Swet Shop Boys: Why white skin is no longer a safety net – Deutsche Welle

Migration complicates identity. Many people of color born in the diaspora are often dogged by the challenge of reconciling their blurred identities rendering them half this, half that, butalways the other.

The Swet Shop Boys are a half-this, half-that transatlantic hip-hop trio, featuring the increasingly eminent British-Pakistani actor and rapper Riz MC (whose meteoric rise has earned him credits in films like "Four Lions," "Nightcrawler," "Star Wars: Rogue One" and the HBO miniseries "The Night Of"), American-Indian rapper Heems, and British producer, Redinho, whose ominous and genre-bendingmusicprovides the perfect soundscape for the group'slyrical attacks.

Their debut album, "Cashmere" (2016), offers a humorous and ostentatious celebration of diversity and duality, poking fun at the British Empire, airport security, HareKrishnas, andDonald Trump.

The Swet Shop Boys' songs are often situated in in-between places such as airports, where people are oftensubordinated to dehumanizing and impersonal political protocols. The title itself refers to Kashmir, an intensely contested region squeezed between India and Pakistan, and repeatedly deprived of its right to self-determination.The comprising songs are regularly punctuated with sarcastic and pithy punch lines, like this one from "T5":"TSA always wanna burst my bubble. I always get a random check when I rock the stubble."

DW recently sat down with the boys before their first performance in Germany to chat aboutrap,politics,identity, satire, modern anxietiesand the perceived image of "the good migrant."

DW: Rap music seems to holda lot of resonance with minorities in Europe and the US. What are the points of contact between the two? What drew you to rap music?

Riz: I guess it is a politicizing and mobilizing art form for working-class people of color around the world. In our song "Half Mogul, Half Mowgli," I talk about how, growing up, black rappers were my only heroes. For me, Tupac was a true "paki," in the sense that his music provided a template for the ethnic and socio-economic insider/outsider - someone who has built the country, is central to forming it and making it relevant today, but somehow feels unwanted.

Heems: Rap and basketball were unavoidable in my neighborhood in Queens, New York. There weren't many other affordable options available - I mean, instruments can cost a lot of money. Rap is an accessible medium. It is about making the most of what you have, and demanding a seat at the table, demanding that your voice be heard. I saw a lot of that in my parents' immigration stories. It was the closest thing to me that spoke about what I was going through and my experiences.

The kids I grew up with didn't read books. They liked music, and particularly rap. So, it was about explaining the story from within the community, for the community, and not necessarily as an exploit out of it.

Also, being Punjabi meant that drums, poetry and ostentatiousness were already in my blood. So, rap seemed like an appropriate avenue for my personality.

Riz MC is also a successful actor

The British elections are coming up. Do you have any endorsements?

Heems: Yeah, vote [Jeremy] Corbyn.

Riz: Yeah, given the choice, I would go with Corbyn...

Heems: You are given a choice. That is literally what it is. [laughs]

Riz: Well, are we really given a choice? In a first-past-the-post-electoral-system, are we really given a choice?

The issue of migration has been at the center of contemporary political debates. What do you think constitutes theanxiety around migration?

Redinho: If there is a lot of uncertainty about the future, then you look for things that have already been established, conceptually or whatever. I think people sense a shift, like we are going into some unknown chapter of human evolution. In times of uncertainty, people gravitate towards rigid, polarized ideologies. But humans have survived and thrived by collaborating cross culturally.

I think our music reflects the latter. I try to mix as many incongruous elements as possible - the more seemingly disparate the better.

Heems: I think confusion comes from the collapse of things. And what we are seeing is the collapse of white skin as a safety net. And that scares people. White skin used to be all the insurance you needed and now progressivism is becoming more diverse and visible, so we see a backlash. People turn on the TV, and they see more ethnic minorities, LGBT people, and they see the playing field being leveled, and it's reactionary to go against that.

Your music is a bold and humorous response to the embrace of extremism in mainstream politics. What role does humor play in your music?

Heems: Humor gives us a more light-hearted way to talk about things that are painful. So it is a form of self-care. Rap is part of the African-American tradition of poetry, as simple as Langston Hughes talking about "laughing to keep them from crying." I guess I'd rather laugh than cry.

Riz: For me, humor is about Trojan-horsing some humanity into polarizing debates, and saying things in accessible ways. You remember things that make you feel good. So, if I can make you feel good while telling you some tragic truths, you are more likely to remember them and care.

And I guess there is something British about mixing cynicism with humor. I am not forcing humor on my songs. I feel like the world is genuinely absurd. When you get some perspective on it, you think, "Look what this species is doing to itself" - it is hilarious! I mean, look who the president [of the US] is! Look at Brexit! There is inherent comedy in our self destruction! [laughs]

Heems: Absurdism is perhaps the most appropriate language for the times we are living in.

The Swet Shop Boys released their debut album, "Cashmere" in 2016

Growing up in the post-migrant communities in the UK and US, what did Pakistan and India mean to you?

Riz: The first time I went to Pakistan, I was 15 and I didn't feel like I fit in. I mean I thought I spoke the language well, but people kept saying I had an accent.I remember as teenagers we would go up and down Southall Broadway in London (a mainly South-Asian district), chanting "Pakistan, Pakistan," and when I finally went there, I thought, "What? This place? I have nothing in common with these people!" Then you realize you don't necessarily belong anywhere, but maybe you can make your own space.

People often expect post-migrant minorities to express gratitude over criticism. You guys are not timid about the way you express your opinions. What do you think about the perceived image of the "good migrant"?

Riz:I am born and raised in London, so I don't have the same attitude about these things compared to someone who might have had to flee a war zone. But I think, yes, there should be gratitude when some of the Western countries take refugees in, while a lot of Muslim countries do not. There is a lot to be proud of in our societies. But being part of a society means having a voice in that society. And when a suffocating gratitude is expected from migrants, it undermines the work needed to bolster inclusion. We need to include people's voices, not just their bodies.

See the original post here:

Swet Shop Boys: Why white skin is no longer a safety net - Deutsche Welle

PDP misled people on power projects, AFSPA, Art 370: Omar – Rising Kashmir Daily English Newspaper (press release)

Says GoI created political vacuum by failing youth reach out Farooq told Modi to talk to Pak, Hurriyat; stop arrests and pellet gun use

Opposition National Conference Working President and former chief minister, Omar Abdullah Tuesday said the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) misled people about the return of power projects, revocation of Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) and safeguarding of Article 370. They misled people saying they would ensure the return of power projects to the State, revocation of AFSPA, and safeguarding of Article 370 and promised employment to the unemployed but failed, Omar said addressing Youth National Conference (YNC) activists and office bearers at NCs Nawai Subha headquarters in in Srinagar. He said it was astonishing too see that while the government talks a lot about its Agenda of Alliance, the common minimum programme of the PDP and its alliance partner Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), it had made no progress in its implementation in three years. Questioning PDPs intent, the former CM quoted the Union Power Minister as saying clearly that GoI did not wish to return any power project to the State. He said the confrontational approach and PDP-led governments oppressive policy was choking Kashmiri youth and held Government of India (GoI) responsible for creating political vacuum by failing to reach out to them. Unfortunately New Delhi failed to reach out and build bridges of reconciliation and peace with our youth, creating political vacuum, Omar said. He said Kashmiri youth were picking guns and stones due to the due to the policies of the present government and oppression meted out to them. I have been in politics for past 20 years now but never did I see a student of Womens College, M A Road, throwing stones and kicking police vehicles, the former CM said. It all happened due to the atrocities committed on the students in Government Degree College Pulwama. He said there was no place from north Kashmir to south Kashmir where government had not closed down schools as students were angry because their loved ones had been hit by pellets or meted with repression. If the government does not stop its oppressive tactics, it will be swept aside by the movement of the youth, Omar said. Stressing that the problem for the people of Kashmir was that the incumbent CM was in complete knowhow of what was happening on the ground, he said but Mehbooba chooses not to do anything for them as she was only executing GoIs agenda. That agenda was decided by the Muftis in Amit Shahs home, the NC Working President said. Talking about the meeting of his father and NC President, Farooq Abdullah with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the he said the PM had invited the three-time CM and sought suggestions on how the situation could be improved in the State. Farooq sahab clearly told him that GoI needed to engage in a process of dialogue on Kashmir by engaging with both Pakistan as well as the Hurriyat besides ending the spate of arrests and use of pellet guns and other oppressive tactics, Omar said. He said Mehbooba Mufti had learnt a lesson at SKICC when women, she had promised jobs, turned hostile at the event after coming to know that they were only being used as an audience. BLIND, DEAF AND DUMB GOVT Speaking on the occasion, NC General Secretary and senior leader, Ali Muhammad Sagar termed the Mehbooba Mufti led government as blind, deaf and dumb. He said the government was conducting experimentation on Kashmiri youth by using Kashmir as a lab for its repressive policies. Sagar said NC does not want or never demanded toppling of Mehbooba-led government but always played the role of good opposition for the benefit of the people. NC Provisional President, Kashmir, Nasir Aslam Wani said the government had failed on all front but its performance on human rights front had been pathetic. Earlier, addressing the youth convention, YNC Provincial President, Salman Ali Sagar said YNC would continue its outreach programmes across the length and width of Kashmir. Salman said he was encouraged by the overwhelming response of the youth to the partys political mission and programmes and praised Omar Abdullahs leadership for empowering youth to be a part of change. YNC Senior Vice Presidents Imran Nabi Dar and Younis Mubarak Gul also addressed the youth convention. Various party leaders and office bearers including Muhammad Sayeed Akhoon, Showkat Ahmed Mir, Mushtaq Ahmed Guru, Iqbal Qasba also attended the convention besides YNC leaders Mudassir Shahmiri, Ahsan Pardesi, Muhammad Saleem Akhoon, Nilofer Masood, Salman Mattoo, Irfan Zehgeer, Mushtaq Mir, Abid Wani, Abdul Hameed, Javaid Bhat and Asif Zargar.

