California sports betting initiative would block competition – CalMatters

In summary

Of the different efforts to legalize sports betting in California, one would require over $100 million in fees a move experts say limits competition in what is forecasted to be a multi-billion dollar industry.

One of the measures Californians will likely get to vote on this fall does more than just allow betting on sports: Critics are concerned it will effectively block smaller gaming companies and startups from operating in the state.

Those are high stakes for an industry that could rake in over $3.5 billion each year from California bettors and for a state that prefers to see itself as the startup capital of the world.

Of the four sports betting initiatives competing to make Novembers ballot, one, paid for by online sports betting giants FanDuel, DraftKings and BetMGM, would allow gaming companies and Native American tribes to provide sports betting online across the state.

But embedded in the initiative are requirements that would be very difficult if not impossible for the companies smaller competitors to meet, experts say.

If the initiative passes, gaming companies would have to pay a $100 million licensing fee to do business in the state, as well as already be licensed in 10 states, or be operating in five states and running 12 casinos.

I think its absolute nonsense, said John Holden, a professor at Oklahoma State University who studies sports gambling policy. I think whats effectively happening is, basically, the 5 to 10 frontrunners in the market have decided Alright, lets ensure that theres no one else who can compete by agreeing to pay these exorbitant license fees.

The $100 million fee, Holden said, essentially ensures no startups will be able to operate in California.

The fee is one way the measure generates significant revenue to fund homelessness housing and mental health treatment and provide financial support for California Tribal nations, Nathan Click, a spokesperson for the initiatives campaign, wrote in a statement.

California is best served by creating a safe and tightly regulated sports betting market, one where customers can know they are working with experienced platforms with a proven track record of safe and responsible operation in other markets, Click wrote.

FanDuel and BetMGM did not respond to CalMatters request for an interview. DraftKings directed CalMatters interview request to Click, the campaign spokesperson.

The initiative backed by sports betting companies would:

The states Legislative Analysts Office wrote in its assessment of the measure that its uncertain how much money the new taxes and fees would generate for the state, but it could reach the mid-hundreds of millions per year.

The measure hasnt qualified for the ballot yet its still gathering signatures. But Click, the spokesperson for the campaign, said the measure is well ahead of where it needs to be to qualify.

Other measures that legalize sports betting could make the ballot or are already eligible. One, backed by a coalition of tribes, would allow sports betting at tribal casinos and four horse race tracks only, while another, backed by a separate coalition of tribes, would allow tribes to offer online and in-person sports betting exclusively. Native American tribes have long had the exclusive right to offer certain forms of gambling in California. Many tribes are campaigning against the gaming companies initiative arguing, among other things, that it would threaten tribes sovereignty and self-reliance.

If one of the initiatives passes, California would become one of over 30 states to legalize betting on sports. The industry could generate $3.57 billion per year in net revenue for entities offering sports betting to people in California if online and in-person betting is legalized and many companies are able to operate, according to projections from Eilers & Krejcik Gaming LLC, a research firm. Thats larger than the firms projections for Texas, New York, or Florida.

The $100 million licensing fee is much higher than what any other state has on the books, said Becca Giden, director of policy for Eilers & Krejcik. Now, New Yorks $25 million licensing fee is the highest, she said. Most states that have legalized sports betting have licensing fees in the low single-digit millions or hundreds of thousands and no other state requires companies to already be licensed in other states, according to Giden.

The requirement that a company already be licensed in 10 states would cut off smaller companies and startups that are only licensed in a few states, Giden said. That, combined with the fee, would meaningfully limit the ability of small companies and startups to participate in the market, she said.

Early-stage startups that get money from venture capitalists generally raise around $5 million to $20 million in their first round, said Olav Sorenson, a sociologist at UCLAs Anderson School of Management who studies entrepreneurship. But only about 1 out of every 100 startups get any venture capital money, Sorenson said. When you include startups that rely on credit card loans and other sources of funds, the amount of money new companies have at their disposal shrinks.

Very, very few startups would be able to afford that kind of fee, Sorenson said. I think its going to dramatically limit competition.

A few companies already dominate online sports betting. FanDuel commands 31% of the U.S. market, followed by DraftKings with 26%, BetMGM with 16% and Caesars with 12%, according to research from Eilers & Krejcik.

Very, very few startups would be able to afford that kind of fee. I think its going to dramatically limit competition.

The goal of this seems to be to create an oligopoly market for sports betting, said Marc Edelman, a law professor at Baruch College who specializes in sports, gaming, and antitrust law. It would, he said, benefit a limited number of companies to the detriment of smaller companies and consumers.

MaximBet, a sports betting company launched in 2021, is so far licensed in one state: Colorado. The company tries to set itself apart by offering bettors in-person experiences glitzy masquerade parties, meet-and-greets with pro players, or the opportunity to drive a Ferrari around a race track, said Doug Terfher, vice president of marketing for the company.

Because the company is licensed in just one state, it wouldnt be able to operate in California yet under the initiative backed by the gaming companies or the initiatives backed by the tribes. We want (California) to be as open and available to as many operators as possible with where we are in our growth journey, Terfher said.

MaximBet is working on getting licensed in 10 states and in Ontario, Canada, but the process is slow. If the company is able to get licensed in five states this year, itll be an amazing year, said Terfher.

Most states are restricting the number of companies that can offer sports betting, said Daniel Wallach, a Florida-based gaming lawyer who has testified in front of state legislatures considering legalization. States do this with other forms of gambling too. Its commonplace, he said, for gaming not to be a free for all, where any company can participate. There have to be some baseline standards, he said, that ensure that a companys integrity, experience, and track record are closely scrutinized.

Historically, organized crime groups have been involved in the gambling industry, Wallach said, so state legislatures and gaming agencies are very careful to limit who can operate in this heavily regulated industry.

If smaller companies cant do business in California, that means fewer options for would-be bettors and potentially less innovation.

Youd basically end up with a lot less choice, said Holden.

One up-and-coming product Holden cited is exchange-based wagering, where bettors can trade wagers with each other throughout a game, similar to how day traders buy and sell stocks.

Sporttrade, a Philadelphia-based startup that offers stock-market-like sports betting, is working on getting licensed in New Jersey, Colorado, Indiana, and Louisiana. Could it cough up $100 million and get licensed in 10 states in order to come to California?

No chance, said Alex Kane, the companys CEO. Hes all for regulations that protect consumers, he said, but thinks a $100 million licensing fee doesnt have anything to do with that. Instead, Kane said he thinks the bigger companies writing the initiative dont want to face competition. Theyre looking at What would we be willing to pay to get rid of competition altogether? Kane said. You can see that its worth a lot of money to them.

And if its difficult for new companies to reach customers in California, that could wind up shaping not just what services are offered, but who offers them. Such a high financial barrier to entry makes it nearly impossible for minority-owned businesses or new businesses or entrepreneurial ventures to even attempt to compete, said Edelman, the law professor at Baruch College. If theres not a lot of competition between sports betting vendors, that might also lead to worse prices for customers, he said.

To presume that a company that could spend a lot of money is ethical and a company that could spend a small amount of money is not ethical is very dubious logic.

If the initiative backed by the gaming companies passes, California wouldnt be the most restrictive state not even close. Delaware has essentially limited sports betting to three casinos. Washington D.C. enabled one app, run by the DC Lottery, to offer online sports betting city-wide, while other companies are limited to the geographic areas surrounding sports arenas theyve cut deals with. Somes states have set limits on the number of licenses theyll offer. Washington state made sports betting the exclusive domain of Native American tribes, and Maine seems poised to make a similar decision.

Regulators can make rules that protect consumers and ensure gaming companies act responsibly without limiting the number of companies that can operate. The fact that many states have limited the number of licenses theyll give out isnt necessarily because thats the optimal set up for consumers. Its because theyve been lobbied by casinos, racetracks, and other groups that already have a stake in gambling, said Giden.

If the goal is to ensure that companies operate ethically, then regulators should be reviewing companies past business practices across all lines of business, said Edelman, the gaming and antitrust law professor.

To presume that a company that could spend a lot of money is ethical and a company that could spend a small amount of money is not ethical is very dubious logic, he said.

Original post:

California sports betting initiative would block competition - CalMatters

Maine Sports Betting Bill Moves Off Table, On To Governor – Legal Sports Report

For the second time, sports betting in Maine is a signature away from legalization as it heads to Gov. Janet Millss desk.

LD 585 was taken off the Appropriations Table Monday morning, the final step needed before Mills can approve it. Both the House and Senate passed the bill last Tuesday.

Advancing past the table was an important milestone since that is where legislation to legalize sports betting in Maine failed last year despite passage from both chambers.

Sports betting is just one part of LD 585, which is a larger bill concerning tribal sovereignty. It creates four mobile sports betting licenses in the state, one for each of the federally recognized tribes in the state. There are 10 retail sports betting licenses available for casinos, tracks and OTBs.

Mills used the mobile exclusivity as a bargaining chip in negotiations, which is why her signature is expected.

Mills did not approve of LD 1352, the legislation passed by both chambers last year and left on the Appropriations Table. That gave mobile licenses to both tribal and commercial entities.

Nothing is certain until Mills puts her signature on the bill, though.

The governor vetoed a sports betting bill in 2019. Mills said she was unconvinced the majority of Maine residents wanted legal sports betting while citing other odd reasoning about betting on spelling bees and local elections in her veto letter.

Should she sign as expected, though, that means only two states will be left without legal sports betting in New England:

Maine will tax sports betting revenue at 10%, though that is not on gross revenue. Maine will allow promotions and federal excise tax payments to be deducted from taxable revenue.

All licenses are good for four years, with mobile licenses costing $200,000 while retail licenses will cost just $4,000. Supplier licenses and management service licenses will cost $40,000each.

There is no betting on Maine colleges, though betting on tournaments those schools are involved in is allowed.

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Maine Sports Betting Bill Moves Off Table, On To Governor - Legal Sports Report

Sports Betting Legalization: Best Bets for Next States To Legalize – The Action Network

Maine surprised last week when it became the first state to pass a legal sports betting bill in 2022, which now awaits Gov. Janet Mills approval.

A handful of other states are close behind, but with their legislative sessions winding down, lawmakers are quickly running out of time to resolve differencesaround legalizing.

To keep up with their fast-changing outlooks, we compiled this list of states most likely to legalize next, in order of likelihood.

Missouri is likely the surest state out of this bunch to legalize sports betting this year. Once it does, its the surest to get it quickly up and running.

Primary Bill Pending: HB 2502

Two bills passed by the House March 24 are making their way to the Senate floor, the final step before heading to Gov. Mike Parson (D), whos remained neutral on sports betting but called it inevitable.

In five years of failed legislation, its the farthest a sports betting bill has made it through Missouris legislature. But the Senate has its own version, which bill sponsors estimate could raise $140 million more a year under a higher tax.

Before it can become law both chambers will have to agree on a tax rate and pass identical versions before May 13, the last day of Missouris legislative session.

Regulation would fall under the Missouri Gaming Commission, which has overseen the statesriverboat casinos, charitable bingo, and fantasy sports contests since the early 90s.Already having an established regulatory body in place positions Missouri well to go live with sports betting quickly, once lawmakers act.

If I wrote this last month, Kansas would have been my best bet to be the next state to legalize.

