered in Center City West, Philadelphia, but with a hybrid remote culture of over 350 employees, the interactive gaming company has made its name in the sports betting and online gambling space something Saillard knew very little about.

The industry I was working in before was very female-dominated, Saillard said. At Penn Interactive, its not just the technology, but the industry of sports betting and casino that is dominated by men.

Working in compliance and project management, this growing group of women at Penn Interactive have helped launch its app in 11 states in a little over a year, including seven in the past three months alone.

Allison Saillard. (Courtesy photo)

Because each state has different laws pertaining to gambling, understanding and launching a gambling app across the country comes with its own particular set of challenges. The app is slightly different from one state to another, and without the proper communication between internal and external stakeholders, its a challenge to tailor-make and launch the app across the country. Thats why compliance and project management hires are essential.

Technical Compliance Manager Mary Obusek helps bridge that internal and external communications gap. She communicates externally with state regulatory bodies, taking their feedback and translating it to the internal engineering team.

Oftentimes, Im that conduit or middle person to talk about technical issues to our own internal Penn interactive compliance team and state regulatory bodies who may not understand the technology coming from the engineering side, said Obusek.

Before Technical Project Manager Dara Good joined Penn Interactive, the product, engineering, and compliance teams were disjointed in many ways, attempting to communicate across siloed departments.

Mary Obusek. (Courtesy photo)

I think my role came about here because the company and the engineering team at PI was growing so fast, Good explained. This role came about to facilitate, streamline, and road map work across teams. So I think that this role is pretty pivotal to filling the gaps that no one anticipates happening.

Not only has Penn Interactive launched in many states in the past year, but its also grown its team, creating an opportunity for more voices in the room to help streamline processes and bring a unique perspective to app development.

Obusek may be an admitted sports fanatic, but Good and Saillards backgrounds are far from it. Its that diversity of thought that helps strengthen Penn Interactives growth and process as it expands.

I think we can bring a unique look, whether its from a design perspective, product perspective, or even an engineering perspective on how to fix things and what we do, Obusek said. Online sports betting may skew male, but more women are joining these apps every year (and early research suggests women may even be better at betting). Bringing in different voices in the development phase could also inform the engagement from the end-user.

Penn Interactive encourages a culture of asking questions and learning on the job.

Dara Good. (Courtesy photo)

Culture here at Penn is very open and communicative, Good said. People from all different levels throughout the company are constantly asking questions and encouraging collaboration to the point where no one should feel intimidated to ask questions.

Whats more, Penn Interactives growing team of women in compliance and technical project management are expanding what it means to be a woman in a technical role. Women in tech doesnt just mean a woman programmer. Tech-adjacent roles are equally essential in the process.

Im not a super technical person, but I love technology and I love being around it facilitating it, Saillard said. I want other women to understand that there is a role for them in whatever aspect it is in technology, there is space for us.

Theres the oft-cited statistic that women only apply for jobs when they meet 100% of the qualifications, whereas men apply when they meet just 60%. Just because someone isnt cranking out lines of code doesnt mean there isnt a space for them in a technology role. In fact, Saillard said, her experience has been more about her willingness to learn on the job and ask questions than the skill sets she brought in.

As long as you are willing to learn and willing to understand ways to improve the experience, then you are a great person to have on the team, Good said. Thats something thats been super attractive to me, not only as a female but also as someone who didnt have experience in this industry.

Continued here:

Penn Interactive expands its sports betting app, and changes company culture along the way - Technical.ly

Town of Chesapeake Beach passes ordinance to collect tax revenue on sports betting – WTOP

The Chesapeake Beach Town Council passed an ordinance Friday that allows the town to collect tax revenue on brick and mortar sports betting.

The Chesapeake Beach Town Council passed an ordinance Friday that allows the town to collect tax revenue on brick and mortar sports betting.

The ordinance expands the Admission and Amusement Tax for the Town of Chesapeake Beach to include Sports Betting for Class A1, A2, Class B1, and Class B2 licenses.

In November of 2020, town residents voted against sports betting in Chesapeake Beach by a 2 to 1 margin.

The Chesapeake Beach Town Council acted to prevent expanding gambling activities after the election.

Its my opinion that its the fiduciary responsibility of this body to pass this ordinance so we can maintain our revenues and continue to provide world class services to the good people of Chesapeake Beach, said Mayor Pat Mahoney.

Maryland pre-empted the town allowing sports betting with one license for a brick and mortar facility within the municipal limits of Chesapeake Beach, Mahoney said during the town council meeting.

In a 5-to-2 vote in November, the Sports Wagering Application Review Commission awarded the first Maryland in-person sports betting licenses.

Like WTOP on Facebook and follow WTOP on Twitter and Instagram to engage in conversation about this article and others.

Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

2022 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

Read the original post:

Town of Chesapeake Beach passes ordinance to collect tax revenue on sports betting - WTOP

Sports host Craig Carton hopes talking about his compulsive gambling history can help others – WAMC

If youve watched any sports or used any social media in recent weeks, youve surely noticed that mobile sports betting has come to New York state.

A flurry of promotions and ads are targeted at signing up users for competing mobile sports apps, where users can wager on hundreds of teams and events from their smartphone.

One person who knows a lot about sports and sports betting is Craig Carton. Carton, now working with FanDuel, was a morning host on WFAN for years before losing his job in a stunning reversal. Carton was found guilty of using a complicated scheme to fund a growing gambling addiction.

Now, Carton is out of prison and back on the airwaves. He can be heard in drive time in New York City weekdays from 2 to 7 on WFAN.

The national council on problem gambling operates a phone helpline at 1-800-522-4700, open 24/7.

You can also get help at gamtalk.org.

In New York, you can call 1-877-8-HOPENY or visit nyproblemgamblinghelp.org.

Continued here:

Sports host Craig Carton hopes talking about his compulsive gambling history can help others - WAMC