Read the original post:

PDP misled people on power projects, AFSPA, Art 370: Omar - Rising Kashmir Daily English Newspaper (press release)

A Half-Century of Oppression – Consortium News

Israels right-wing governments bear the greatest guilt for the last half-century of oppressing the Palestinians but the divided and ineffectual opposition has played its part, too, says Alon Ben-Meir.

By Alon Ben-Meir

On June 5, Israel reaches the grim milestone of 50 years of occupation of the West Bank. Many Israelis have become complacent and succumbed to the governments argument that the continuing occupation is necessary to safeguard Israels national security.

Others are lamenting the day, as they view the occupation not only as a gross violation of Palestinian human rights, but a real menace to Israels democratic nature and Jewish national character.

Whereas right-wing Israeli governments have maintained the occupation by any means available, including the use of force, the Israeli opposition parties from the left and center have failed miserably over many years to advance a unified political platform to end the occupation and resolve the conflict based on a two-state solution.

With every passing day, it is becoming increasingly difficult to establish a Palestinian state with a contiguous land mass, which is a result of legalizing illegal settlements and building new and expanding existing ones. This settlement activity has changed the demographic composition of Israeli Jews and Palestinians inside the West Bank.

Should this trend continue for another ten years, it is estimated that the number of Jews living in the West Bank and East Jerusalem will grow from the current 650,000 to one million, creating irreversible facts on the ground that will render the two-state solution inviolable.

Successive right-wing Israeli governments, especially the current one led by Benjamin Netanyahu, have never committed to a two-state solution. Instead, they have determined to manage the occupation by the use of force and intimidation while forcing the Palestinians to live in self-governing cantons and allowing them to manage their own internal affairs as long as they do not pose a security threat.

This dangerous development was largely made possible by two factors: first is the Israeli political system, which encourages the proliferation of parties with various political orientations. On average, there are 12-15 political parties that garner the minimum threshold of 3.25 percent of the votes to be elected. As a result, every Israeli government since the inception of the state is a coalition government consisting of several parties, which together enjoy the backing of a majority in the Knesset. The second is the fact that past and current opposition parties from the center and left have been unwilling to form a coalition government with a united platform to end the occupation.

One of the main reasons behind this discord between the parties is not as much their ideological difference but the blind personal ambition of party leaders including Yair Lapid of Yesh Atid, Isaac Herzog of the Zionist Union (along with Tzipi Livni), and others to become prime minister, as they view themselves as the most qualified to lead the country.

Thus, the political field was left open for Netanyahu and his cohorts to expand the settlements, forcefully claiming that the Jews have a historic and biblical right to the entire Land of Israel that God bequeathed to them, and that Israel has every right to build anywhere in Judea and Samaria. Although Netanyahu continues to assert that he supports a two-state solution, he never provided a convincing argument as to how he would square the creation of a Palestinian state with Israels claims to the same land and its continued building of settlements where the Palestinians are supposed to establish their own state.

To explain the rationale behind this contradiction, however, he argues that Israels concerns over security and the Palestinians long-term objective to destroy the state compels Israel to maintain its control over the entire territory by whatever intrusive security measures necessary. Moreover, several members of the Netanyahu government openly call for the annexation of much of the West Bank, as from their perspective there must never be a Palestinian state.

Pariah State

The dire consequences of continuing the occupation are extremely damaging to Israels character and national security. Other than the intense and growing opposition of the international community, Israels loss of its moral compass and continued resistance to the creation of a Palestinian state will be to its detriment. Israel is increasingly becoming a pariah state, deprived of peace with the Arab world and gradually losing its very reason to exist as a Jewish state that ironically Netanyahu and the extreme right insist on characterizing it as such.

Finally, the continuing occupation will inevitably intensify the conflict, which will become ever more ferocious as the Palestinians prospect of establishing a state of their own fades away.

Israels future as a democratic and Jewish state rests on the shoulders of the opposition parties. They must think of what will happen if the current or future right-of-center governments continue with the present policy and maintain the occupation for another 10 years or more.

They must remember that the fate of the country is in their hands. They must set their personal ambitions aside and put the future security and wellbeing of the state first. They must produce a unified political program to end the occupation and explain to the public the disastrous consequences Israel will face unless the occupation comes to an end.

As a single party with unity of purpose, they can successfully challenge the Netanyahu government in the next election. They should learn from 70 years of experience that no political party has been able to garner a majority of the electorate to form a government on its own, but together they can mobilize the public behind the noble cause of unshackling Israel from the self-degrading occupation.

If they fail, they too will be blamed for having betrayed the nation and sacrificed a millennium-old dream of a Jewish state a state recognized not only because of its unprecedented achievements, but for its high moral standing and the realization that its future as an independent, free, and secure state depends on allowing the Palestinians to enjoy the same rights.

Dr. Alon Ben-Meir is a professor of international relations at the Center for Global Affairs at NYU. He teaches courses on international negotiation and Middle Eastern studies. alon@alonben-meir.com Web: http://www.alonben-meir.com

Read more from the original source:

A Half-Century of Oppression - Consortium News

World must oppose Ethiopian government-sanctioned mass killings – Green Left Weekly

Government-sanctioned mass killings in Gambella in Ethiopia by South Sudanese forces, which decimated the Anuak Tribe in January last year, is a clear example of the second wave of atrocities of the maleficient rulers towards the forgotten people of the African Horn.

Armed with modern weapons, the South Sudanese Nuers settled as refugees and took pride in forcibly and permanently disarming any Anuak civilian who dared to rise up. This region has come to prominence with various calls for the international community to take action again the genocidal acts of the Ethiopian government against its own people.

It is expected that crimes against peoples can be dealt with by fair law enforcement, and administered by fair judicial systems. But in Ethiopia, the judiciary lacks independence in any politically related cases.

Ethiopian courts refuse to investigate incidents of alleged torture, information dissemination is hindered with false media reports, and international agencies are blocked from investigating and detailing government oppression of civilians.

Government officials and party loyalists obtain preferential access to jobs, land and finances. The corruption of this Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) government, over which the Tigrayan People's Liberation Frontis the main component, has not been curtailed over its years in power. Rather it has bulldozed through the human rights of the people who slave away for subsistence.

In 2003, protests by the Amhara, the Oromia and the Gambella peoples aimed to stop native lands from being taken over. With their arms raised to signify peaceful protest, they were violently repressed.

Whole tribes in large parts of Ethiopia have faced destruction at the hands of a government entrusted to protect them. The nations wealth has been looted amid a bleak future of greater poverty and economic starvation for already suffering peoples. How much longer can people be subjected to the personal greed of the EPRDF in collaboration with the Gulf state countries?

The pride and life of Ethiopia must be preserved. The international community must take notice of the atrocities in Ethiopia and label them for what they are: genocide.

Unfortunately, for its own cynical interests, the US government has supported the EPRDF regime. When then-president Barack Obama visited Ethiopia last year, he congratulated the government on its re-election while it jails civil rights activists.

Ethiopia needs a combined effort by international agencies to investigate these genocidal acts, and hold the ruling party accountable and responsible. Bona-fide democratic processes must return.