Even after an unexpected amendment from House lawmakers, Im still bullish on Kansas. Its governor and legislature both want sports betting. Plus, its lawmakers have been so vocal about beating out Missouri, its hard to picture them bowing out now.

Primary bill pending: SB 84

A House Conference Committee amendment from earlier in April shifts funding, so that 80% of tax revenue from sports betting goes to attracting a new professional sports team. Industry observers have pegged it as a ploy to lure the Kansas City Chiefs, which have openly mulled relocating if Missouri doesnt foot the bill for a new stadium.

Before the change a disagreement on tax rates seemed to be the only major discrepancy between House and Senate lawmakers, just like in Missouri. But even that felt like more of a bump in the road than a road block; both sides need only to move about six percentage points from their desired rates.

A Senate Conference Committee will need to sign off on the same bill by May 20 in order to send it to the governor, though its unclear how theyll view the Houses amendment. The legislature is back this week after a month of recess, and that vote could come at any time.

Minnesotas sports betting bill hasnt progressed as far or as fast as these other ones, but its probably been the most steady of the bunch.

Primary Bill Pending: HF 778

Previous attempts to legalize fell short largely due to opposition from the states native tribes, which have a stronghold on gambling in the state.Now, the very reason House lawmakers have been able to rally tribal support could be what averts their Senate counterparts from getting on board.

The battle for Minnesota sports betting has been less about resistance to gambling and all about control.

The version awaiting its fifth committee hearing in the House would give the states 11 tribes a monopoly on sports betting. It has progressed relatively smoothly, despite the amount of hearings its received, but will likely be met with resistance in the Senate, which has been resistant to gaming expansion in the past, and is weighing a separate bill to give racetracks and pro sports teams a piece of the action.

Like theyve done in the past, the states tribes would likely pull out all stops to kill any bill that doesnt give them 100% control.

One of Commonwealths sports betting bills could be voted on in the Senate as early as this week, however it contains a laundry list of glaring differences from the Houses proposal, making its passage unlikely.

Primary bills pending: S 269G, H 3993

The Senates bill would tax sports betting more than double the rate desired by House lawmakers, though thanks to a ban on all collegiate betting (not just on Massachusetts colleges), it would raise about $25 million less annually in taxes, according to a fiscal analysis.

It would also prohibit bettors from funding online accounts with credit cards or from using credit cards to bet in person, which Senate leadership has said could help prevent impulsive bettors from racking up debt. The Senate bill also includes a plethora of advertising restrictions that operators probably wont like, like ad bans during live sports broadcasts.

Gov. Charlie Barker (D) has been supportive of sports betting for years, though for him to sign a bill House and Senate lawmakers must agree on the same proposal by July 31, the last day of Massachusetts legislative session.

If lawmakers do end up coming to an agreement in time, Massachusetts, like Missouri above, is also positioned to get a launch up and running quickly.

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Sports Betting Legalization: Best Bets for Next States To Legalize - The Action Network

NFL odds: Which wide receiver gets drafted first? Betting experts chime in – FOX Sports

Without a dominant quarterback prospect in the NFL Draft, teams could stock up on wide receivers during the first round on Thursday.

FOX Bet has set the line for wide receivers picked in the first round at 6.5, so let's take a look at some prospects.

For more, from gambling-friendly schedules featuring live, updating odds to expert analysis and the day's most-bet games, check out the NFL section on FOX Bet, the FOX Sports App and FOXSports.com!

Ohio State's Garrett Wilson is FOX Bet's favorite to be the first WR drafted, followed by Alabama's Jameson Williams,USC's Drake London,Arkansas Treylon Burks and Ohio State's Chris Olave.

Number of WRs taken in the first round

Under 6.5: -149 (bet $10 to win $16.71)Over 6.5: +110 (bet $10 to win $21)

"It's a pretty solid wide receiver group," FOX Sports betting expert Jason McIntyre said. "This is one I still like the over 6.5. You could make a case that eight could go in the first round, seven is more realistic, five is a lock, six is kind of the pivot point."

FOX Sports betting analyst Geoff Schwartz expects receivers to be popular toward the end of the first round, citing the Kansas City Chiefs looking to replace the departed Tyreek Hill.

"I wouldn't take the over here. ... You get to Kansas City, they're the wild card at the very end of the first round at 29 and 30," Schwartz said. "If all six of these guys are gone, which are consensus top-six wide receivers, the Chiefs still have needs at cornerback and defensive end. They'll have guys graded higher at those positions. ... I think the Chiefs are the team at the bottom here who could kind of determine if it's over or not. I don't think they reach for those guys because edge rushers will go fast."

PICK: Under 6.5 receivers (at FOX Bet) picked in the first round

Said FOX Sports betting analyst Sam Panayotovich, "I hate the jump from 5.5 to 6.5. I would've gone over 5.5 and now I sort of lean under 6.5. It's funny how that one position, it changes everything. 5.5 to 6.5? Well, it's an entire player."

First receiver drafted

Garrett Wilson -125 (bet $10 to win $18)Jameson Williams +150 (bet $10 to win $25)Drake London +250 (bet $10 to win $35)Treylon Burks +1800 (bet $10 to win $190)Chris Olave +2200 (bet $10 to win $230)Skyy Moore +3300 (bet $10 to win $340)Jahan Dotson +3400 (bet $10 to win $350)Christian Watson +5000 (bet $10 to win $510)George Pickens +7500 (bet $10 to win $760)Justyn Ross +9000 (bet $10 to win $1,000)

McIntyre, Panayotovich and Schwartz debated which wide receiver will be the first selected. Since there was no consensus, that shows the depth of the pool of pass catchers.

"As good of a wide receiver class as it is, there might not be a lot of guys actually taken in the Top 10. ... I think we get a run on wide receivers from about 10 to about 30 is kind of where these six or seven guys," Schwartz said.

McIntyre predicts Wilson will be the first receiver taken. The New York Jets own the fourth and 10th picks, with the latter pick being the logical spot for the former Buckeye.

"I love him for my Jets," McIntyre said. "I pray that the Falcons don't take him at No. 8 because he would fit perfectly with the Jets. I mean, they could use anyone on the outside, but the kid Wilson, I've got him as the best receiver in the draft."

PICK: Garrett Wilson (-125 at FOX Bet) first receiver drafted

Schwartz is looking for a bigger payout with the first receiver drafted.

"I can see a team say, 'Hey, Drake London is our guy,' right? He's a big, physical guy, goes up and catches the ball," Schwartz said. "Maybe the Jets at 10 take him first, right, if Atlanta goes pass rusher, Seattle goes offensive lineman.

"There's a way the Jets actually end up having the first wide receiver taken at 10. Maybe Drake London is their guy. I just think it's too volatile. There's not a consensus No.1 here. For that reason, I'd rather take the plus-money with Drake London here at +250."

PICK: Drake London (+250 at FOX Bet) first receiver drafted

Panayotovich said his play may be betting on "fringe" receivers such as Alabama's John Metchie (who tore his ACL late in the season) and Georgia's George Pickens instead of playing the number of wideouts picked in the first round.

"Rather than go over 6.5 receivers at +110, you could take a price on one of those two guys and get a much bigger payout. ... That's sort of how I would attack this market," Panayotovich explained.

PICK: George Pickens (+105 at FOX Bet) to be selected in first round

PICK: John Metchie (+800 at FOX Bet) to be selected in first round

McIntyre, leery of Pickens, said, "Somebody joked to me, he's got more red flags than the Daytona 500." But he does think Western Michigan's Skyy Moore could be a good catch for the Chiefs at the end of the first round.

"He's not Tyreek Hill, but he's in that mold where you can line him up (in the) slot, outside, backfield, he can kind of do it all," McIntyre said. "And if I'm Andy Reid looking to replace and you can't replace Tyreek Hill but find someone whose kind of a Swiss Army knife, the kid Moore can do it all."

PICK: Skyy Moore (+120 at FOX Bet) to be selected in first round

If you have a hunch on which wide receivers get their names called Thursday night, head over to FOX Bet to get your wagers in!

Play FOX Super 6 every weekfor your chance to win thousands of dollars every week.Just download the Super 6 app and make your picks today!

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NFL odds: Which wide receiver gets drafted first? Betting experts chime in - FOX Sports

Get A Grip The Week In Sports Betting: Issues Abound – 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.

As the sports betting bonanza continues in the U.S., it stands to reason that not everything will go smoothly every step of the way. Stakeholders in many different spheres including bettors, operators, legislators, regulators, vendors, and more still have plenty to learn and change in the legalized sports betting world.

So, what issues popped up this week? Lets dive in.

Californias war over sports betting gets hotter

Licensed Ontario operators frustrated with ongoing black market operations

NHL remains mum on Sportradars activities in Russia

American Gaming Association, sports bettors need to work together

Carousel Group fined for MaximBets 16 days of missed geolocation checks in Colorado

Is fixed-odds horse racing legal in Michigan? Maybe!

Charlie Blackmon becomes first active MLB player to sign deal with a sportsbook

South Carolina politicians introduce another sports betting bill

Maine legislators take major step toward legal sports betting

Massachusetts Senate president, who opposes gambling, continues to slow sports betting process

Maryland online sports betting launch likely still months away

Beto ORourke voices support for legal sports betting in Texas

Expansion of New Yorks sports betting menu likely wont happen in 2022

Sportsbooks, particularly FanDuel, cleaned up in New York last week

New Jersey sportsbooks betting handle back to a billion in March

Michigan sports betting handle in March was up nearly 23% from the same month a year ago

BetMGM vaulted ahead of DraftKings last month in handle

Pennsylvania sportsbooks rebounded nicely in March

Tennessee posts $370 million in sports betting handle for March

Louisiana sportsbooks clean up in March, gross nearly $31 million in revenue

Connecticut sportsbooks bounce back from sluggish February

HHR setback compels Grants Pass Downs to cancel meet, but the race may not be over

As 888 continues the expansion of its SI Sportsbook brand, the company made a splash earlier this week with the hiring of former Bleacher Report CEO Howard Mittman as president of its U.S. division.

Mittman, who served as CEO of Bleacher Report for a four-year period through 2020, oversaw the launch of B/R Betting, the sites sports betting project, as well as the opening of a Las Vegas-based studio. In 2018, B/R Live hosted The Match, a made-for-TV, 18-hole match play event between Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson. Held several months after the Supreme Courts historic PASPA decision, The Match marked the first time a network partnered with a major sportsbook to integrate live odds into a sports broadcast.

I have been hugely impressed by the people Ive met within the business, particularly their passion for product and the customer experience, and I share their excitement about the significant opportunities ahead, Mittman said in a statement.

In September, 888 launched the SI Sportsbook in its first U.S. state, with a rollout in Colorado. The company plans to launch in several additional states in the coming year.

This key appointment comes at a hugely exciting point in our long-term growth strategy, said Itai Pazner, CEO of 888.

Matt Rybaltowski

Rupert Murdochs News Corp is reportedly primed to enter Australias hyper-competitive sports betting market in time for spring horse racing season, which gets underway in August.

According to The Wall Street Journal, BetMakers will provide technology for the venture, which has a working title of BetR. News Corp will be part of a consortium that includes Las Vegas-based Tekkorp Capital and Matthew Tripp, who has held executive positions with several Australian sports betting companies, including industry leader SportsBet.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that News Corp has been exploring an entry into the sports betting space for at least a year. But perhaps it got the idea from a scene in the most recent season of Succession, which is not-so-loosely based on the Murdoch family, in which the multimedia company Waystar Royco akin to a fictional News Corp declares its intent to expand into sports betting.

