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Monthly Archives: January 2021
Artificial intelligence spotted on everything (and anything!) at CES 2021 – Malay Mail
Posted: January 17, 2021 at 8:57 am
Thanks to its new processor, the Panasonic JZ2000 can analyse the picture every second and automatically adjust picture quality. Picture courtesy of Panasonic
LAS VEGAS, Jan 16 If theres one thing to take away from the 2021 edition of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), its that artificial intelligence (AI) seemed to be omnipresent in the technologies and devices presented.
Whether a marketing argument or genuine technological progress, AI has become an inevitable part of many new applications, TVs and vehicle dashboards not to mention toothbrushes and massage chairs!
Smart TVs
TVs have been the major stars of CES for a few years now, and this edition held entirely online due to the covid-19 pandemic was no exception.
Thanks to new, ultra-high-performance processors, manufacturers are promising optimal image quality thanks to built-in artificial intelligence.
Sony, for example, unveiled a new range of TVs capable of anticipating which part of the screen viewers are likely to be looking at, in order to systematically bring out the best in this focal point of the image.
Similarly, Panasonic showcased a new TV model that automatically calibrates the image in relation to the kind of content displayed (movie, sport, concert, video game, etc.).
Samsung and LG also embraced artificial intelligence, whether for upscaling (converting HD content to 4K resolution onscreen, for example) or for recommending shows for viewers to watch.
Smart objects
As well as TVs, almost all the connected devices presented at CES seemed to boast some kind of artificial intelligence, which, in reality, is often an ability to record and convey user habits.
That, for example, is seen in products as diverse as a toothbrush, which sends brushing quality reports to your smartphone, or in a massage chair, which can adapt its technique to user needs expressed by voice command.
In-car AI
Finally, cars were also on the agenda at CES, in particular with cabin technology thats ever more spectacular and connected.
Here too, artificial intelligence has a role to play, coming to life onscreen with custom suggestions, or via driving comfort systems, not to mention entertainment for both driver and passengers.
Mercedes and BMW, for example, presented future touchscreen interfaces with integrated AI. AFP-Relaxnews
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Artificial intelligence spotted on everything (and anything!) at CES 2021 - Malay Mail
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Brevard Museum of History and Natural Science Highlights Area’s Unique Past From the Ice Age to the Space Age – SpaceCoastDaily.com
Posted: at 8:56 am
Opened in 1973 in a Portable Classroom Donated by the Brevard County School BoardFLORIDA CRACKERS are cattle ranchers with techniques specific to the Florida pine and scrub lands. By cracking a whip they herd cattle while seated on Cracker horses, sturdy equines bread for cattle work. Learn more about a unique lifeway that has endured from early Spanish settlers to the present day at the museum. (Cracker Cow Hunt, Casper McCloud)
BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA The Brevard Museum of History and Natural Science, located at 2201 Michigan Avenue in Cocoa, is tucked away in a quite residential neighborhood and features two wings of indoor exhibits.
The entire museum complex consists of a 14,750 square foot facility with parking for 75 cars, a pavilion with four picnic tables, and a beautiful 22-acre nature preserve that backs up to the Eastern Florida State College Planetarium.
Through curation and display, visitors to the museum can explore the unique history of Brevard County from Ice Age fossils to the Space Age Hubble telescope, it have something for everyone.
The Brevard Museum is also now home to the Florida Historical Society Archaeological Institute whose mission, in hand with the museum, is to educate the public about Florida archaeology through research, publication and outreach.
Museum Home to Extensive Collection of Antiques, Historic Artifacts
In the late 1960s a group of local citizens saw the need to preserve the unique history and pre-history of Brevard County located on Floridas east coast.
Forming a Friends of the Brevard Museum organization, their efforts and dedication led to the establishment of the museum, which opened to the public in 1973 in a portable classroom donated by the Brevard County School Board.
A permanent facility was dedicated in 1978 with funding provided by the Grace and Albert Taylor trust.
Settling in the east central Florida area in 1895, Grace and Albert contributed greatly to the development of Brevard County. Grace in particular was interested in preserving the history and natural beauty of the area.
When she passed away in 1945 she left a bequest specifically for the development of a museum to to preserve these early lifeways.
Today, in addition to many milestones and moments in Brevard County history, the museum is home to an extensive collection of her antiques and historic artifacts.
Interest in the museum continued to grow and funds for further construction were secured through a partnership between the state and local community, allowing a second wing with a connecting lobby to be built in 1992.
The original Taylor Wing is now home to the museums Ice Age exhibit featuring fully articulated skeletons of a mastodon, giant ground sloth and saber tooth cat.
This wing also has a hands-on Imagination Station for the young and young at heart, with a simulated rocket capsule, tree house and cave.
Explore Floridas Past with the Brevard Museums Exhibits
The Brevard Museum features two wings of exhibits representing Brevard Countys rich and diverse history. Click on the links below for a sneak-peak at some of the images that will whet your appetite to stop in to learn the rest of Brevards exciting story.
Lesson plans are under development for many of the museums exhibits, call 321-632-1830 for more information.