Read this article:

World must oppose Ethiopian government-sanctioned mass killings - Green Left Weekly

Bill Donohue’s Open Letter to Justin Trudeau: Please Apologize to Canadian Victims Now – CNSNews.com

Bill Donohue's Open Letter to Justin Trudeau: Please Apologize to Canadian Victims Now
CNSNews.com
Your interest in having Pope Francis apologize for the Catholic Church's mistreatment of indigenous peoples is commendable, but it would take on greater meaning if you were to offer a sincere apology for the Canadian government's oppression of Indians, ...

View post:

Bill Donohue's Open Letter to Justin Trudeau: Please Apologize to Canadian Victims Now - CNSNews.com

War on Drugs, The Unheard Voices | ABS-CBN News

'They didn't give my husband chance to air his side'

COMING home from work one day in July 2016 in Southville Niugan in Cabuyao City, Laguna, she was met by her son who anxiously told her: Mama, si Papa sumakay ng kotse.

It would not have worried her except that several hours had passed and her husband Ricardo had not come home. In an earlier text to his brother, Ricardo said he left for a while to accompany someone for an errand.

She looked around for her husband all night until dawn. With her brother-in-law, she went to police stations and funeral homes but no one had seen her 42-year-old husband.

She returned home to attend to their five children.

Later in the afternoon, her brother-in-law received a text from a funeral service in Cabuyao: A man was found dead in a nearby barangay and the body had been brought to another funeral home in Calamba.

It was Ricardo, the most tragic news she ever heard in her life. Her husband is dead. He was slain.

Until now, Gina does not know what really happened to Ricardo. Who killed him--and why?

Some people said they saw an unmarked grey sedan pick up Ricardo from their house. There were two men in the car. One of them was a known police asset nicknamed Elvis.

Another witness told her Ricardo was seen running along the docks before he was shot dead by policemen no less.

Later in the afternoon, her brother-in-law received a text from a funeral service in Cabuyao: A man was found dead in a nearby barangay and the body had been brought to another funeral home in Calamba.

The funeral issued a death certificate showing Ricardo suffered gunshot wounds on his trunk. But he also had wounds in his right thigh, upper abdomen, chest, and nape, his brother said.

A police report later showed the police tried to arrest Ricardo in a buy-bust operation, but he resisted arrest, forcing the police to shoot him. He died at once.

According to a barangay official, Ricardo had been involved in drugs. He had no permanent job.

His wife denied the allegations, saying he had tried his best to earn by taking jobs as a porter, laborer and construction worker. Too bad, Ricardo was no longer around to say his piece, she said. - Juni Gonzales, Rachel Cantuba, John de Lima

HE WAS last seen alive with a team of policemen one afternoon in July in front of his house in Lupang Arenda in Sta. Ana, Taytay, Rizal; his hands behind his back, apparently tied or in handcuffs. He died several hours later inside the house.

His family and neighbors said Rio Awa, or Dodong as he was fondly called, was involved in illegal drug activities and that he owned a gun to protect himself.

But must his life end this way? His sister Marianne asked, recalling how his 28-year-old brother lived and he died.

Marianne said Dodong, a father of a four-year-old boy, was a construction worker but he had to stop due to an operation. In deep predicament to make both ends meet, he sold prohibited drugs.

The day he died, he was at home, but in police custody, the sister said. Police accosted him and brought him back to his house.

Curious, the neighbors gathered around near his house. More men came, some in police uniform and some in civilian clothes. The law enforcers told all the neighbors to stay in their houses and away from harms way.

A few minutes later, the neighbors heard gunshots.

A police official reported later that Dodong was a suspected drug pusher. There was a drug buy-bust operation, and Dodong attempted to shoot the poseur buyer but he missed, the official said.

That was when the law enforcers fired back, killing him instantly.

"Paano yun nanlaban eh kitang kita namin dito nakaposas? a neighbor asked.

Dodongs wife is pregnant with their second child. Ana Maria Reyes, Jhoanna Ballaran

CHARLENE waited for her mother and stepfather Edgar who were coming to her place on Geronimo Street in Sampaloc, Manila for a visit one afternoon in July. He had promised her to set-up an internet shop she would name Piso Net to earn extra income for the family.

He showed up and while in Sampaloc, Edgar tried to fix his motorbike when two policemen approached him and asked why he was half naked. The two proceeded to search him but did not find any illegal drugs or weapons.

Not content, they brought Edgar to the Lacson Police Community Precinct.

Charlene and her mother followed Edgar to the precinct to speak with the arresting officers. She was surprised when she found out they wanted to slap him with possession of illegal drugs and a grenade.

The police told mother and daughter to go home and come back with food and clothes for him.

It was to be the last time they would see Edgar alive.

Said Charlene: Nandun siya sa ano sa upuan, nakita ko, nakaganyan, may posas siya.

They went back to the precinct and spoke with the police as to how much it would take for Edgar to get his freedom backthe amount ranged first from P120,000 and later, with the help of the barangay chairman, to P10,000. They did not allow them to see him.

Wala namang damit, wala namang may nakuha. Sabi kasi ang kaso niya daw kuno shabu atsaka granada. Ang ano daw doon P120,000 ang dapat piyansa doon, she said.

Sabi ko wala naman po kaming ganoong pera tapos isa pa, wala naman pong nakuha dyan na ganyan, shabu atsaka granada. Huling nakahubad lang naman, she added.

But the police refused to accept P10,000 only. And so, they went back home to look for more money and other things that they could sell to the pawnshop.

When they came back, they found a patrol car parked in front of the Ospital ng Tondo, just across the barangay hall. They turned red and fidgety.

Edgar was dead, they were told.

According to a police report, his stepfather was released from his handcuffs when he was granted permission to go to the bathroom. He reportedly grabbed the service gun of his police escort, causing a commotion, which prompted another police to shoot him. The report said the police found two sachets of shabu from him.

The barangay chairman said that Edgar was not among the drug users and pushers who surrendered during the implementation of the Opla Tokhang because he was not a resident of the barangay.

Charlene said his stepfather was a full-time barangay tanod in Sucat and that he was not involved in illegal drug activities. Juni Gonzales

ON THE NIGHT of June 14, Ronilo talked to his partner, Jenny about his plan on coming clean to the police with his involvement to illegal drugs.

Before leaving the house, Jenny checked Ronilos pockets because she was asking him for money to buy some food for their children. She got nothing.

The following day, Jenny heard the news that Ronilo was killed in a vacant lot just few blocks from their house in Barangay Biclatan, General Trias in Cavite. He suffered not less than 10 gunshots including one in the head, she was told.

A neighbor said Ronilo was last seen talking to some people in the same vacant lot where he was killed.

A police report said the General Trias City Anti-Illegal Drugs Special Operations Task Group had conducted a drug buy-bust operation targeting Ronilo. He was listed as top drug personality in General Trias City and was also previously arrested for drugs.

The police report said that Ronilo exchanged fire with the operatives and was thus fired upon. He was brought to a nearby hospital but was declared dead on arrival.

Jenny said that Ronilo was indeed arrested in 2015. He was released on bail after three months. Free as a bird, he continued his illegal activities, she said.

Noong nakita namin na may barka-barkada at ginagabi siya lagi, sabi ko baka nagddrugs ka na naman, iwasan mo. Maawa ka na lang sa amin ng anak mo kung ayaw mong magbago, she recalled telling him.

In December 2015, Jenny said she kicked him out of the house because she was worried about their safety since Ronilo wouldnt stop his illegal activities.

He had been invited to surrender at the barangay but he refused because he believed that the people in the barangay were also involved to illegal drugs.

Ronilo left behind six children aged 18, 17, 15, 11, 10, and five. Ana Maria Reyes

THEY suddenly barged into the house of Napoleon Miras Ay-Ay, shouting and ordering everyone to lie face down in Barangay Antipona in Bocaue, Bulacan.

Operatives of the Bocaue police and PDEA were looking for 27-year-old Napoleon, or Nono, a suspected seller of prohibited drugs. His house was one of the many shanties in the cavernous compound in the barangay.

Out of fear, Nonos 52-year-old mother Edeltruda, who was standing by the entrance, stepped out and into a neighbors house.

Nonos father Eustaquio, 60, told his son to surrender to the police. Nono instead ducked himself at a corner of the house by the river.

Nagtatago na siya diyan e, Eustaquio said. Sabi ko tara na kako anak, sumama ka na kako sa kanila. Edi nandito ako, inakay ko siya dito."

Eustaquio begged the police not to hurt Nono because he was only driving for the actual pusher, Eunice Zapra Ripia who had been arrested by the police.

Service lang siya talaga e, he said. Service lang siya sa tricycle. Inuupa siya noong babae na P300 kada biyahe.

The police saw Nono and brought him upstairs. Within a couple of minutes, they heard gunshots. When the police went down, they broke the news: Nono was dead.