Mike Seely

Another South Dakota tribe received approval from the federal government to offer sports betting on its tribal land.

On Friday, the U.S. Department of the Interior published in the Federal Register final approval of the amended compact between the Standing Rock Sioux and the state of South Dakota, which expands the tribes authority to offer sports betting on all Indian lands.

Now that the amendment is official, the Standing Rock Sioux are free to open a sportsbook at their casino.

Ted Dahlstrom

JUMPED THE GUN?: Fanatics denies Amelco sportsbook deal [iGB]

NEW FACE: DAZN Group announces strategic partnership to launch DAZN Bet [PR Newswire]

HELP WANTED: NFL seeks sports betting czar [Sportico]

TIME FOR CHANGE: National Indian Gaming Association drops N from acronym [Native News Online]

DOWN TO THE WIRE: Vegas, Churchill optimistic about Derby betting deal [Horse Racing Nation]

VIOLATION: Illegal gambling ringleader admits violating terms of release [Nevada Independent]

WHATS NEXT?: The future of sports betting in North Carolina [Spectrum News]

Originally posted here:

Get A Grip The Week In Sports Betting: Issues Abound - Sports Handle

From tax cuts to sports betting, here are the top 5 issues to watch when lawmakers return to Topeka – The Topeka Capital-Journal

Lawmakers return to Topeka on Monday for the veto session after leaving several high-profile issues unresolved before the abrupt adjournment of the regular session earlier this month.

After three weeks away from the capitol,politicians will resolve policy debates with the looming election season. The governor's race is heating up with political advertisements hitting the airwaves.

Some major legislative proposals are unlikely to succeed. Despite efforts to pass medical marijuana, Medicaid expansion and election security bills, those appear unlikely to cross the finish line.

The top issues to watch include taxes, budgets, legalizing sports betting, veto overrides and public health measures.

Gov. Laura Kelly's signature policy priority this session is on rough footing as election season heats up.

After legislative leadership never advanced any tax bills to the floor, lawmakers negotiated dozens of tax proposals into three bills during conference committee week. Only one passed before the spring break.

Kelly signed that bill, HB 2239, which was a collection of 29 previously separate tax bills. The $310million in tax cuts over three years is highlighted by $134million in residential property tax cuts, amounting to $46per year for most homeowners.

A food sales tax cut could be in the works, but GOP leadership and Kelly have competing plans. Kelly wants to fully eliminate the state's 6.5% sales tax on groceries starting this summer with HB 2487. The proposal from GOP leadership, HB 2106, would wait until after election day to gradually reduce the tax until it reaches zero in 2025.

More: Is a food sales tax cut still on the table for Kansans? Election year posturing raises doubts.

A third tax bill, HB 2597, is a collection of bigger-ticket and more controversial tax policies. The various pieces will collectively cost an estimated $432million over three years.

The billmost notably includes COVID-19 retail storefront property tax relief, which would use approximately $56 million in additional funds from the federal government.

One budget bill, SB 267, has already been signed into law. But a budget omnibus bill is still to come with further spending plans, and the Legislature has yet to pass a budget for K-12 education.

The debates come after newconsensus revenue estimates last week increased the projected tax revenue by $340 million over two fiscal years. State coffers are currently projected to have a $3.1 billion budget surplus at the end of fiscal year 2023.

With the windfall, educators have pushed formillions of dollars in additional special education funding. The education budget has been held up by policy debates politicians chose to attachto school funding.

More: Kansas Legislature may require use of private math plan Math Nation. Critics say reasons don't add up.

The governor's office has requested budget amendments, highlighted by a proposed one-time $250 tax rebate to all Kansas residents who filed a tax return.

"I want to return this money to the people who earned it," Kelly said."Especially right now, when we are all experiencing the impact of rising costs at the pump and the grocery store, the state can make an immediate and direct impact to help Kansas families pay their bills and save for the future."

Such a plan would cost about $460 million, but it is unlikely to win the approval of Republican lawmakers, who view it as an attempt to buy votes during an election year.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt, the Republican frontrunner in the governor's race, called on the Legislature to further pay down pension debt. Such a move would lead to long-term savings on debt service. He told policymakers that they should "resist the temptation for a new spending spree."

"Legislators also should fully fund public schools as promised, reduce or eliminate the state sales tax on groceries, and then place the rest of this windfall in a rainy day fund," Schmidt said.

Republican leadership will seek to whip enough votes to override a slew of gubernatorial vetoes.

The most notable vetoes came on a pair of bills to implement a so-called parents' bill of rights and toban transgender students from competing on girls and women's sports teams.

The parents' bill of rights bill, SB 58, is designed to increasethe ability for parents to inspect and review curriculumused in classrooms.Kelly called it a"teacher demoralization act."

Educators have said the concept is overly burdensome, though the version approved by the Legislature was less restrictive than what some Republican lawmakers pushed for.

To override the veto, Republicans need 17 more yeas in the House and four more in the Senate.

The transgender sports ban, SB 160, needs 10 more ayes in the House and two more in the Senate to override the veto. Kelly also vetoed the bill last year, which critics have said is an attack on LGBT youth. Proponents say they are trying to protect the integrity of female sports.

Additional veto override attempts could come on two other bills.

Kelly vetoed a food stamp bill,HB 2448, which had a veto-proof majority in the Senate but was 14 votes short in the House. The bill creates a new work training requirement for able-bodied adults without dependents who work fewer than 30 hours a week.

More: Food stamp recipients won't be required to complete work training program after Kansas governor veto

The governor also vetoedSB 286, which paired anexpansion ofCOVID liability immunity protections for health care facilities with various other provisions. That bill barely squeaked through the Legislature after opposition from Democrats and far-right Republicans.

Kelly said she would like to see new legislation that renews the liability protections using the previous language, which the Legislature allowed to expire.

Republicans won't override a veto on another controversial bill because Kelly signed it, despite objections of most Democrats. The law, which Schmidt introduced as HB 2717to prevent local sanctuary cities for immigrants, had enough votes in the Legislature to override a veto.

More: Some activists say Kansas Gov. Kelly hit 'new low' after sanctuary city ban. Will it impact the election?

Lawmakers were unable to pass a bill legalizing sports betting before taking their break. The Senate didn't take up the issue afterSB 84squeaked by in the House with the slimmest of majorities.

The bill would amend current laws to allow sports wagering operations by lottery gaming facilities. It would also authorize historical horse race machines under parimutuel racing statutes.

A late addition the lengthy legislation was a provision apparently targeted at luring the Kansas City Chiefs to move across the state line. The mechanism would direct most of the state's sports gambling revenues into a fund aimed at attracting professional sports to Kansas. The money would be controlled by legislative leadership and the governor's office.

Despite policy disagreements and controversy, lawmakers are expected to legalize sports gambling before leaving Topeka. Expansion advocates don't want Missouri to beat Kansas to the punch.

More: Want to bet on sports in Kansas? If lawmakers have their way, you'll be able to soon.

When Kelly signed the November special session law guaranteeing religious and moral exemptions to workplace vaccine mandates, the governor indicated that her signature would preempt further legislation targeting public health measures.

That strategy appears to have worked so far, as conservative Republicans have been unable to pass bills targeting vaccines and quarantines while promoting off-label drugs.

The Senate previously passed four bills SB 489, SB 541, HB 2280 and HB 2416 though none of them reached the 27-vote supermajority needed to override a veto, and the House never acted on any of them.

More: 'Back to normal' rewrites of public health laws pass Kansas Senate, but not with veto-proof majorities

The bill that appears most likely to advance is also the one that has been the most controversial: HB 2280, which promotes ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine as off-label COVID-19 treatment, preempts health board investigations related to the pandemic and grants moral exemptions to all childhood wellness vaccines required to attend schools and day cares.

There may be an attempt to tie the fate of the ivermectin bill to another one one the 988 suicide hotline.

That bill, SB 19, would appropriate $10 million for call centers and support services. But there is a concern among some legislators that senators may block the bill if HB 2280 doesn't advance. A similar move happened last month when House negotiators refused a Senate demand to insert anti-quarantine provisions into SB 12,which is focused on Kansas Department for Children and Families contracts.

The provisions came from SB 489, which overhauls quarantine laws to strip local health officers and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment from ordering quarantines and isolations for any infectious disease.

Among the provisions in the various rewrites of public health laws aremask mandates bans onany level of government, blockingschools from discriminating based on COVID-19 vaccination status andrequiringgovernment compensation for businesses affected by public health orders.

Republicans have especially pushed for expanding religious exemptions on childhood vaccine mandates to include non-religious moral and ethical beliefs.

Sen. Mark Steffen, R-Hutchinson, said at a legislative forum earlier this month that HB 2280 is "still very much alive."

"It really isn't anybody else'sright to judge your sincerity in regards to that religious exemption," Steffen said. "You basically take a napkin and a crayon and write, 'I don't want this shotbecause it's not good for me,I don't believe in it,'and that has to be accepted as an exemption."

More: Ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine off-label prescription bill passes Kansas Senate in late-night vote

Jason Tidd is a statehouse reporter for the Topeka Capital-Journal. He can be reached by email at jtidd@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter @Jason_Tidd.

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From tax cuts to sports betting, here are the top 5 issues to watch when lawmakers return to Topeka - The Topeka Capital-Journal

San Francisco Giants vs. Oakland Athletics odds, tips and betting trends – USA TODAY Sportsbook Wire

On Wednesday, the Oakland Athletics (9-9) are visiting the San Francisco Giants (13-5), at 9:45 PM ET. The Giants have won five straight.

The Athletics are an underdog (+125 moneyline odds) when they visit the Giants (-145). The Athletics will give the start to Paul Blackburn, but the Giants starter is yet to be announced for this game.

These teams meet again after the Giants took down the Athletics 8-2 yesterday. Carlos Rodon registered the win for the Giants (6.0 IP, 1 R, 3 H, 9 K), and Wilmer Flores led the way offensively (2-for-4 with a double, a home run and four RBI). Daulton Jefferies (4.0 IP, 5 R, 4 H, 3 K) took the loss for the Athletics.

Heres what you need to prepare for Wednesdays Giants vs. Athletics game.

Major League Baseball odds courtesy of Tipico Sportsbook. Odds updated Wednesday at 5:07 AM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.

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Gannett may earn revenue from Tipico for audience referrals to betting services. Tipico has no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. See Tipico.com for Terms and Conditions. 21+ only. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA).

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San Francisco Giants vs. Oakland Athletics odds, tips and betting trends - USA TODAY Sportsbook Wire

MLB Legend Pete Rose on Sports Betting: ‘I Came Along At The Wrong Time’ – OutKick

MLB legend Pete Rose joined the OutKick 360 crew on Monday. Among the many topics in their interview, the OK360 panel discussed modern sports betting and how it changes the narrative on Roses legacy.

OutKick 360s Chad Withrow asked Pete what he thought of the stark contrast in the attitude toward sports betting now and during his time in baseball.

For years, pro sports would not embrace Las Vegas, Withrow said. You couldnt have a team there because guys were gonna be on the take and it was gonna look bad for the league and everyone was gonna think the game is fixed.