The newest chapter in the museums history began in September of 2014 when the Florida Historical Society, located at 435 Brevard Avenue in Cocoa Village, became the museums parent organization.
Many changes have occurred, and will continue to occur, under this new umbrella. If you havent seen the Brevard Museum in the past year, you havent seen the Brevard Museum.
Be sure to come on out and see these great exhibits:
The Ice Age
Windover Archaeological Site
Cape Canaveral Lighthouse and special 150th anniversary exhibit
Pioneer Homestead
Citrus Industry
Florida Cracker Culture
Florida East Cost Railway
Grace & Albert Taylor
Hubble Space Telescope: Eye on the Universe
Butterfly Garden
Imagination Station
Past Exhibit: Paintings of Nostalgic Florida: The Original Highwaymen Artists April 7, 2018 April 28, 2018
Past Exhibit: Time to Shine: Mismatched Items from our Collection Feb 23 March 31
The Apollo Journey: Birth of the Space Coast
For more information log on to myfloridahistory.org/brevardmuseum
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Brevard Museum of History and Natural Science Highlights Area's Unique Past From the Ice Age to the Space Age - SpaceCoastDaily.com
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Jaywalking and the Dilemma of Victimless Crimes – Governing
Posted: at 8:55 am
As of March 1, if you live in Virginia, you will be able to cross the street anywhere in the middle of a block, 100 yards from a crosswalk, as clumsily and unpredictably as you wish without having to worry much about getting in trouble with the law. Jaywalking, while technically still illegal, will be decriminalized throughout the state.
It would seem to be a sensible move. In Virginia, as in most of the country, jaywalking has long been punishable by a fine but very rarely enforced. A penalty that is invoked sporadically and capriciously is not fair to those who get socked with it, as state and federal courts have declared many times.
In the case of jaywalking, however, there is another principle involved. Studies in a number of states have shown that when a pedestrian does get a ticket for crossing in the wrong place, it is disproportionately likely to be a person of color. This is not a small disproportion. A study in 2019 in New York City found that Blacks and Hispanics had been getting 90 percent of the tickets for "illegal or unsafe" crossing, even though they comprised just a bare majority of the city's population. Earlier research in Florida reported that minorities in Jacksonville received three times as many pedestrian tickets as white people did.
That in itself isn't airtight evidence of discrimination. Minorities may, in fact, do more jaywalking. But they may also have a reason. If you walk down any one of thousands of suburban highway strips in America and especially in the South, traversing long corridors in minority neighborhoods, you will find crosswalks few and far between. If you're carrying a load of groceries, maybe holding a child's hand at the same time, and the nearest crosswalk is half a mile away, you shouldn't be blamed too severely if you dart across in the middle of the road.
For decades in this country, California was the national capital of jaywalking enforcement. It wasn't unknown for Californians or especially visitors ignorant of the law to get a ticket just for taking a few steps into the street when the traffic light was red. You could end up paying the Golden State $196.
And indeed, California's get-tough approach did seem to have an impact. Given that it is perhaps the nation's most car-obsessed state, its figures for pedestrian injuries were comparatively low. But not any more. The number of pedestrian fatalities on California streets and highways went up by 26 percent between 2014 and 2018, and this was as the state was implementing a "Vision Zero" program aimed at reducing the number of traffic deaths.
What's happened in California has been happening in the rest of the country as well. Between 2007 and 2016, pedestrian traffic deaths shot up 27 percent. They went up three percent from 2017 to 2018 alone. It's true that more pedestrians are hit at crosswalks, often by drivers making left turns, than are hit while jaywalking. But jaywalking collisions are much more likely to kill people.
JAYWALKING MAY NOT BE AMERICA'S MOST SERIOUS PUBLIC PROBLEM, but it brings up a whole series of larger questions. What if the decriminalization of jaywalking leads increased numbers of people to be more nonchalant when they cross dangerous streets? And much more broadly, how much authority should governments have to protect people misbehaving in ways that are, in most cases, dangerous only to themselves?
The first objection can be disposed of fairly easily. Virtually no one thinks the police are going to punish them when they cross a street illegally, so it's extremely unlikely that they will change their behavior when criminal punishment is wiped off the books altogether. But the larger issue remains a compelling one. If a citizen takes an action that is unlikely to harm anyone else, what sort of retribution if any is appropriate? The argument that punishment for these actions is wrong has been bouncing around this country's legal system for two centuries. It is probably more fashionable in libertarian circles right now than it has been in the past.
The problem is that many actions said to be "victimless" aren't really victimless at all. Drivers may claim an absolute right not to wear a seat belt, but failure to do so costs American taxpayers billions of dollars every year in medical bills. Marijuana may be a harmless pleasure or it may not but the use of opioids and other hard drugs impose massive costs on the entire society. Right at this moment, there is the issue of masks. Millions of angry dissidents claim the right to go maskless when they are out in public, but the evidence is overwhelming that they jeopardize the lives of all those they come into contact with. Mask defiance is a major reason more than 360,000 Americans have died from the coronavirus since the beginning of last year.