"Sabi ko, Sir kako, ano na po nangyari sa kay Nono ko? Eustaquio asked. Nandoon eka, nanlaban e, patay na.

But the parents said that Nono didnt resist arrest.

Paano lalaban ang anak ko e dito pa lang e putlang putla na yung anak ko, Eustaquio said.

According to a report, police recovered one .38-caliber revolver and sachets containing shabu from the house.

Edeltruda said her son didnt have a gun. Wala po 'yon! Pinalabas lang may .38. Pagkain nga lang namin tingnan mo naman ang itsura, ito ba makakabili ng .38 ang anak ko? she said.

Edeltruda said it would have been better if Nono were just imprisoned.

Bakit kasi pinatay nila? Sana kinulong na lang,, madadalaw ko yung anak ko," she said.

Nonos death left the family devastated. Rizza Cervantes

DERNLY BATALAN, a 27-year-old part-time construction worker, had to call his engineer he couldnt report for work one morning in July. He was at home in Barangay Western Bicutan in Taguig City. He was not feeling well.

By the time he was ready for lunch, some Taguig police and barangay officers arrived to conduct Oplan Tokhang, catching Batalan and his family by surprise.

"Dapa, dapa, dapa! Pulis to!" Dernlys sister recalled hearing the operatives shouting. In no time, they were kicking Dernlys door.

It was clear: They were after him. Dernly had a previous brush with the law. Last year, he was released from a three-year detention for possession of marijuana.

The police ordered everybody in the neighborhood to close their doors and windows to keep them out of harms way. The suspect might fire at the operatives, the neighbors were told.

Standing next door watching, Dernlys sister said she heard her brother shouting for help: "Uncle, Uncle, tulungan nyo ako!"

But the police didnt listen to him, she said.

Di ba po pag sinabing tulong di naman nanlalaban yun e? Tsaka parang umiiyak si kuya noon. Alam nyo naman po yung boses ng umiiyak habang humihingi ng tulong, she said.

After three gunshots, she said she overheard the police talking about checking Dernlys eyes, probably to check if her brother was dead. He was. His body suffered two gunshot wounds: two in his trunk and another in the head.

[Tapos] parang may tinawagan silayun palapatay na pala.

A police report later said the operatives had recovered .45-caliber Colt MK IV, an empty magazine of caliber .45, empty shells of .45 and 9mm caliber, an improvised shotgun or sumpak loaded with 12 gauge live ammunition, and four sachets of suspected shabu.

Dernlys sister said the alleged pieces of evidence found were questionable. But she said her brother did make a sumpak.

Eto po ang mali dun: kaliwete po yung kuya ko, kanan po nila nilagay yung baril, she said.

After the killing, she said authorities simply walked away without a word, except to say he was on the police watch list of men allegedly involved in drugs.

But they were not shown of any document, she said. Not even a warrant.

Sa programang Oplan Tokhang ni Mayor Lani at ni Kapitan Supan Pinapasuko ang mga adik dito sa Taguig. Yun siguro hindi pinansin ni kuya. Pero hindi po doon mini-mention yung pangalan ni kuya. Hindi po!

Di po tama yung ginawa ng mga [pulis], she said. San po kayo nakakita ng nanlalaban pero humihingi ng tulong? she asked. Yssa Espaola

DERNLY BATALAN, a 27-year-old part-time construction worker, had to call his engineer he couldnt report for work one morning in July. He was at home in Barangay Western Bicutan in Taguig City. He was not feeling well.

By the time he was ready for lunch, some Taguig police and barangay officers arrived to conduct Oplan Tokhang, catching Batalan and his family by surprise.

"Dapa, dapa, dapa! Pulis to!" Dernlys sister recalled hearing the operatives shouting. In no time, they were kicking Dernlys door.

It was clear: They were after him. Dernly had a previous brush with the law. Last year, he was released from a three-year detention for possession of marijuana.

The police ordered everybody in the neighborhood to close their doors and windows to keep them out of harms way. The suspect might fire at the operatives, the neighbors were told.

Standing next door watching, Dernlys sister said she heard her brother shouting for help: "Uncle, Uncle, tulungan nyo ako!"

But the police didnt listen to him, she said.

Di ba po pag sinabing tulong di naman nanlalaban yun e? Tsaka parang umiiyak si kuya noon. Alam nyo naman po yung boses ng umiiyak habang humihingi ng tulong, she said.

After three gunshots, she said she overheard the police talking about checking Dernlys eyes, probably to check if her brother was dead. He was. His body suffered two gunshot wounds: two in his trunk and another in the head.

[Tapos] parang may tinawagan silayun palapatay na pala.

A police report later said the operatives had recovered .45-caliber Colt MK IV, an empty magazine of caliber .45, empty shells of .45 and 9mm caliber, an improvised shotgun or sumpak loaded with 12 gauge live ammunition, and four sachets of suspected shabu.

Dernlys sister said the alleged pieces of evidence found were questionable. But she said her brother did make a sumpak.

Eto po ang mali dun: kaliwete po yung kuya ko, kanan po nila nilagay yung baril, she said.

After the killing, she said authorities simply walked away without a word, except to say he was on the police watch list of men allegedly involved in drugs.

Here is the original post:

War on Drugs, The Unheard Voices | ABS-CBN News

Watch the War on Drugs Perform Grand New Song ‘Holding On’ on ‘Colbert’ – RollingStone.com

The War on Drugs performed their chiming new single "Holding On" Monday on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.

Though the band recorded as a sextet for upcoming LP A Deeper Understanding, the line-up swelled to a nine-piece unit forColbert. Singer-guitarist Adam Granduciel was backed by three keyboardists, three guitarists, a bassist and drummer, forming a textured, grandiose wall of sound full of bell-like tones and slide-guitar fills.

A Deeper Understanding, described in a statement as a "band record," is out August 25th. The 10-track LP also features "Thinking of a Place," the psychedelic, 11-minute track previously issued as a 12-inch vinyl single for Record Store Day.

The War on Drugs will launch a major tour this fall. The band will kick of a North American leg on September 18th, followed by a European trek in November.

Sign up for our newsletter to receive breaking news directly in your inbox.

Read the original post:

Watch the War on Drugs Perform Grand New Song 'Holding On' on 'Colbert' - RollingStone.com

Four players publish column aimed at revived war on drugs – NBCSports.com

Getty Images

A quartet of NFL players who have devoted time and effort to addressing concerns regarding the criminal justice system have written a column that advocates against what could be a renewed war on drugs.

The effort from Malcolm Jenkins, Anquan Boldin, Glover Quin, and Johnson Bademosi, posted at CNN.com, is aimed at a recent directive from Attorney General Jeff Sessions to require prosecutors to seek the strongest possible sentences in all situation, including drug offenses.

[W]e believe our justice system is broken, they write. We believe America is locking the wrong people up for the wrong reasons for too long. We believe treatment and rehabilitation are often better alternatives to prison. And we believe that for those who do deserve prison time, there should also be second chances.

The four players have spent time in D.C., meeting with members of Congress in order to effect change.

We were so gratified to see that most of the elected officials we met in Washington on the right and on the left believe this, too, they explain. In fact, it seems criminal justice reform may be the only issue where members of both parties agree.

That would be significant, given the current volume and tone of the discourse in Washington.

We are in this for the long haul, the players say. We know these problems wont be solved in a few weeks or months, but we are committed to using our voices to do whatever we can to truly make our neighborhoods safer.

The full article can be seen here. Jenkins, Boldin, Quin, and Bademosi deserve credit for addressing a serious problem in a thoughtful way and attempting to identify solutions for solving it.

Read the original post:

Four players publish column aimed at revived war on drugs - NBCSports.com

War on Drugs is costing thousands of lives – LA Daily News

While American foreign policy has for years fixated on the conflict in Syria and the Middle East, just across the border in Mexico and throughout Central America tens of thousands of people lost their lives last year because of the conflict between drug cartels competing to deliver illicit drugs into the United States.

According to a recent report from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, whereas approximately 50,000 lives were lost in Syria last year, approximately 39,000 were killed in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, much of which is attributable to drug-war violence.

Mexicos homicide total of 23,000 for 2016 is second only to Syrias, and is only the latest development in a conflict which stretches back to 2006, when President Felipe Calderon deployed the military to combat drug cartels.

Although the exact number of people killed because of the drug war in Mexico is unlikely to ever be known, a recent report from the Congressional Research Service cited estimates from 80,000 to more than 100,000 in that country alone.

The cause of this violence is obvious, and it is a direct, predictable consequence of our failed policy of drug prohibition. In the near-half century since President Richard Nixon declared a war on drugs, hundreds of thousands of Latin Americans have been killed in conflicts fueled by a lucrative illicit drug trade made possible by our prohibition of drugs.