Withrow asked, Does that make you look around and think, What are we doing here with baseballs view of me, and what happened years ago when you see their willingness to embrace it now?

Not really because I just came along at the wrong time, Rose admitted.

Im not here to tell baseball what to do. As you know, baseball is all about making dollars. Im not here to try to tell baseball how to run its business, and Im certainly not going to tell the casinos how to run their business.

In the end result, I just hope everyones happy.

Watch the segment with Rose below and subscribe to OutKick 360s YouTube channel to watch the entire interview.

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MLB Legend Pete Rose on Sports Betting: 'I Came Along At The Wrong Time' - OutKick

NBA betting: Someone turned ten bucks into $15K on a first basket parlay last night – Yahoo Sports

There must be something in Pennsylvania's water. A week after a Pittsburgh bettor hit a 500-to-1 ticket on Marcus Smart winning Defensive Player of the Year, a BetMGM customer in the "Keystone State" banged a three-leg parlay at 1,551-to-1 odds. The parlay was comprised of first field goal scorer props from each of last night's three NBA playoff games and paid out $15,515 on a $10 wager.

As sports betting continues to be legalized in states across the country, first basket parlays have become a popular type of wager among bettors. What's not to love about an exponential sweat with astronomical odds?

The first two legs of the BetMGM customer's parlay were "exact method" first field goal props, where the bettor needed to nail not just who would score the game's first basket, but also how.

Needing a Kevin Huerter three-pointer to kick things off, the bettor caught an unfortunate break when the Heat won the opening tip. Miami's Max Strus missed a trey of his own, though, and Atlanta's De'Andre Hunter claimed the rebound. Eight seconds later, Huerter swished a corner three off a deflected pass.

Leg No. 2 also necessitated a three-pointer, this time from Memphis' Desmond Bane. The shooting guard buried a jumper from beyond the arc, 18 seconds after the Grizzlies claimed the tip-off. Bane would later be assessed a technical foul for shoving Timberwolves coach Chris Finch in one of the wildest games of the NBA season, which also featured the dunk of the year.

With the most difficult legs of the parlay wrapped up, the bettor just needed Phoenix's Deandre Ayton to score the first basket in the Suns-Pelicans nightcap to turn his sawbuck into more than $15,000. Ayton won the tip then found himself double-teamed on the baseline as the shot clock began to run out on the game's opening possession. The big man channeled Dirk Nowitzki, performing a 180-degree fadeaway to drain a jumper over Brandon Ingram and Jaxson Hayes, making our bettor five figures richer.

Story continues

Here is the parlay, complete with the odds for each leg:

Hawks-Heat First Field Goal Exact Method - Kevin Huerter three-pointer +2200

Grizzlies-Wolves First Field Goal Exact Method Desmond Bane three-pointer +1400

Suns-Pelicans First Field Goal Scorer Deandre Ayton +350

Continued here:

NBA betting: Someone turned ten bucks into $15K on a first basket parlay last night - Yahoo Sports

SPORTS BRIEFING | News, Sports, Jobs – The Review

Junior high county meet

COLUMBIANA The 37th Columbiana County Middle School Track and Field Meet has been moved to Friday at Crestview High School.

The meet was orginally scheduled for today, but has been pushed back due to the chilly weather forecast.

Action will start at 4:30 p.m. Friday with the field events. The running events will start at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are available at the gate.

YSU will play Ohio State

YOUNGSTOWN The Youngstown State football team will play Ohio State in 2023, the program announced Monday.

The game will take place Sept. 9.

The Buckeyes originally were supposed to play San Jose State that weekend, but the programs mutually agreed to call the game off, according to Ohio State Athletics.

The Penguins and Buckeyes last squared off in 2007 and 2008, when now YSU president Jim Tressel was the head coach at OSU.

Ohio State won both contests, 38-6 in 2007 and 43-0 in 2008.

YSU will receive $800,000 for playing the game.

Browns bet on Ballys

CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns are going all in on sports betting.

The team announced a long-term partnership Tuesday with Ballys Interactive, a division of Ballys Corp.

that makes the gaming leader the official sports betting partner of the NFL team. As part of the agreement, Ballys will have a branded lounge at FirstEnergy Stadium.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed bills to legalize sports books in the state late last year. Pending local approval and licensing, fans could begin legally betting in person on their favorite teams in 2023 and the Browns want to have those capabilities in place for the launch.

The Browns and Ballys Interactive also plan to have a mobile sports app that will allow fans to place bets.

Dave Jenkins, executive vice president and CEO of Haslam Sports Group, said Ballys vision meshes with the Browns for fans to have fully-integrated sports betting experiences.

As we continue to work closely with sports betting regulators in our state to ensure a responsible and timely launch, we are excited and confident that our partnership with Ballys will ultimately offer industry-leading benefits to fans throughout Cleveland and Ohio, Jenkins said.

The Browns and Ballys have not yet decided on the location for the stadium betting lounge. Fans who are 21 and older will have access to sports betting on game days while being able to watch games across the league.

In adding Ohio, Ballys will have market access to sports betting in 18 states.

In their release, the Browns and Ballys reminded fans to bet responsibly and provided information for the National Problem Gambling Helpline (1-800-522-4700).

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SPORTS BRIEFING | News, Sports, Jobs - The Review

The irony of advanced technology – Independent Australia

With technology advancing at a rapid pace, it is becoming increasingly difficult for the human mind to understand and control it, writes Paul Budde.

MY COLLEAGUE Pat Scannell asked me the other day to assist in reviewing his manuscript: The Great Irony of Technology.

In this upcoming book, he mentioned an issue that really intrigued me the disruption of thought.

He makes the point that the rapid acceleration of technology exceeds the ability of any one person or organisation to understand. The pace of the change is disruptingthe very fabric of how humans think.

We often fail to pause and think about the barrage of information we receive, to fact check, make up our mind or just for a moment think about what we are confronted with before we react on social media, in emails and so on.

He even argues that this problem is in fact the biggest problem in the world, exceeding, for example, climate change and he mentions the following reasons for that:

We see some of this in the developments of algorithms. We know, for example, that the use of this can lead to gender and race bias. If you analyse this a bit further, then what is missing here in the human cognitive surroundings that in most cases can make the necessary adjustments.

Furthermore, it is near impossible to reconstruct how algorithms built those computer models. So who is in control? Furthermore, algorithms and big data lead to exponential numbers of variables, each expanding at exponential rates. Humans simply cant fathom this.

If this continues uncontrolled, it will grow into artificial superintelligence. Of course, we cant predict the future but it is highly likely that this is going to develop in ways we cant even imagine.

The first level of automation was mechanical (factories, mines, agriculture). However, we are increasingly replacing functions that require cognitive processes. This could lead to a dumbing down as the people who would normally undertake such thinking processes are now barely operators of such processes.

We are seeing that more and more of these outcomes are now outpacing the capacities of human intelligence, human independence, and the use of creativity in our own brains. These three elements are what make humans different from robots and we do need to use these unique human attributes to manage these processes. Machines will never be able to take over those elements.

As these developments are going so fast, we have little room and time to manage them through policies, regulations, social discussions and so on. The developments are driven by human material demands and desires without the necessary checks and balances to guide these processes.

The fact is that technology improves most peoples' lives, objectively, but ironically it leaves many people feeling worse off. It looks like the positive outcome of technology is not enough because of the social confusion it creates which can be captured in the disruption of thought.

It gets even scarier when we talk about quantum mechanics. We are using this technology and it delivers great outcomes, but we have no clue how this works. Many of the outcomes provide great benefits, for example, in analysing diseases and producing solutions. However, we dont know how they came to those outcomes. Think about what happens when this technology will no doubt be developed further and further.

We are reaching a stage where technology will be able to know more than humans, without us being in control of that process.

So, what we are seeing here is a double whammy. We see that the disruption of thought is already a key root of some of our social and political problems. Next, we could see a development whereby technology will start outstripping humans as cognitive operators.

A serious concern is that many people have catastrophe fatigue even before the pandemic and don't have the cognitive headspace to do the reading, thinking and other work to get their heads around these issues, much less collaborate at any effective scale.

As I have mentioned before, I dont think that technology is the key to these serious problems, but it is our human resolve to address these problems. We are far too caught up in short-term gains and politics what is required is a more fundamental long-term approach. So, the problems can be solved by us humans, but we should act now rather than wait for a crisis.

At the same time, I firmly believe that technology, when correctly managed, can assist us in staying in control.

Paul Buddeis an Independent Australia columnist and managing director ofPaul Budde Consulting, an independent telecommunications research and consultancy organisation. You can follow Paul on Twitter@PaulBudde.

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The irony of advanced technology - Independent Australia

This Is the Most Important Decision You Can Make To Increase Sales Right Now! – InvisionMag

SELLING IS A vital part of what we do. Patients dont get to experience amazing vision without eyewear. To improve our sales, weve been told to change the way we think about sales.

But what we actually need is more foundational, more deeply rooted. We need to change our philosophy on sales. Youve likely heard stories of people transforming their lives with a change in philosophy. Could a new sales philosophy transform your business? Absolutely.

Writer Ayn Rand, a brilliant thinker and philosopher, said, philosophy is needed in order to live life. The importance of having a foundational philosophy underpinning everything you do, especially business, cant be overstated. Thus, the two most important questions are:

Think of this philosophy as a filter for all your decisions and actions, guiding you and your team. Only do those things that support it. This one act is simple, powerful, and it will transform your business.

To help you create a foundational philosophy, consider this: Whats best for the patient, is best for the practice.

Let it settle in. Its profound, not to be glossed over. If what is best for the patient makes the practice money, even better. Many feel guilty when recommending something if its more expensive; the real guilt should come if you are not recommending what you truly know is best for your patients vision.A heart surgeon never asks a patient if they want the best procedure or one thats just okay; neither do neurologists or orthopedic surgeons.

For you to serve, you must sell. Selling is serving. Better products are easier to work with, more functional, have better craftsmanship and style. It best serves the practice through dramatically decreasing remakes and warranty work, while increasing patient satisfaction and referrals. All things that increase your reputation and sales but will go unnoticed if you choose not to sell or only aim to sell the least expensive option to the patient.

Money demands that you sellyour talent to their reason. Ayn Rand

A critical initial sales step is recommending or prescribing. When its done with authentic belief its powerful, and skilled opticians can more easily guide a patient through the optical, ensuring the patient experiences the best vision while delivering the talent of your team. This is the perfect example of a customer-first philosophy implemented in a real sale.

Your patient will have confidence in that amazing progressive and that great AR treatment that will keep those lenses pristine. Definitely best for the patient and best for the practice.

A few other examples:

Its best for your patient to have an annual supply of contacts. Studies prove these patients are less likely to overwear lenses.Its best for your patient to have photo documentation of their retina to flag early changes. One early catch can make all the difference.

First, implement your version of a customer-first philosophy. Second, and just as critical, is getting buy-in from your team. Assure them when you all implement this philosophy decisions will come faster and easier, be less stressful, more accurate and increase accountability.

As co-founder and visionary leader of Spexy, this is the type of philosophy-based thinking I implement and impart to my team and our clients.

Decide, right now, to implement a clear customer-first philosophy to guide your business. Your team will start selling and serving like never before.