This is an insight a certain New York developer possessed 27 years ago. Were losing badly the war on drugs, Donald Trump said in 1990. You have to legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars.

While Trump may have since lost this insight, the fact remains that the war on drugs does more harm than drugs themselves.

Last year, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos used his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech to call for a rethink of the drug war, which contributed to decades of conflict in Colombia that killed hundreds of thousands.

Rather than squander more lives and resources fighting a War on Drugs that cannot be won including in our inner cities the United States must recognize the futility and harm of its drug policies.

Advertisement

See original here:

War on Drugs is costing thousands of lives - LA Daily News

Hear ‘Holding On,’ The New Song By The War On Drugs : All Songs … – NPR

The War On Drugs Dustin Condren hide caption

The War On Drugs will release A Deeper Understanding, its fourth full-length, late this summer, coming three years after the band's previous album, Lost In The Dream.

In announcing A Deeper Understanding today the band has shared a new single from the record, "Holding On," a pulsing jam that sounds deeply inspired by '80s-era Bruce Springsteen, with glockenspiel chimes set against gritty guitars and synths. It's the second track the band has shared from the upcoming album, after the release in April of a moody, 11-minute opus called "Thinking Of A Place."

A Deeper Understanding is out Aug. 25 on Atlantic Records. Full track listing below:

1. Up All Night 2. Pain 3. Holding On 4. Strangest Thing 5. Knocked Down 6. Nothing To Find 7. Thinking of a Place 8. In Chains 9. Clean Living 10. You Don't Have To Go

Link:

Hear 'Holding On,' The New Song By The War On Drugs : All Songs ... - NPR

State vows to launch war on drugs – The Telegraph – Calcutta Telegraph

The Telegraph report published on June 3

Alarmed by the jump in seizures of narcotics in Bihar post prohibition, the state government and central agencies are gearing up to combat the drugs menace on war footing.

Chief secretary Anjani Kumar Singh convened a high-level meeting on Saturday over the crisis, in which senior officers of the administration, the police and central agencies such as the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) and Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) participated.

"Based on recent seizures, six places have been identified from where drugs are distributed to other parts of the state," one of the senior officials present at the meeting said under cover of anonymity because he is not authorised to talk to the media. "All the agencies concerned have been asked to work in close coordination to break the backbone of the drug dealers at the point of supply."

The six places are Masarh in Bhojpur district, Gaya, Purnea, the Raghopur Diara region in Vaishali district, and Gopalganj and Raxaul in East Champaran.

The Telegraph had reported in its June 3 edition how seizures of narcotics such as ganja, charas and opium have gone through the roof after prohibition was imposed on the state.

"It's nothing to be surprised about," chief minister Nitish Kumar said on Monday, when asked about increased consumption of narcotics in dry Bihar.

Nitish said he had been continuously expressing his concern about it at public meetings since April 2016, and pointed out that de-addiction centres had been set up in all districts.

He underlined the need to spread awareness among people about the ill-effects of substance abuse, and also indicated an administrative crackdown on drugs.

"Those indulging in drug trafficking would be strongly dealt with. The chief secretary chaired a meeting with all enforcement agencies working in the state, including central government's DRI, Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) and others. State and central government agencies will work in close coordination to tackle the issue," Nitish said.

The NCB, the DRI, the state police and the state excise department will jointly crack the whip on the narcotics suppliers. All agencies that seize drugs are supposed to inform the NCB.

Jitendra Singh Gangwar, the inspector-general of police, economic offences unit, will be the nodal officer to whom the state police and the excise officials would provide details of seizures before they are passed on to the NCB.

"Seizure-related data is of prime importance for coordinating the efforts of the agencies working against drug dealers," explained a senior NCB official. "These data can help identify people engaged in this illegal business and help decipher their modus operandi."

Saturday's meeting decided on strict action against those running drug rackets in Bihar.

"All the participants unanimously agreed that nabbing the peddlers will not help much unless strict action, including legal action, is taken against the actual recipients of the drug consignments coming to Bihar," said the official who was present at the meeting. "Some of them have already been identified. The ultimate aim will be to hand over the cases to the Enforcement Directorate so that the ill-gotten assets of the drug mafia are seized."

The government has told excise and police officers to intensify checking of vehicles with out-of-state registration numbers.

"Most vehicles from which drugs have been seized bear registration numbers of other states," said the official.

The police and the excise officers have also been instructed to keep tabs on drug peddlers while carrying out operations to nab bootleggers.

See the article here:

State vows to launch war on drugs - The Telegraph - Calcutta Telegraph

VIDEO: The War On Drugs Perform ‘Holding On’ on LATE SHOW – Broadway World

On last night's LATE SHOW, music guest The War On Drugs performed 'Holding On' off their upcoming album 'A Deeper Understanding.' Watch the appearance below!

Stephen Colbert brings his signature satire and comedy to THE LATE SHOW with STEPHEN COLBERT, where he talks with an eclectic mix of guests about what is new and relevant in the worlds of politics, entertainment, business, music, technology and more.

Featuring bandleader Jon Batiste and his band Stay Human, the show is broadcast from the historic and newly renovated Ed Sullivan Theater. Stephen Colbert took over as host, executive producer and writer of THE LATE SHOW on September 8, 2015.

A multi-talented and respected host, writer, producer, satirist and comedian, Colbert is well-known for his previous late night show, "The Colbert Report," which concluded on Friday, Dec. 18, 2014. The program received wide-spread critical acclaim and earned two Peabody Awards and 29 Emmy Award nominations, including two Emmy wins for Outstanding Variety Series (2013, 2014) and four Emmy wins for Outstanding Writing for a Variety, Music or Comedy Program (2008, 2010, 2013, 2014). Prior to that, Colbert spent eight years as a correspondent on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" as an on-air personality and writer of news satire for the Emmy and Peabody Award-winning series.

Photo: Scott Kowalchyk/CBS

Read more here:

VIDEO: The War On Drugs Perform 'Holding On' on LATE SHOW - Broadway World

Legalized Gambling Would Fuel Another Rise For ESPN – Forbes


Forbes
Legalized Gambling Would Fuel Another Rise For ESPN
Forbes
ESPN has a problem. It's shedding subscribers fast. The ongoing trend soured an otherwise positive first quarter for parent Disney, whose theme parks and movie division performed exceedingly well. Of course, this is hardly news. The network's problems ...

See original here:

Legalized Gambling Would Fuel Another Rise For ESPN - Forbes

Tories have ‘shameful record’ on FOBT gambling, says Labour – The Guardian

A FOBT gambling machine in a Paddy Power betting shop in east London. Photograph: David Levene/the Guardian

The Labour party has accused the government of failing to act on fixed-odds betting terminals, after data showed that gamblers losses are largest in deprived areas and opposition-held constituencies.

A breakdown of estimated losses by parliamentary constituency shows that areas where voters chose Labour in the 2015 election make up eight of the top 10 most affected. Of 62 constituencies where gamblers lost more than 5m in 2015-16, 47 are Labour, five are Scottish National party areas and 10 are Conservative.

Both Labour and the Liberal Democrats have promised in their general election manifestos to cut the maximum stake on FOBTs from 100 to 2. The Conservative manifesto did not address the issue and the government has so far resisted calls for stake reduction, pending a review due to be published this summer.

The data also shows a greater concentration of betting shops in areas with higher rates of poverty, fuelling existing concerns that bookmakers are clustering their shops in deprived areas.

Labours deputy leader, Tom Watson, said: Theresa Mays government has repeatedly failed to act on FOBTs, despite being presented with evidence they are highly addictive and target people who struggle to control their gambling.

Local councils see the damage FOBTs cause in communities up and down the country but the Tories have simply refused to talk about how to tackle this problem. Its a shameful record of inaction which confirms the Tories will always place corporate interests ahead of people.

Despite the prominence of Labour constituencies in the top 10, the highest losses were recorded in a Conservative seat, the Cities of London and Westminster, where gamblers lost 31m in 120 bookmakers, an average of more than 250,000 per shop.

The data, which shows that nine of the top 10 biggest losses are in London constituencies, may be skewed by the high number of people who do not live in those areas but pass through for work and tourism. Outside London, the worst affected constituency was Glasgow Central, where gamblers lost 10m on FOBTs in 66 betting shops, followed by Liverpool Riverside, where bookies took 8.1m.

And the constituencies outside London that suffered the biggest losses are also dominated by Labour and the SNP. Of the 15 where FOBTs took more than 5m, nine are Labour, five are SNP and one is Conservative.

While there is no official data on losses by constituency, the estimates were compiled by consultancy Landman Economics on behalf of the Campaign for Fairer Gambling, by cross-referencing data released by the Gambling Commission and the Responsible Gambling Trust.

The statistics used to calculate the estimates include the number of bookmakers in local authority areas and the average losses in each region of the UK. The total estimated figure of 1.7bn for all constituencies tallies with the amount the Gambling Commission said bookies took from FOBTs in the 2015-16 year.

The data also provide fresh evidence of clustering by bookmakers, which have been accused of targeting areas suffering from low wages, high unemployment and high rates of child poverty. Forty-three parliamentary constituencies have more than 30 betting shops, of which 74% have a higher-than-average claimant count for jobseekers allowance or universal credit. About two-thirds have an average weekly wage below the national median, while 79% report above-average child poverty rates.

A spokesperson for the Campaign for Fairer Gambling said: This research shows that bookmakers are targeting the most deprived parts of the country with a highly addictive gambling product. They circumvent the limit of four FOBTs per shop by opening multiple outlets, which leads to clustering. It is welcome that both Labour and the Liberal Democrats have committed to reducing the maximum stake to 2 in their manifestos.

If Theresa May really wants to help those who are just about managing then she will commit to the same.

Bookmakers rake in 1.8bn a year from FOBTs, according to figures released last month, more than half of their annual revenue.

Bookmakers have argued that there is no causal link between FOBTs and problem gambling, and that curbing the maximum amount that can be staked on the machines could cost jobs and deprive the exchequer of taxes.

Jim Mullen, the chief executive of betting firm Ladbrokes Coral, has said cutting the maximum stake could cost up to 20,000 jobs. But campaigners and rival segments of the gambling industry, which support greater curbs on FOBTs, have questioned the claims.

John White, the chief executive of amusement arcade trade body Bacta, said the warnings were scaremongering, designed to shore up a status quo that puts consumers at risk.

Landman Economics has previously said that FOBTs represent a net drain on the economy, despite the tax revenues they provide. The economic research consultancy said FOBTs have actually reduced HMRCs tax income by 1.3bn since 2008 because the money spent on them would be more productive if spent elsewhere.

Read the original post:

Tories have 'shameful record' on FOBT gambling, says Labour - The Guardian

Manila Casino Attacker Was a Gambling Addict, the Philippine Police Say – New York Times


New York Times
Manila Casino Attacker Was a Gambling Addict, the Philippine Police Say
New York Times
The police identified Mr. Carlos as the man seen in security videos of the attack, setting fires in the casino's gambling rooms and stealing more than $2 million worth of gambling chips. The videos were made public Saturday, but the assailant had not ...
Manila casino attack suspect was in debt, hooked on gambling, Philippine police sayCBS News
450 gambling addicts banned from casinosPhilippine Star
Philippine police say casino attacker was an indebted gamblerLos Angeles Times
Wall Street Journal (subscription) -RT -Inquirer.net -CNN International
all 681 news articles »

Originally posted here:

Manila Casino Attacker Was a Gambling Addict, the Philippine Police Say - New York Times

How Casinos, States Are Winning Big From Online Gambling – HuffPost

Casinos are struggling and are looking to their own online gambling sites for revenue.

The Pew Charitable Trusts

For the past few years, New Jersey casinos have been losing money like most of their customers consistently. But in the last six months, the popularity of casino-sponsored online betting has reversed the fortunes of Atlantic Citys gambling palaces, cheering both casino owners and state revenue officials.

New Jersey is one of only three states Nevada and Delaware are the others where in-state bettors can log on to websites run by casinos and gamble from the comfort of their couches, rather than going into a glitzy and noisy casino.

Gambling experts say casinos that sponsor their own online wagering are making a smart play for millennials, many of whom prefer online gambling. At least eight states (California, Hawaii, Illinois, Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania and West Virginia) are considering legalizing casino-run online wagering this year.

State-sanctioned, casino-sponsored online gambling is different from online gambling that originates offshore, which states cannot tax. It is also distinct from state-regulated daily fantasy sports sites like DraftKings and FanDuel, which generate taxes and fees for some states.

Chris Grove, a gambling industry consultant who runs the website PlayNJ.com, said online gambling is a key to the growth of casino revenue. Weve seen nearly every other form of commerce migrate to the internet how we shop, how we bank, how we listen to music, he said. It doesnt make sense that gambling would be an exception to that rule and the early results in New Jersey really drive that point home.

According to the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement, total casino gambling revenue was $763.5 million through April of this year, an increase of 1.7 percent compared to the same period last year. The casinos winnings from online gambling, however, were $80.1 million, up 29.5 percent from same period last year.

New Jersey legalized casino-sponsored online gambling in late 2013, but it took casinos some time to create the software to take advantage of the new law, as well as for gamblers to adapt. At first, some casinos only offered a game or two online. According to New Jersey officials, online gambling increased in late 2016 and early 2017, as evidenced by a spike in revenue. The state collected $3.1 million in taxes on online gambling in April, up 23 percent from $2.5 million in April 2016.

From 2007 to 2015, New Jersey casino revenue declined by an average of 7.6 percent annually. This year, thanks in part to the increasing popularity of online gambling, casino revenue is on track for a year-to-year increase for the first time since 2006.

Kerry Langan, spokeswoman for the New Jersey department, said internet gambling raises as much revenue by itself as a small free-standing casino would. Most of the projections Ive seen from gaming analysts are that its doing well and will continue to do well, she said.

In Nevada and Delaware the impact has been smaller. In Delaware, only three casinos sponsor online gambling, and it has generated revenue of about $200,000 a month. Total casino revenue in Delaware is about $50 million per month.

In Nevada only two casinos offer internet poker, the only online casino game the state allows. Mike Lawton, senior research analyst at the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said online poker revenue is wrapped into the control boards report on poker overall, so its difficult to determine whether online poker has been a huge hit. But online sports betting, also offered by casinos, has really taken off, increasing 5 percent in the first quarter of 2017 compared to the same period last year.

A lot of the reason for the sports book business taking off is people being able to do it on their phone. Its a huge convenience, he said, noting, We do everything else on our phones.

Every state that has legal gambling collects taxes or fees from it. There can be a tax on casinos revenue, hefty fees to procure a casino operating license, a tax on gamblers winnings, an entertainment tax on casinos or players, a tax on lottery locations, a tax on poker machines at bars or some combination of the levies. In general, casinos must pay gambling taxes in addition to corporate taxes.

Despite the online gambling spike in New Jersey and elsewhere, overall gambling tax revenue in the states is flat on average, according to Lucy Dadayan, senior research scientist at the Rockefeller Institute of Government.

In 17 states she studied, tax revenue from gambling declined by 0.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2016, compared to the same quarter of 2015. However, there was some growth in tax revenue in the first quarter of 2017, at 0.6 percent. A big part of the increase was the opening of a new casino in Maryland, she said.

The overall total tax revenues for casinos should be interpreted with caution and should not be viewed as a positive sign, she said. She noted that online casino gambling is not easy to implement and comes with a lot of regulation.

Because New Jersey requires people who play online casino games to be in the state, it has developed tracking software to determine a bettors location. That means a gambler who lives in Pennsylvania must travel to New Jersey to play an online casino game.

New Jersey online [gambling] has definitely come on very strong, said David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at UNLV. People enjoy playing online rather than in casinos.

But Jackson Brainerd, who studies state gambling for the National Conference of State Legislatures, said while income from casino-sponsored online gambling has been robust, it has not lived up to predictions. In New Jersey, for example, it was expected to generate $1.2 billion in the first year, resulting in $180 million for the state.

In Pennsylvania, the states continuing budget woes have given a push to casino-sponsored online gambling. The state Senate in May passed a measure that would legalize it in January 2018. Sponsors believe the outlook in the House is better this year than last, when a similar bill failed to pass.

Under the measure, Pennsylvania casinos that want to sponsor online gambling would have to pay a one-time $10 million fee to the state. Vendors supplying the gambling platform would pay the state $5 million, and revenue would be taxed at 25 percent, 15 percent of which would go to reduce property taxes, a longtime sore point among Pennsylvania taxpayers.

We hope we can generate $100-$125 million more, said Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa, the Democrat who sponsored the legislation. He said some casinos are worried that they will lose in-house gamblers to the online version, rather than expanding their customer base. But the prospect of a new state revenue source has persuaded some legislators that its time to implement online casino games.

In New York, Senate panels have passed a bill that would legalize and regulate online poker games, though the proposal is still awaiting a vote by the full Senate. A similar bill passed the Senate last year, but died in the House without being considered. A 10-year license fee would cost $10 million, and the state would levy a 15 percent tax on revenue.