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This Is the Most Important Decision You Can Make To Increase Sales Right Now! - InvisionMag

Angelo Carusone: Elon Musk’s vision for Twitter sounds like a sophomore in high school that just read Ayn Rand for the first time – Media Matters for…

Citation From the April 25, 2022, edition of SiriusXM's Tell Me Everything with John Fugelsang

JOHN FUGELSANG (HOST): For all the coverage that CNN+ tanking got, this is the really the media story of the year so far.

ANGELO CARUSONE (PRESIDENT, MEDIA MATTERS FOR AMERICA): Oh yeah, no. This is a huge story. And it's a huge story, I think that it's a huge story in ways that I don't think that the current reactions actually reflect.

...

There are really, really bad people, and Marjorie Taylor Greene, strangely enough, amongst this group of people that are celebrating isn't even the worst.

Like, there are actual Nazis and white supremacists and like really horrible, violent people that are very very excited about this, about [Elon] Musk acquiring Twitter because they all think they're going to get their accounts back which is going to allow them to like, you know, do a whole bunch of stuff that got them banned in the first place, which was abusing people.

But I actually think to me, the big thing here is that it's a pivot point. This is actually and I see this in many ways as similar to what happened and it's because, partly because of Musk, partly because the way that Twitter plays out. You know, it's when Fox, sort of, was born, the idea behind it was that it was a counterbalance to the rest of the news media.

FUGELSANG: That's right.

CARUSONE: And in a lot of ways, Musk sees this as a counterbalance to a whole range of policies that were put in place on social media. And he's been talking about this for like two to three years, where he's teased the idea, you know, in conversations and on Twitter that he wants to buy a network or some kind of social media outlet because it's time to push back against this sort of woke culture.

And I think that he sees this as an opportunity to do you know it's not as ideologically pure as say what Ailes and Murdoch tried to do in the nineties, but he sees this through ideological terms, which is that this is an opportunity to demonstrate, in his mind, a sort of open environment very much the way that, like, a sophomore in high school that just read Ayn Rand for the first time would, like, regurgitate that stuff back to you and think they have some really profound thoughts.

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Angelo Carusone: Elon Musk's vision for Twitter sounds like a sophomore in high school that just read Ayn Rand for the first time - Media Matters for...

Broaden your perspective with the ‘1 after 2’ reading rule – Bangor Daily News

The BDN Opinion section operates independently and does not set newsroom policies or contribute to reporting or editing articles elsewhere in the newspaper or onbangordailynews.com.

Bart Ehrman is currently the James A. Gray Distinguished Professor of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the author of several best-selling books on religious topics. His writings range from the historical Jesus, to the development of Christianity from humble beginnings to the worldwide religion we know today.

He is also a self-described agnostic atheist, and a textual critic.

Ehrmanis not the kind of writer one usually finds on the nightstands of devoted Christians. As Anglican priest Michael Birdonce put it, for conservative Christians, Ehrman is a bit of a bogeyman, the Professor Moriarty of biblical studies, constantly pressing an attack on their long-held beliefs about God, Jesus, and the Bible.

And yet I, a lifelong Catholic, just finished his book Heaven and Hell: A History of the Afterlife.

In it, Ehrman attempts to trace the origins of the concept of heaven and hell as we currently conceive of them, and historically explain how those notions were developed within Christianity. He does not himself believe in an afterlife, and declares outright that the ideas of the afterlife that we have today are at odds with what Jesus taught, and what the first Christians believed.

To explain my counterintuitive reading choice, I read Ehrmans book because of my longstanding one after two rule.

Here is the basic rationale: it is impossible to seek truth, insight, wisdom or knowledge without directly challenging your beliefs. For every two books I read that align with my worldview in some way, I will read one book that opposes those views.

As a self-described classical liberaland fusionist, I enjoy reading books that more fully develop my ideological worldview. Thus late last year I read through Road to Serfdom by F.A. Hayek and The Virtue of Selfishnessby Ayn Rand,two important texts of the libertarian right.

After I read those two books, I picked up Das Kapital by Karl Marx.

Doing so was incredibly important for me, not only because it exposed me to the actual arguments, rather than the cartoonish characterizations of the communist icon contained in most mainstream discourse, but also because it forced me to consider his logic and arguments directly and sincerely.

It is important to keep the subject-matter of the one in line with that of the two. For instance, after reading memoirs from right-wing politicians, such as Decision Pointsby former President George W. Bush and For the Record by former conservative British Prime Minister David Cameron, I picked up A Journey by Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair.

The Dictatorship of Woke Capitalby Stephen Soukup and The Coddling of the American Mind by Jonathan Haidt and Greg Lukianoff were followed up by How To Be An Antiracist by Ibram X Kendi. Yes, I really read it.

Sometimes I will even double up the one after the two. This happened after reading The Power of Silenceby Catholic Cardinal Robert Sarah and When the Church Was Young by Marcellino DAmbrosio. Afterward I read both A Universe from Nothing by Lawrence Krauss and Zealot by Reza Aslan.

The point of doing all this is pretty simple. My beliefs are worthless to me if they are unable to withstand criticism or scrutiny. My ideas arent really ideas if I havent thought through the possible ways they could be wrong.

Human beings have a tendency to want to be right, and resist any confrontation of ideas that may prove them wrong. Avoiding the discomfort inherent in self-examination doesnt actually make any of us right, however. It simply avoids any need for us to consider the possibility that we may be wrong, thus making us feel secure in ourselves. Yet that comfort is a rather cowardly form of avoidance.

We should instead be constantly fostering skepticism. When we read things that we agree with, it is usually best to read them critically and identify logical inconsistencies throughout. When we read things we disagree with, it is best to read them sympathetically, and sincerely consider the perspective.

Doing so doesnt mean we have to necessarily change our mind, or abandon our beliefs. Ive found that doing this actually makes the opinions you are left with all the stronger, because you now can see the opposing point of view, and have thought much deeper about the issue.

This wont make us all agree with each other, but it will make us smarter, and much more reasonable. Consider creating your own one after two rule, and see how it goes. It might surprise you how much you enjoy disagreeing with yourself.

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Broaden your perspective with the '1 after 2' reading rule - Bangor Daily News

A New History of the Old Right – Reason

The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism, by Matthew Continetti, Basic Books, 480 pages, $32

Unlike most accounts of the American conservative movement, Matthew Continetti's The Right begins in the 1920s, when two Republican presidents returned the country to normalcy after World War I. The ideals of that era's Republicans were not so different from those espoused by former President Donald Trump today: They believed in cutting taxes, restricting immigration, and protecting American industry through tariffs. But there was one fundamental difference: Presidents Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge rejected the populism of their age. They aimed to preserve American institutions. Trump is more like William Jennings Bryan, riding the coattails of discontent. He represents a time, Continetti argues, when an increasingly apocalyptic conservative movement "no longer viewed core American institutions as worth defending."

Continetti has worked in many of the most important conservative institutions. As such, he should be praised for addressing the darker side of his movement, a side that many other conservatives have been hesitant to confront. Continetti puts the tension between populism and elitism at the heart of the conflict over conservatism. The result is a much more nuanced and satisfying portrait of the American right than is offered by most other journalists and historians.

The discontent Trump used to propel himself to the White House has always been present on the American right. When Sen. Joseph McCarthy (RWis.) began his crusade against "the hidden Communists in America and their liberal Democratic protectors," for example, he found support in the Republican Party and in the few conservative publications that existed at the timeThe American Mercury, Human Events, even the libertarian-leaning Freeman. As McCarthy's accusations multiplied and "became more outrageous, more galling, and more disconnected from reality," Continetti writes, conservatives such as William F. Buckley Jr. still backed his crusade. There are similarities in the way Sen. Robert Taft (ROhio) responded to McCarthy's conspiracy theories and the way Sen. Mitch McConnell (RKy.) has responded to Trump's. While McCarthy ultimately undermined himself by launching outrageous accusations against President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Continetti demonstrates just how long conservatives have been tempted to follow aggressive demagogues while they lambaste liberals.

Traditionally, conservative elites have tried to channel populist sentiments into a respectable and successful movement. No one had to grapple with this question more than Buckley, the founder of National Review. The usual conservative narrative says that Buckley legitimized conservatism by being a gatekeeper: In keeping the conspiracism of the John Birch Society and the radical individualism of Ayn Rand at arm's length, he made it less likely that conservatives would be labeled extremists. In the case of the John Birch Society, Buckley wrote a 5,000-word essay, "The Question of Robert Welch," that condemned the group's founder, arguing that "the best thing Mr. Welch could do to serve the cause of anticommunism in the United States would be to resign." Buckley's purges are often held up as a great success, but the reality is that Welch did not resign and the John Birch Society continued to have influence.

While Buckley initially aligned his magazine with segregationists in the South, a choice that has marred the movement's reputation ever since, he was resolute in opposing Alabama Gov. George Wallace's particular brand of populism. Wallace, of course, was a strident proponent of segregation in the 1960s. During his second run for president, on a third-party ticket in 1968, the candidate turned heavily to anti-elitist rhetoric. "As he began to attack the federal government and its know-it-all politicians and bureaucrats," Continetti writes, "his support among conservatives grew." Buckley called Wallace "Mr. Evil," "a dangerous man," and a "great phony." He was also taken aback by the "uncouthness that seems to account for his general popularity."

Other conservatives joined the denunciations. Wallace's conservative fans, Frank Meyer wrote, need to recognize that "there are other dangers to conservatism and to the civilization conservatives are defending than the liberal Establishment, and that to fight liberalism without guarding against these dangers runs the risk of ending in a situation as bad as or worse as our present one." In modern parlance: Don't back a man like Wallace to own the libs.

Ultimately, movement conservatives did not embrace Wallace. Ronald Reagan refused to run on his ticket with him (the idea had been floated by some conservative activists), and Wallace ultimately gave way to another Southern Democrat, Jimmy Carter (who Wallace endorsed and campaigned for in both 1976 and 1980). But the fact that he made so many inroads is revealing.

Continetti does not spend much time discussing Reagan. This was deliberate: Reagan often dominates histories of the conservative movement, even though he was just one of many important historical actors. But he remains essential to understanding the American right. His presidential campaigns appealed to the populist impulses of the late 1970s, but they did so in an optimistic way, channeling voters' discontent into a constructive legislative agenda. This made him both the exemplar and the exception.

Continetti's major contribution comes in explaining how conservatism has changed since the end of the Cold War. Here he details the conflict between neoconservatives, such as Bill Kristol, and paleoconservatives, such as Pat Buchanan. With their dedication to the culture war and their opposition to foreign intervention and immigration, the paleoconservatives presaged Trump's electoral success in 2016.

The paleocons lost the political battles of the 1990s and 2000s. But the War on Terror ultimately discredited the neoconservatives, opening the door for populist discontent to capture the Republican Party. The first manifestation of this was the Tea Party movement. While Continetti draws a straight line from this to Trump's election, in reality the Tea Party encompassed several strands of conservatism (all populist in nature) with conflicting conceptions of what 21st century conservatism should entail. Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky, Marco Rubio of Florida, and Ted Cruz of Texas all rode the Tea Party wave to victory in 201012, and all had very different visions for the future of the nationand very different visions from Trump's. Nonetheless, the anti-establishment politics that emerged in the wake of the Iraq War and the 2008 financial crisis ultimately brought Trump to power.