State Sen. John Bonacic, a Republican sponsor of the bill, sweetened the pot this year with a provision that mandates that the revenue from casino-sponsored online poker be used for education.

This bill is necessary to provide consumer protections and combat illegal websites that are currently offering online poker to New Yorkers further it would bring in additional revenue for education, he said in an email.

See the rest here:

How Casinos, States Are Winning Big From Online Gambling - HuffPost

Sands Bethlehem casino waging ad war against tavern gambling – Allentown Morning Call

BETHLEHEM Just two weeks after the $1.3 billion sale of Sands Casino Resort Bethlehem collapsed under the threat that Pennsylvania may allow casino gambling in bars, Sands is launching a million-dollar campaign to stop the legislation behind it.

Sands this week is beginning a statewide ad war against proposed House legislation that would allow video gaming terminals in bars and truck stops. You'll soon be seeing doom-and-gloom commercials detailing how VGTs in every neighborhood will gut a statewide casino model that is yielding $1.4 billion in tax money a year.

To fund it, Sands is pumping more than $1 million into a newly formed lobbying organization called Pennsylvanians For Responsible Government. Sands officials say they expect other casinos to join in their fight, but none were announced Monday. The campaign includes radio ads, an internet landing page with the headline "Greetings from Pennsylvania, Land of 12,000 Casinos," and a 30-second television spot that suggests some lawmakers want to put the terminals in delis and nursing homes.

It sets up a heavyweight fight between casinos looking to keep their slot machine monopoly and the Pennsylvania Tavern Association, which wants its cut of the gambling pie.

"This proposal would destroy the brick-and-mortar casino industry and risk the nearly $1.4 billion in tax revenues that these establishments generate annually," lobbying group spokesman Michael Barley said. "Worse yet, because VGTs are designed to operate without employees, the 18,000 people casinos collectively employ in Pennsylvania will be put in serious jeopardy."

Proponents say the bill will prop up mom-and-pop taverns, while pumping hundreds of millions of tax dollars into the state budget.

The bill's main sponsor, Rep. Mark Mustio, R-Allegheny, said Monday that Sands' ad campaign is misleading.

"They are trying to create a boogieman and I'm not interested in playing that game," Mustio said. "If they can spend $1 million for an ad campaign, maybe we should raise their taxes."

Mustio said allowing five machines doesn't make a bar a casino, and the bill only allows the terminals in liquor-licensed establishments, truck stops and off-track betting facilities. Liquor Control Board records show that 35 nursing homes statewide have active liquor licenses but Mustio said he didn't know that, and the bill can be amended to exclude nursing homes as has been done with groceries that have licenses to sell beer or wine.

The bill's purpose, Mustio added, is to legalize and tax illegal terminals operating in social halls and taverns across the state.

"We don't have $1 million to fight Sands, but we have friends in the Senate and House," said Tavern Association President Tom Boock, who owns the Cottage Pub and Restaurant in Chambersburg, Franklin County. "We're not just going to back down to these billionaire casino owners."

Among those friends is Sen. Lisa Boscola, D-Northampton, whose Bethlehem office is roughly a mile from Sands. Boscola said she doesn't believe the terminals are a threat to the casino industry.

"They are entitled to have their ad campaign, but it's not going to change my vote one way or the other," Boscola said

Sands, arguably the state's most successful casino, may rule Pennsylvania's gambling landscape, but its executives are admittedly worried about VGTs. And they should be worried, said John Cunnane, a Wall Street gaming and leisure analyst for Stifel Investment Services, because House Bill 1010 calls for sweeping expansion. It would give the state's more than 16,000 establishments with liquor licenses a chance to have what are essentially tavern slot machines.

Sources have said Sands already has been damaged by the threat of the terminals. Sources in March said the world's largest casino company had a tentative deal to sell its south Bethlehem casino, hotel, outlet mall and concert venue to the world's second-largest, MGM Resorts International. Las Vegas Sands Corp. confirmed the casino had an interested buyer, but never commented on who it was. However, two weeks ago, sources said MGM pulled out of the deal, fearing that VGTs would be approved in Pennsylvania, if not this year then later.

Under the bill, bars, clubs and restaurants could have as many as five terminals each, and off-track betting facilities and truck terminals could have up to 10. Analysts estimate it would add 35,000 to 40,000 machines statewide. The combined number of slot machines at the state's 12 casinos is less than 27,000.

"That's an insane number of VGTs, and we've seen the impact that's had on casinos in places like Iowa and Illinois," Cunnane said. "It won't cause a mass exodus from casinos, but they will feel the pain, no doubt."

Cunnane explained that because Pennsylvania's casino model is built on the convenience gambler rather than Las Vegas or even Atlantic City, which cater to the destination gambler adding thousands of more convenient locations will have a major impact on the bottom line.

In Illinois, for example, its 10 riverboat casinos had $1.6 billion in gross revenues in 2012, before VGTs arrived. Last year, revenues were down to $1.4 billion, and the tax to the state fell nearly $100 million, to $477 million, according to figures compiled by the Illinois Gaming Board.

VGT proponents say there are 40,000 machines being played illegally in private clubs and bars, though state police put the number closer to 15,000. House estimates say it will produce $100 million in the first year and up to $500 million more in taxes down the road.

Based on testimony during gambling hearings in March, it appears that 11 of the state's 12 casinos will oppose the terminals. Hollywood Casino in Dauphin County supports them, largely because its owner, Penn National Gaming, owns a VGT business that includes more than 1,500 machines in Illinois.

There are some carrots in the bill to entice casinos to endorse it. The latest version would reduce the 54 percent slot machine tax in casinos to 49 percent, but that has not swayed Sands.

massad@mcall.com

Twitter @matthewassad21

610-820-6691

What House Bill 1010 legalizes: Up to five video gaming terminals similar to slot machines in liquor-licensed facilities, such as bars and restaurants, and up to 10 VGTs in truck stops and off-track betting facilities.

Where the bill stands: It was introduced in the House on Monday, where it could get amendments, but it's unclear how soon, or if, it will come for a vote. To become law, it would also need approval in the Senate, where there is far less support for VGTs.

Why Sands casino is waging an ad war against it: Sands executives fear the addition of 40,000 VGTs statewide would affect their bottom line by keeping people from visiting brick and mortar casinos.

Read more:

Sands Bethlehem casino waging ad war against tavern gambling - Allentown Morning Call

Hoffman can bet on it: Galveston casino gambling boat ventures into uncharted waters – CultureMap Houston

It hasnt exactly been smooth sailing for the Jacks or Better gambling boat in Galveston.

The boats maiden voyage was April 6. Between rough seas that canceled more than a dozen departures, damage from hitting a buoy that put the boat in dry dock several days, and seasick guests backing up toilets and sinks with vomit the boat is looking for calmer waters this summer.

Jacks or Better has sailings scheduled every day, and twice on Fridays and Saturdays. The cruises generally take between six and seven hours. Tickets are $15, including two free drink tickets.

Its about a one-hour drive from Houston to Galveston. You want to arrive a half-hour early, a built-in safety against those inexplicable traffic jams on I-45. (Its 2 pm on Tuesday, why is traffic backed up?) Once the boat leaves port, it takes about 1-1/2 hours to reach federal waters, 9.1 miles offshore, where its legal for the captain to say, Let the games begin. The boat has 180 slot machines and tables for shootout poker, blackjack, craps, chuck-a-luck, and other games.

Its supposed to have sports wagering, where you can bet on any college or pro event anywhere in the world, from French Open tennis to World Cup soccer to Aussie cricket to American baseball and football games. Supposedly.

Ready to set sail? A friend and I recently boarded the Jacks or Better boat for a Saturday afternoon cruise. Well have to call my friend Oscar. I cant use his real name because he lied to his boss to get off work that day. This is the kind of friends I have.

Before sailing, I took to Yelp and read horror story reviews about passengers getting seasick on the boat, complete with nasty photos of clogged toilets. There were some positive, fun-filledreviews, too. It all dependedon how rough the seaswere that day.

Not taking chances, Oscar and I popped a couple of Dramamine motion sickness pills the All Day Less Drowsy formula an hour before departure.

The boat is 150 feet long and can hold 360 passengers and 54 crew members. Im guessing that most of the passengers didnt know about the 3- to 4-foot seas predicted that day.

Passengers began climbing aboard and some immediately cashed in their two free drink tickets. Theyll pay for that later.

The Jacks or Better boat has three decks. The first deck is covered with slot machines. The second deck has gaming tables and a snack bar offering burgers, nachos, chicken sandwiches, Buffalo wings, and Galveston cheesesteaks. The most expensive item on the menu is $8. The upstairs, open-air observation deck has lounge chairs and live entertainment. On my cruise, there was karaoke.