It was during this time, from 2010 to 2016, that Continetti believes "the populist American Right [became] less interested in preserving institutions than in tearing them down." One could hardly think of a better instrument for that purpose than Trump. Trump condemned illegal immigration and trade with China, announced "support for a ban on Muslim entry into the United States," and recalibrated "American politics along the axis of national identity." Many conservatives initially condemned him, and National Review even released a special issue titled "Against Trump." One of its contributors called the candidate "a philosophically unmoored political opportunist who would trash the broad conservative ideological consensus within the GOP in favor of a free-floating populism with strong-man overtones." Nonetheless, Trump won.

Now a new generation of right-wing writers is denouncing the American founding and trying to redefine American conservatism. Continetti rejects their project, insisting that "one cannot be an American patriot without reverence for the nation's enabling documents" and "one cannot be an American conservative without regard for the American tradition of liberty those charters inaugurated." The task for conservatives, he writes, is to preserve "the American idea of liberty and the familial, communal, religious, and political institutions that incarnate and sustain itthat is what makes American conservatism distinctly American."

Many Americans, including a lot of conservatives, were shocked when Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton in 2016. If Continetti's book had been available before the 2016 election, perhaps we would not have been so surprised. The Right demonstrates that the populism we have seen from the American right over the last five years is not an aberration. It has always been present, lurking in the shadows and sometimes in plain sight, waiting for its moment. Some statesmen, such as Reagan, were able to tame it and channel it into something productive, but for the most part, it was just pushed to the movement's fringes. It is not likely to return to the margins anytime soon.

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A New History of the Old Right - Reason

Republicans want kids to be bullies like Trump: The hidden agenda of the right’s attack on SEL – Salon

Republicans, led by Florida's Gov. Ron DeSantis, aren't slowing down their war on public education. They really do seem to think they've got a winner with this strategy of misappropriating educator jargon, lying about what it means, and using that to scare gullible parents and (mostly) bigoted old people into joining the fight to gut a child's right to an education. This is how the state of Florida has reached beyond the scare tactics of lying about critical race theory and the "don't say gay" bill tobanning a whole slew of math textbooks, claiming that the textbooks had, uh, "Woke Math" in them.

A better picture of what the hell Republicans consider "Woke Math" finally started to emerge and, unsurprisingly, was largely centered on the latest right-wing hysteria.

RELATED:What is "social emotional learning" and how did it become the right's new CRT panic?

Republicans are suddenly furious now about another educational bit of jargon: "Social-emotional learning," typically shortened to "SEL." Conservatives are complaining that kids are learning social and emotional skills like learning to say "please" and "thank you." Yes, you read that right. Being reminded to share and to clean up after yourself is being equated with communism. Telling little kids to play nicely together is the end of civilization itself.

Successful, well-adjusted adults are the GOP's kryptonite

It would be hard to believe, until you remember that these are the same people who practically worship Donald Trump, an illiterate bully with absolutely no redeeming qualities.

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If they consider Trump a role model, of course, Republicans don't want kids learning either math or basic social skills in the classroom. Generating new Republican voters means cultivating a generation of mean-spirited dullards. By god, DeSantis isn't going to let some soft-hearted schoolteachers get in his way.

This is truly no exaggeration. As Kathryn Joyce reported for Salon, SEL is just a systemized way for educators to incorporate life skills into lesson planning, with an eye towards "helping students understand and regulate their emotions, cooperate with classmates and be more empathetic." It's also about presenting subjects, like math, in ways that encourage kids to get better at problem-solving and critical thinking, rather than rote memorization.

The debate is about the journey to the right answer. Are they simply told the answer and expected to parrot it back? Or are they being taught how to think through problems?

Judd Legum, Tesnim Zekeria, and Rebecca Crosby at Popular Info examined the banned math textbooks and found that the supposedly offending sections were mostly focused on teaching young kids to be patient with themselves and others while dealing with difficult math problems."How can you show you value the ideas of others?" a level 1 textbook asks. Other supposedly offensive book suggested kids work together on problems, and ask, "What can I learn from others' thinking about the problem?" And as the New York Times examination of the books found, some of what angers Republicans is centered around the "growth mindest" approach to education, where kids are taught to puzzle out ways to solve math problems creatively, instead of simply being told to memorize multiplication tables.

DeSantis doesn't hide that all this creativity and empathy is what is teeing him off.

RELATED:Banning math books and attacking libraries: Republicans ramp up their mission to spread ignorance

"Math is about getting the right answer, not about feelings or ideologies," he tweeted in a video where he demagogued about how there's "a right answer and a wrong answer and we want all our students getting the right answers."

His framing is meant to imply, falsely, that kids are somehow writing "2+2=5" and getting As anyway. Couple that with his press secretary claiming, falsely, that teachers were saying the right answers are "white supremacy" and the conspiracy theory they're peddling comes into view. This is classic "Bell Curve" white paranoia, a racist belief that the "liberal elite" is promoting supposedly less intelligent people of color over supposedly more qualified white people.

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In reality, of course, the kids are still expected to get the right answers. The debate is about the journey to the right answer. Are they simply told the answer and expected to parrot it back? Or are they being taught how to think through problems? The latter is a far more valuable skill, of course. But it's also threatening to authoritarians, who prefer an unthinking citizenry that simply follows the commands of their right-wing leaders. The battle is not over whether two plus two equals four. It's over whether students know why that equation works. If they do, then they are less likely to believe Trump or DeSantis when they push alternative facts.

The Republican loathing of the larger social and emotional parts of SEL isn't exactly mysterious, either. For the kids themselves, of course, lessons in working well with others, active listening, and exhibiting empathy all cultivate invaluable skills. Kids who learn those skills are far likelier to grow into successful, well-adjusted adults. But successful, well-adjusted adults are the GOP's kryptonite. They need voters to be maladjusted miscreants, the kind of people who think that someone like Trump or Tucker Carlson is worth following. So of course they object to any school lessons that put kids on the pathway to being decent adults. They need a voting population of assholes to keep holding power.

RELATED:The secret plan behind Florida's "don't say gay" bill: Bankrupting public education

These fights are nothing new, to be clear. Conservatives have long championed writers like Ayn Rand, whose entire life philosophy was a belief that kindness and empathy are weaknesses. Being a bully has always been aspirational on the right, which is why there seems to be no end of loudmouthed talk radio jackasses in the mold of Rush Limbaugh. It's why there was a massive meltdown in the '90s over Hillary Clinton's book "It Takes A Village," and it still causes red hot right-wing anger today. They really hate Clinton's notion that children should be raised to be empathetic members of society. The ideal child-rearing on the right is about an authoritarian father dictating his child's life, which produces incurious and small-minded bullies. In other words, people like Trump.

As Joyce reported, a big talking point on the right now is that SEL is a covert form of "critical race theory." This is dumb on its surface, but actually makes more sense if you view it from this Ayn Randian point of view. After all, kids who are raised to be good listeners, critical thinkers, and empathetic human beings are, in fact, more likely to be skeptical of bigoted beliefs like racism, homophobia, and sexism. To liberals, this sounds great, and certainly better than raising the next generation to be a bunch of ignorant buffoons like Trump. To conservatives, however, it opens the door to kids who move to the big city, have friends who are different races, and who may even, heaven forbid, start pushing back when their own parents say prejudiced things. Given a choice between raising kids to be well-functioning members of society, or raising them to be dim-witted bullies, Republicans clearly choose the latter.

See more here:

Republicans want kids to be bullies like Trump: The hidden agenda of the right's attack on SEL - Salon

John Waters on His Joyously Offensive New Show and Why Pink Flamingos Is Filthier Than Ever at 50 – IndieWire

The pope of trash, the duke of dirt, the prince of puke. As cinemas darling purveyor of filth, John Waters, at 76, has heard and seen it all, and he isnt slowing down. In fact, he turns 76 on this very day, April 22, and is readying to premiere his new one-man, spoken-word special, False Negative, in New York and then Atlantic City this weekend. Hes also got a debut novel, Liarmouth: A Feel-Bad Romance, coming out from Macmillan May 3. There may even be a new film project in the works, though Waters is loath to spill his secrets. His breakout feature, the gleefully demonic, camp-exploitation classic Pink Flamingos, also celebrates a birthday this year, five decades after its release in 1972.

Waters, in a phone interview from his Baltimore stomping grounds, is chuffed at the hilarity of the film landing in the National Film Registry this year. At the time, the perverse Divine vehicle was reviled for its scatological sensibilities, its cigarette-in-the-eye of moviemaking conventions and American decorum. Its perhaps filthier than ever now, and its a movie hell be discussing in False Negative, which is a complete reinvention of his 2006 special This Filthy World, now re-written for the post-COVID age. The special sets out to lampoon political correctness on all sides of the aisle in the spirit of Waters championing of free speech even at its most lunatic and outrageous.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

IndieWire: False Negative is an entirely new version of your This Filthy World, which you re-imagined for a post-COVID world. The ground has shifted for a lot of people in the last few years, which has surely given you more fodder. Whatre you touching on this time around?

John Waters: Certainly political correctness, and what is funny about that. Certainly reinventing yourself, and reinventing everything. Thats a big part of this speech. Certainly including the movie business, the way it is today, and how you can last. Ive been doing this for 50 years. How the most insane things can change. Pink Flamingos got named to the National Film Registry this year, which is pretty hilarious and great. So heres a movie that actually today is more offensive than it was when it came out, probably, with all the new touchiness, but at the same time, it still brings joy to people no matter what their politics are, in a way. Thats what Im so happy to be celebrating. Im trying to talk about how always we use humor to win, not self-righteousness, not telling people theyre stupid, not lecturing people. You have to make fun of yourself first, which I always did, and then you can make fun of others. But Ive made a career of making fun of the rules in the outsider society that I live in and love, so I usually make fun of things I love.

You dont mention Trump anymore even though he figured heavily in the last version. People are tired of hearing about him.

When it was This Filthy World, I did a long thing about what it would be like to have sex with him in the most graphic detail of every act. I live in a country where its free enough where I didnt get the firing squad. That makes me feel patriotic.

Pink Flamingos is funnier and fouler today than it was 50 years ago. Why do you think its endured?

Because of all the stuff you cant say today, which makes them kind of funnier, because maybe they get away with it because they know its historic. Its not of today. Its in a time capsule of lunacy from somewhere. Thats why I never mentioned politics in the movies because it dates them. You want your movies to be timeless. Most of my movies didnt do well when they came out, but theyre still playing now, and eventually made money. But it took a long time. Thats not why studios put movies out. They want to make all the money in the first two weeks.

Courtesy Everett Collection

Pink Flamingos is also getting a Criterion release in June. That will certainly help engender a new generation of John Waters appreciators.

They can do Bresson and they can do Pink Flamingoes. Its the same thing, and I kept trying to tell them [that like when New Line released] Polyester [in Odorama], they should do all their films in Odorama. What does Bresson smell like? What does Bergmans suicide smell like? Seventh Seal they could sniff and you can jump off a cliff. You could do lots of good advertising if you just let me go in there.

Its hard to imagine a movie as offensive as Pink Flamingos getting made now.

When I say offensive, I mean joyously offensive. Its easy to be offensive. Often, when critics today call it a John Waters type movie, I hate those movies because theyre just gross or they have a drag queen in them. They do something that we did years ago. I always try to make you laugh at your ability to be surprised by something. Ive said that forever, but Im still doing that. The American audiences sense of humor has gotten darker. Its changed. Its really way more like what I started out doing. RuPauls on television. Look at how great that is, that drag queens are in middle America. Things have changed for the better at least with peoples sense of humor. But as soon as you start lecturing them, they shut up and we have to pick our battles.

I do a whole thing in there about battles that we pick that really make people vote for the other side. We want to pick battles that we can win. Pick the three most important ones. Not the most obscure ones. PETA came out and said you cant call your animal a pet, that thats degrading, in the same way calling a woman a chick is. I think thats funny, but that makes people go crazy. I love extreme politics, even when I completely do not agree with it. People have the right to say anything. Im for freedom of speech. Many dont seem to be these days.

New Line Cinema/courtesy Everett / Everett Collection

Do you feel like its harder or easier to be funny now, and to wield your particular brand of humor?

The edge that youre walking on is harder, and I try to stay right on the side where youre almost falling off. My new book if I can get away with this one, well see. I do make fun of the rules that I live in and the society that Im living in now. Im certainly a bleeding heart liberal, but I rebel against those rules, too, which I think is healthy.

You have a book coming out in a few weeks, Liarmouth: A Feel Bad Romance. Youve written a number of essay collections but this is your first novel. Did this come as easily to you as making a movie?

It took me three years to write. Its pretty crazy. Its about a woman who steals suitcases in airports, and shes a very disagreeable character. You will like her because shes so unlikeable. I didnt have to worry about budget. I didnt have to worry about casting. I didnt have to worry about the children, and how they have to only work four hours a day and have a schoolteacher. All that kind of stuff I dont have to worry about, so I could really be free to explore this insane universe that I set up in the book. Thats the only thing you have to stay true to. No matter how crazy the plot or how much fun you make of narrative and everything, it still has to be true to the world that you set up in the book.

John Waters performs False Negative on Friday, April 22, at Sony Hall in New York City, and Saturday, April 23, at the Anchor Rock Club in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

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Excerpt from:

John Waters on His Joyously Offensive New Show and Why Pink Flamingos Is Filthier Than Ever at 50 - IndieWire

Political Correctness: Its Origins and the Backlash Against It

Please note: This article contains language some might find offensive.

Mexican immigrants are bringing drugs, theyre bringing crime, theyre rapists. In response to outrage at his statements like this one, Donald Trump replies: I think the big problem this country has is being politically correct. On this vague platform Trump has made himself a serious contender for the Republican presidential nomination.

So what is political correctness?

To be politically correct is to choose words (and sometimes actions) that avoid disparaging, insulting or offending people because they belong to oppressed groups. Oppressed groups are those subject to prejudice, disrespect or discrimination on the basis of their race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation or physical disability.

The term emerged in the west in the 1970s as a kind of self-parody used by activists in the various new social movements and the New Left more broadly. It was borrowed from the English translation of Chinese Communist texts, particularly those of the Cultural Revolution, seen by most in the New Left as doctrinaire and Orwellian. Ideologically sound and the correct line were similar borrowings.

If the interjection Thats politically incorrect was uttered with a wry knowingness, it had a serious intent to challenge the user to think about the social power of a word and the injury it might cause.

As this form of language policing spread into the wider community it became a highly effective means of confronting the deep-rooted prejudices embedded in everyday words and expressions.

We should recall that in the 1950s Aboriginal people were casually referred to, even by educated people, as boongs and Aboriginal women as lubras. The leader of the ALP, Arthur Calwell, received chuckles when defended the White Australia Policy with two Wongs dont make a White. In that era, grown women were habitually trivialised as girls and for a laugh schoolboys would mimic the facial expressions, hand gestures and voices of kids with cerebral palsy, or spazzos.

All of these, and a thousand more, had the effect of reinforcing the subjugation of people already in a weak or vulnerable position in society. Beyond mere politeness or civility, political correctness was political in the sense that it aimed at bringing about social change at a time when racist, sexist and homophobic attitudes found expression in everyday language and attracted no censure, even though the words were humiliating, disparaging or threatening to the minorities in question.

Some expressions and behaviours criticised as politically incorrect were subtle, and could leave those reproached puzzled and angry. Why is it sexist to open the door for a woman? Isnt it just politeness? Or is it a reflection of a patriarchal social structure in which men were expected to be chivalrous toward the weaker sex? In the same way, women were excluded from pubs because their sensitivities had to be protected.

Shifting taboos

So political correctness forced us to think more deeply about our own ingrained and frequently unconscious oppressive attitudes. As a genuinely perplexed student I once asked a more experienced activist: Why is it acceptable to call a bloke a prick but not acceptable to call him a cunt?

Because, he replied, men arent oppressed. I saw it straight away. Apart from the vulgarity of the word, it was politically incorrect to use as an insult a word that denigrates women by sexually objectifying them, as if they are defined by that repulsive yet irresistible thing.

The history of the word cunt throws more light on the evolution of political correctness. This good old Anglo-Saxon word was heard even in high society in the 16th century the young aristocrats utter it in the BBC film of Wolf Hall but it was taboo by the end of the 18th century when it became a nasty name for a nasty thing. In Australia in the 1950s it was absent from written English and polite conversation but enjoyed a vigorous life in the vernacular, particularly amongst working-class men.

But from the late 1960s its vernacular use came under sustained criticism from feminists for the way it was used as a weapon to dehumanise women, to keep them as sexual objects, and within a decade or so its use had sharply declined. Wives and girlfriends spoke up and when used it was done so with more care about who might be within earshot.

In recent years, cunt has been partially rehabilitated; the taboo has been lifted so that we can hear it used on ABC television. This is so in large measure because the status of women in Australian society has improved so much that, while forms of discrimination persist, it is hard to describe them as oppressed as a gender. And womens own sexual expression has blossomed, including reclaiming the word in forums such as The Vagina Monologues. As a result, the word has lost much of its hidden political freight and its shock-value, although it remains vulgar and many women still find it discomforting.

This process of rehabilitating taboo words fortifies the claim that political correctness is not a mere fad of the moralising left but is directly connected to oppression and discrimination within the social structure.

In a similar way, in the 1960s it was common to hear Anglo-Australians disparage immigrants from southern Europe as wogs and dagos. These descriptors were deemed politically incorrect and, when it was explained that they wounded those at the bottom of the socio-economic scale, they mostly fell out of use.

Yet as those ethnic groups worked their way into a position of social equality their confidence increased to the point where they began to use the words themselves in an ironic way, such as in the TV program Wogs Out of Work. It didnt matter any more. An Anglo today might use wog ironically; but if used seriously as a form of abuse the user would be regarded as weird or even unreconstructed!

The oppression of Aboriginal people remains because racial prejudice against them runs deep, and we could expect an outcry at the broadcast of a television program titled Boongs On the Dole, and not just from latte-sipping inner-city lefties. Even those conservative commentators who have led the charge against political correctness routinely engage in politically correct self-censorship. So whats behind the backlash?

The Backlash

The backlash began in the United States in the early 1990s when conservative intellectuals began to use political correctness to criticize the left for imposing their views on others and suppressing dissenting opinion.

In universities, more traditional subjects were being augmented or replaced by others dealing with feminism, queer politics, post-colonial history and so on. Leading conservative began to attack the liberal-left for making certain topics of study off-limits.

Soon political correctness was being used as a pejorative, not least by right-wing shock jocks such as Rush Limbaugh. In the United Kingdom, the Daily Mail began a campaign (still running) against political correctness gone mad with stories, many of them made up, about ordinary people prevented from flying patriotic flags or schools banning musical chairs because it encourages aggression or the BBC replacing AD (as in 2015 AD) with CE (for Common Era).

The backlash struck a chord with some sections of the public, disproportionately among white males who felt that equal-access policies were discriminating against them and who generally felt put-upon by demands that they make deeper changes to traditional attitudes and behaviours. The subliminal message of the backlash has been that you dont have to feel bad about believing what you do, so dont listen to the PC moralisers.

The reversal of the connotation of political correctness was a clever means of turning the moral tables. It authorised a return of some of the oppressive behaviours. On the streets one who objected to a racial insult or sexist remark could be dismissed as just being PC, that is, sitting on a moral high horse, and the offended party might be recruited with See, she doesnt mind or Its just a bit of fun.

As this suggests, the contest over political correctness has historical significance. If we consider the struggle between left and right in the Anglo world over the last five decades its pretty clear that the right won the economic and political war (neoliberalism, the 1%, increasing corporate power, the rise of money politics and so on) and the left won the culture war.

For conservative activists losing the culture war rankled deeply.

In the United States, the urge to fight back explains the sharp shift to the right of the Republican Party from the mid-2000s. It explains how Donald Trump, running for president on a platform of political incorrectness, can get away with a series of racist and sexist insults yet retain the support of conservative men and women.

In Australia Prime Minister Tony Abbott is still fighting the cultural battles of his university days in his resistance to gay marriage, his monarchism and his loathing of the green-left. The bestowing of a knighthood on Prince Phillip attracted almost universal derision but for Abbott it was his way of sticking two fingers up to those he could not defeat at university.

It is true that the liberal-left has provided ammunition for the conservative backlash. At times enthusiastic feminists, particularly when first finding their voices, took PC too far by demanding prohibitions on words and activities that only the hyper-alert would hear as disparaging or offensive. Wimmins rooms and herstory, for example, were made for parody.

The truth is that for many well-meaning people some PC demands are hard to come to terms with, and they have struggled. In The Office Ricky Gervais turned this confusion into excruciating comedy, perhaps reaching its most complex moral tangle in the episode including the joke about the Royal Family and the black mans cock.

In 2012 the Centre for Independent Studies published a booklet titled You Cant Say That! containing four short articles by conservative academics and commentators. Janet Albrechtsen complained that the PC virus has infected so much of what we do, what we read, how we live, how we think and demanded the right to offend. People of a more conservative bent, she opined, feel intimidated about expressing their opinions because they fear censure from the thought police.

What is most striking about these papers is that none of the authors seems to have any interest in understanding from where political correctness derives its social power. None saw it as embedded in social structures; they could not get beyond their righteous disdain for the latte sippers who have been imposing this new form of censorship.

There is a reason for their blindness. Conservatives concede that discrimination exists (even if it is exaggerated) but they see society as essentially good and not in need of structural change. So they do not accept that the injustices that animate activists reflect something rotten in society; instead they are merely the product of individuals behaving badly.

Against the grain

Nevertheless, and surprising as it may appear, I have some sympathy with their complaint. In the age of Twitter and Facebook there are some disturbing examples of people who have been set upon for quite minor infractions. Justine Sacco was publicly shamed and then sacked for tweeting to her 170 followers a dumb joke about AIDS as she boarded a plane to Africa.

The swimmer Stephanie Rice deserved to be corrected for tweeting the word faggot but not the monstering that reduced her to public tears and caused her sponsors to withdraw. A PC pack mentality has developed and it turns with particular ferocity on anyone who questions the presumptions of a certain kind of liberal feminism.

In addition, the well-meaning PC commitment to multiculturalism became a campaign against all forms of tradition. To take one example, I am not a Christian but I believe that the cultural legacy of Christianity runs deep and should not be discarded wholesale.