AsGeorge Costanza said on Seinfeld, The sea was angry that day, my friends, like an old man trying to send back soup in a deli.

Wobbly and woozy

Thirty minutes into the trip, the boat got wobbly and passengers got woozy. Warning: Heres where this column gets pretty graphic. If youre reading this while eating, stop doing one of them.

Ive seen fewer sick people in the Ben Taub Hospital emergency room. Crew members began roaming the boat with trays piled high with sickness bags and crackers. Like waiters serving hors doeuvres at a wedding party. Passengers were stumbling aimlessly, bumping into furniture and slamming into walls, like babies taking their first steps, or town drunk Otis Campbellon The Andy Griffith Show.

People were puking in public, there was no time for shame. A guy at the snack bar was calmly eating spicy Buffalo wings while a man sitting next to him was retching into a vomit bag.

Never saw that before.

I counted only 22 people actually gambling. Most were upstairs with their faces in a paper bag, or passed out on the floor, or sleeping with their heads pressed against a slot machine. That cant possibly feel good.

Jacks or Better has a policy: If you get seasick during the cruise, upon returning to shore, the company will give you a free pass for another trip, plus a $20 chip to use at a gaming table. If youre thinking of going on the gambling boat, you might want to click at jacksorbettercasino.comfirst to check on sailing conditions. The Gulf of Mexico typically is much calmer during June, July, and August. In two weeks, the water will be like glass, I was told.

I asked a crew member, "Where do I place a sports bet?" I was told to See that guy over there. My whole reason for taking this voyage from hell (tip of the Hatlo Hat to Richard Lewis) was to place a parlay bet: Rafael Nadal to win the French Open and the Astros to win that nights game. Betting on the Astros this season is like stealing money.

The sports manager told me, Sorry, our sports machines havent arrived yet. Theyll be here in a few weeks.

You mean I got on this seasick infirmary for nothing?

Much, much worse

And thats when things turned for the much, much worse.

Oscar and I grabbed a table at the snack bar to wait out the cruise. Five minutes later, and I swear this happened, a man staggered toward us. His face was green. He was ready to blow like Mount St. Helens. But instead of finishing his journey to the restroom, he collapsed into a chair at MY TABLE (good name for a magazine) and let fly.

Thats when I lost it my temper, not my lunch. Remember I took a couple of Dramamine. I bolted up and screamed at him, Thats disgusting. Whats wrong with you? Why didnt you go to the bathroom and do that?

The guy could barely lift his head. I couldnt help it.

A crew member, carrying a bucket and mop, apologized for this incident. Im sorry you had to see that.

I asked him, This is some job you have. What do you use to get puke out of carpet?

Heres your household hint of the day (Hello, Heloise.) The Jacks or Better crew uses D-VOUR Absorbent Powder, which devours liquids such as spilled bodily fluids as it eliminated odors. They must buy it by the case at Costco.

So many passengers were sick, and so few gambling, that the captain decided to cut the cruise short by an hour and head back to land.

I didnt see anybody asking for their free ticket and $20 chip to come back.

---------------------

Ken can be reached at ken@culturemap.com or on Twitter:@KenCultureMap. To have all CultureMap stories, including Ken's columns, delivered to your inbox in one Daily Digest every morning, sign uphere.

Continued here:

Hoffman can bet on it: Galveston casino gambling boat ventures into uncharted waters - CultureMap Houston

Gambling Has Become Part Of Football, And The Bookies Are The Only Winners – Pundit Arena

They tell us that when the fun stops, stop but the fun never stops for them.It seems that it is the bookies who always have the fun. They always have some poor soul who is willing to throw a few quid on the impossible with the faint hope of striking it rich.

This seldom works out as well as the customer would like leaving the big bookie with the last laugh.

Its easy to get sucked into gambling. Its a vacuum, a web even. You throw on 5 here, then another there, you might win a little, throw that back on, and repeat the cycle and there you go nine times out of ten you end up with an empty pocket and a very confused logic. The scale of the gambling problem which exists across Britain and Ireland is one which is grossly underestimated.

Headlines in recent months have showcased the 18-month ban handed to Burnley footballer Joey Barton for his breach of regulations, but although largely in the wrong, Bartons statement makes for interesting reading in which he makes note of the recent explosion in sports betting.

We are living in an era which lacks necessary research, and with the ever-growing influence of the superpowers of the betting industry, proper and just scrutiny of an ever-growing habit will never become sufficient.

Bartons story has brought the spotlight back upon a practice that for decades has been passively accepted as part of the game, not just with football, but all sports. According to The Guardian, British people lost 12.6 billion in 2015 through gambling alone a loss of almost 300 per person and this is what allows the industry to constantly branch out and expand, feeding off of our naivety.

We win once and think we will win forever. In-play and remote betting have skyrocketed in popularity, as our lazy society basks off of the simplicity of placing a bet without having to move a muscle.

Not nearly enough is known on the effects of gambling on those who partake, and while the lack of clarity exists the industry and its associated technologies continue to become all the more influential. Technology advances at such a fast pace that the structures that are tasked to control it simply cannot keep up. The new platform of existing gambling services increases exposure and availability of the system to unprecedented levels. A study conducted by the University of Bristol (via The Times) found that one in four of 1,000 men aged between 18 and 24 displayed signs of a gambling problem.

The leading professor, Dr Sean Cowlishaw cites that effective research is stunted by a lack of funding on the part of the gambling industry itself:

Most of what we know about gambling harm is through research and evidence heavily influenced by industry, said Cowlishaw.

The amount of money put up is incredibly small and the industry has been able to maintain control over the topics addressed.

So what Cowlishaw is telling us, in a nutshell, is that the source of gambling addiction is the industry, yet weve allowed the industry to also withhold control of the funding towards research to such issues, and yet we wonder why its happening? Its happening because they can pull the wool over our eyes.

Whenever we look at football though, gambling is simply all around us. Be it on a shirt sponsor, an advertising board, the ad breaks during a match with the odds popping up left, right and centre, the industry offering free live streaming of football at the charge of placing a bet.

These are all things that, even though we dont realise, we sub-consciously feed off and buy into them, and it has gotten to the point where the presence of such doesnt even provoke negative thought in us anymore. Its become so easy for us to get involved that its almost impossible not to. The industry is everywhere we look.

The industry controls how we fight the industry. Wheres the fun in that, right? They say when the fun stops, stop. But how does it ever start? Contrary to what the eternal optimist might always believe unfortunately, it seems the bookie always wins.

Jordan Norris, Pundit Arena

Visit link:

Gambling Has Become Part Of Football, And The Bookies Are The Only Winners - Pundit Arena

Teacher stole to feed gambling addiction tells court: Manchester tragedy proves I’m cured – Express.co.uk

NC

Alison McWilliam told a disciplinary hearing that despite the stress of her son being at the scene of the terror -attack she did not return to gambling.

McWilliam left her local summer festival committee with just 18p in its account in 2014, a sheriff court was told last year.

The modern studies teacher, from Duns, Berwickshire, ended up with a criminal record and is now fighting for her career in front of the General Teaching Council for Scotland (GTCS).

The 56-year-old was sacked from her job at Kelso High School and could be struck off if found unfit to teach.

I turned to gambling to occupy my mind, but it became a crutch

Alison McWilliam

At a hearing in Edinburgh, McWilliam revealed she was involved in a car accident in 2014 which resulted in the death of an elderly woman.

But when her son, Grant, 22, was caught up in the horror attack at the Ariana Grande concert she did not turn to gambling again.

She said: I turned to gambling to occupy my mind, but it became a crutch. My son was at the Manchester Arena when it was attacked. It really put me in a difficult position.

NC

I spoke to people in my support network, family members were up and around as well. I used my medication well, and the people around me wisely.

I am a good person that did a bad thing, I made a mistake. I would ask for fairness, to judge me by what I do.

McWilliam admitted she had placed bets over the past 12 months but was undergoing counselling and attending Gamblers Anonymous meetings.

Her lawyer, Jamie Foulis, said: Her conduct is remediable, and has been remedied, or is at least in the process of being remedied.

But GTCS presenting officer Deborah Russell disagreed saying: This is a very serious complaint. Its not an insignificant amount, done at a time when the registrant was in a position of trust.

McWilliam, who had been a member of the Duns Summer Festival committee for 15 years, and Treasurer for eight, has since repaid the money that she stole.

Here is the original post:

Teacher stole to feed gambling addiction tells court: Manchester tragedy proves I'm cured - Express.co.uk