The King James Bible, for instance, has profoundly shaped our use of language, the language of the atheist as much as the parish priest. The Book of Job is perhaps the deepest meditation we have on the human condition. And the New Testaments stock of parables and stories imbues our moral thinking, generally in positive ways.

In western societies like ours, a rounded education includes this legacy. A child who grew up without exposure to the cultural riches of the bible including the nativity tale would be one whose education had serious gaps in it. Yes, those cultural riches should be approached critically, and not treated as holy writ.

But lets remember that in China, with the spread of nihilism, moral decline and the emptiness of affluence, even the Chinese Communist Party has rehabilitated Confucius, the sage who had been denounced and banished during the Cultural Revolution. Now that was politically incorrect.

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Political Correctness: Its Origins and the Backlash Against It

Parapsychologists, sects, and secret services: Remembering the most tense chess game in history – EL PAS in English

British grandmaster Michael Stean, who was there, described the 1978 World Chess Championship (held in Baguio, The Philippines, between July and October) as a surreal experience and the most bewildering and dirty world championship match in the history of chess.

In their film The champion of the world, director Aleksey Sidorov and producer Nikita Mikhalkov have reproduced the legendary game in which 27 year old Anatoli Karpov, a young Soviet champion faced off against Viktor Korchnoi, 20 years older and a Russian exile.

A game of science with a dose of art, chess was a geopolitical weapon of the first order in the last years of the Cold War. At the end of the 1970s, the Soviet Union had winning basketball and ice hockey teams, virtuoso footballers like Oleg Blokhin and exceptional athletes like Viktor Sarteieve. It also had chess.

Karpov had regained the world champion title three years before the match in the Philippines, thanks to American Bobby Fischer forfeiting the title due to a dispute over the match format.

Fischers win in Reykjavik in 1927 was a serious affront to the Soviets, who had a countryman hold the title since the end of the Second World War.

With Soviet hegemony restored and Karpov a young chess player still on the rise, the Kremlin did not expect to face a threat like the one posed by the defection of Viktor Korchnoi in 1976.

Korchnoi had taken advantage of his participation in the Amsterdam tournament to apply for political asylum in the Netherlands. More than ideological dissidence, he was motivated by professional ambition.

Korchnoi had been the last rival defeated by Anatoli Karpov in his race to the title in 1975. At his age (he was already 45 years old when he defected), being world champion again seemed like a pipe dream. The Soviet authorities came to suggest that the time had come to step aside so as not to hinder the generational change that Karpov represented.

Korchoi had also not ingratiated himself with the regime particularly well - temperamental and impulsive, he lacked the docility and political correctness required for survival at the upper echelons of Soviet society.

From his exile, first in the Netherlands and then in Switzerland, Korchnoi continued to compete at the highest level. Prior to the 1978 world championship he defeated two former world champions (Tigran Petrosian and Boris Spassky) and a third player from the Soviet elite, Lev Polugaievsky at the Candidates Tournament.

But the truth is most pundits considered Karpov the clear favorite, even though they recognized that Korchnoi was in excellent form, his flight to the West having a revitalizing effect on his game. In the duel between the two, bets were tilted towards the first. Michael Stean, who was part of Korchnois team of analysts, said we dreamed of beating Karpov, but it seemed unlikely to us.

To win the title you had to win six games, not counting draws. After 17 games, Krpov had already obtained four victories, to Korchnois one.

What happened next was watched with growing astonishment by the international press.

The champion of the world portrays a desperate Korchnoi wanting to resort to foul play to destabilize a superior rival. The reality is likely more nuanced.

The swivel chair, the sect and the snake

It started, one could say, with the sunglasses. Karpov alleged that Korchnoi used them to blind him, deliberately catching the reflection of the spotlights in the room with the sunglasses, to project against his eyes. Korchnoi retorted that he wore the shades to protect himself from the icy look of defiance with which Krpov tried to intimidate his opponents.

Head referee Lothat Schmidt and his team tested the glasses, sitting in the same position as the players, to determine to what extent the blinding mirror effect denounced by Karpov was true. They concluded that the sunglasses were not interfering but even so, they asked Karchoi to remove them as an act of goodwill, which he did in the final stretch of the match.

Which flag Korchnoi would play under - that of the Netherlands (the country that had granted him asylum) or of Switzerland (his place of residence) was also a subject of controversy. The Soviet delegation insisted he was a deserter and a stateless person who should display a white flag on his part of the gaming table. Korchnois representatives countered by offering, somewhat playfully, that the exile play under the Jolly Roger, the pirate flag. In the end, it was decided that no flags would be displayed on the table.

It was the second game that brought the most surreal moments. The players began a Byzantine dispute over the types of chairs they would sit in while playing - Korchnoi insisting on a certain model for reasons of comfort, Karpov demanding that it be disassembled and X-rayed to ensure it did not include any listening devices; Karpov spinning in his chair while his opponent was thinking, which Korchnoi said was extremely disruptive.

Korchnoi also protested the blueberry yogurt that waiters served Krpov during the second and third games, claiming it could be used for coded communications from his analysts. The referees decided that the Soviet could continue to be served the yogurt, on the condition that it be always at the same time and that the referee be informed prior to the yogurt being served of what color it was.

A further issue was the presence of Vladimir Zhukar as part of the Russian delegation. Zhukar was a neurologist at the Moscow Psychology Laboratory. Korchnoi insisted that he was a parapsychologist - a kind of sorcerer who hypnotizes people to control their actions. Zhukar was forbidden from sitting in the front five rows and Korchnois team would have people sit next to the neurologist and stare at him in order to break his concentration.

Then came the complete breakdown of courtesy between rivals, the most elementary protocol of chess. Krpov stopped shaking hands with Korchnoi, while, according to the Soviets, Korchnoi started muttering insults under his breath. Any verbal interaction between the players had to be prohibited and even draw offers began to be made through the referees.

The atmosphere only grew more delirious. Korchnois partner, Petra, began to attend proceedings with two members of Ananda Marga, a sect of Indian origin that was then popular within the American counterculture. Korchnoi explained that they were his yoga instructors, but they were denied access to the room when it was discovered that they both held criminal records and were using the opportunity of international exposure to demand the freedom of their groups leader, who had been imprisoned for attempted murder. The Soviets took advantage of this blow to Korchnoi by having Dr. Zhukar returned to the front rows, where he sat close by to the then Philippine president, the dictator Ferdinand Marcos, and First Lady Imelda Marcos.

Sidorovs film also refers to unverified incidents that Karpovs team used as proof that the CIA was conspiring to favor Korchnoi, beginning with the appearance of a snake in the hotel room where Karpov was staying.

The champion of the world also references unverified incidents used by Krpovs team to claim there was a CIA operation underway to favor Korchnoi, evidenced by the appearance of a snake in the hotel room where Krpov was staying and that, when he moved to a private residence, noises of helicopters flying overhead or sprinklers starting up in the middle of the night prevented him from sleeping. Steam recalls, every day there was a new press conference with mutual accusations and the referee team was forced to intervene to put out fires.

The film also shows Korchnoi showing up at the gaming floor with a Geiger counter to monitor radioactivity levels, saying Believe it, the Soviets are capable of that and more.

Amidst the geopolitical circus that now defines this match, we will never know for sure if there was really any foul play at work. The final chapter began at the end of September, with both rivals tense and not playing at their best. Karpov was leading the scoreboard by a comfortable 5-2 when his game entered a deep slump, leading to three losses in four games. It appeared the crown could return to the West.

The decisive game was played on October 17. With the confidence of his recent victories, Korchnoi adopted a high-risk defense aimed at deciding the match, but Krpov rallied, achieving a winning position in 41 moves and five hours of play.

Karpov was the epitome of everything Viktor Korchnoi hated about the Soviet Union, said Stean, recalling the unusual level of acrimony and personal and ideological hostility expressed during the match. To him, Karpov has voluntarily chosen to represent the regime.

Viktor was a fighter. I imagine facing Karpov felt like a member of the French resistance would have felt facing someone who had collaborated with the Nazis.

For the Soviets, said Stean, retaining the title was like winning a version of the space race, with Karpov as their man on the moon.

Karpov beat Korchnoi a second time three years later before being beaten himself by Garry Kasparov in 1985, still keeping the crown in Russian hands.

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Parapsychologists, sects, and secret services: Remembering the most tense chess game in history - EL PAS in English

How the Intellectual Dark Web Spawned ‘Groomer’ Panic – The Daily Beast

Groomer panic is sweeping the nation as right-wing types turn against LGBTQ rights, and the talking pointsas with the backlash against Critical Race Theory (CRT) in schoolscan directly be traced back to a group of anti-woke activists on the intellectual dark web.

As The Daily Beasts senior opinion editor Anthony Fisher notes in the latest episode of Fever Dreams, this group of self-identified disaffected liberals coalesced against the idea of hyper-political correctness as early as 2016 or 2017, and were made famous in a profile by former New York Times editor and writer Bari Weiss. Among the biggest stars are Joe Rogan, controversial Canadian professor Jordan Peterson, YouTuber Dave Rubin, Peter Thiels righthand man Eric Weinstein, and Ben Shapiro, the only one in the group who cops to being a true conservative.

These people claim to be lifelong Democrats, some of them say that they were Bernie Sanders supporters and theyve not had a nice thing to say about a single Democratic politician or liberal commentator or liberal idea in the last six years I think theyre more defined by what theyre against rather than what theyre for, Fisher says, adding, a lot of these people are anti-left, all the things they see on the left are things that are threatening Western civilization, which is why they latch onto people like Tulsi Gabbard, somebody whos nominally a Democrat but for the most part seems to be playing toward the MAGA right audience.

As Fever Dreams co-host Will Sommer points out, this groups strand of thinkingwhich focuses on the excesses of the left, particularly in academiahas now gone from being chatter on Twitter to fueling so many of the national culture wars. Specifically, the rights language around Critical Race Theory and the lies about Disney grooming children can directly be traced back to dark webbers Christopher Rufo (whom the Times profiled this week) and James Lindsay. Theyve created this groundswell that is absolutely affecting policy, Fisher says, pointing out that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis own press secretary is now parroting the leaders of the movement. Meanwhile, some dark webbers are finding their allies on the right are turning against them; Rubin, who is gay, recently came under attack from several conservative outlets and members of his audience for his and his husbands use of a surrogate to build their family.

Elsewhere on the podcast, Sommer and co-host Kelly Weill discuss how Elon Musks successful bid for Twitter is galvanizing the right, raising the prospect that some of their favorite characters like Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes and Milo Yiannopoulos might get their accounts back. Meanwhile, it really does seem like [former president Donald Trumps rival network] TRUTH Social is now going to be dead in the water. Trump doesnt even post there, Sommer notes. And lest you think theres no QAnon angle to the Twitter deal, think again: conspiracy theorists have added up the letters in Elons name via arcane numerology, and theyre pretty convinced that a great plan is in motion.

Finally, the co-hosts discuss how newly released texts show Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene pleading with Mark Meadows to tell the president to calm people on Jan. 6 (before deciding the rioters must be antifa); and how two manosphere influencers in Romania have been raided in connection with an human-trafficking and rape investigation. As Weill points out, its just interesting that this keeps happening to the people who make the loudest noise about the supposed trafficking panic.

Listen, and subscribe, to Fever Dreams on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Stitcher.

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How the Intellectual Dark Web Spawned 'Groomer' Panic - The Daily Beast