If you start combing the statute books for truly victimless crimes, you will find scarcely any, even ones that passionate libertarians insist on defending. There is, of course, one powerful exception: consensual sex among adults. Sexual encounters of various kinds were once punished severely in almost every state, but society has come a long way from that era, and we are all better off for it.
Even on this subject, however, there are complications. AIDS was, until recently, one of them. Sexually free-wheeling bathhouses in American cities were death chambers in the 1980s, spreading a then-incurable disease to thousands of customers, many of whom did not know they were risking their lives. Did public authorities in these cities have a right to close the bathhouses down? That's a troubling question some did close them down, and some didn't.
LURKING BEHIND ALL OF THIS is the eternal issue of alcohol. No one can claim that drinking is a victimless crime. In the past century, alcohol abuse has claimed many more lives than AIDS and COVID-19 combined. But Prohibition was a massive national failure. The fact is that it actually did reduce the level of drinking in America in the 1920s, and thereby saved significant numbers of lives, but it also gave us an organized-crime problem that remains with us a century later. Drinking is in no way a victimless crime, but a substantial majority of the American people believe they are harming no one by doing it. Against massive opposition and widespread willingness to flout the law, the state simply lacks the power to impose stringent behavioral rules. That's one overriding lesson that Prohibition taught us.
A couple of years ago, the District of Columbia city council changed the rules on a category of offenses that many of its members called "minor" but which were in fact a bit more ethically complicated than jaywalking. The council passed a bill that drastically reduced the penalties for fare-jumping slipping through gates at Metro stations to avoid paying the fare. The council majority mainly argued that the existing penalties discriminated against minorities, who were being caught and punished in numbers beyond their share of the population. Mayor Muriel Bowser vetoed the bill, pointing out forcefully that no matter who the perpetrators might be, jumping the gates was a genuine crime that deprived the transit system of badly needed revenue and insulted millions of law-abiding fare-payers. But the council overrode her and the bill became law.
The background to this event was a growing revolt among Black activists against the "broken-windows" policing that had taken hold in many American cities over the previous couple of decades, policing that cracked down on allegedly small offenses, including fare-jumping, graffiti-tagging and petty vandalism, that graduated to serious crimes when the offenders saw that they weren't being punished. There is no question that broken-windows policing seriously inflated the number of young African-American men incarcerated all over the country, and it helped to generate militant protest movements such as Black Lives Matter. There is also little question that it contributed to a substantial decline in violent crime rates in virtually all large American cities, and especially New York, where it was practiced most aggressively and where it produced the angriest outrage.
SO WHAT'S THE RIGHT STAND to take on this whole raft of "minor" offenses, few of which are truly victimless but some of which may ultimately generate punishments more dangerous to society than the offenses themselves? I think there's only one good answer: Don't start by thinking of individual rights; start by thinking about consequences.
That sort of approach yields different answers in different circumstances. We have decided as a society that nearly all sexual practices among consenting adults generate no negative consequences anywhere near as bad as the results of punishing them (although we make exceptions for incest and bigamy). We have also decided that failure to drive with seat belts does more than enough harm to justify laws penalizing the practice. We are deeply divided on the consequences of criminalizing a wide range of narcotic drugs, and we are still divided on requiring masks in the midst of a pandemic, although majority opinion is on the side of mandating the masks in public.
So where does that leave jaywalking? It's clearly not a heinous crime, but it does increase the number of pedestrian deaths in the United States by a substantial amount each year. I think that, in the end, we have to treat it like Prohibition. Most of us will continue to do it, there is no practical way of enforcing laws against it consistently, and so the right course is probably to let all of us walk or run across the street wherever and whenever we please. Just look both ways before you do it.
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Michael Bubl Touts New Bubly Deal With SodaStream, Still Insists Its Named After Him – Adweek
Posted: at 8:55 am
Michael Bubl,pop superstar and secret vandal, often carries a magic marker when he goes grocery shoppingthe better to alter cans of Bubly, replacing the y on the end with an e so the product becomes his namesake.
The Canadian singer confessed his cheeky (and victimless) crimes during the announcement Tuesday of a deal between Bubly and SodaStream, with six Bubly-branded flavors now available to spike the gadgets sparkling water.
I have a mask on to be Covid-safe, he said during an afternoon virtual press gathering. So maybe no one knows its me. But Ill write on Bubly cans in stores.
Call it life imitating art.
Bubl, who started playfully defacing Bubly packages in a 2019 Super Bowl ad, stars in a 30-second spot for the Bubly x SodaStream partnership, which extends the years-long joke into 2021.
I thought it would be one cool, great Super Bowl ad. I had no idea that three years later, Id still be doing it.
Michael Bubl
Bubl, according to the new work, still cant separate his name from the Bubly line. In introducing the new flavor drops, Bubl repeatedly mispronounces Bublybooh-blay instead of bubbly-as an exasperated director calls cut.
In a chat with Adweek, Bubl said that poking fun at his unique surname has always been part of the marketing since early in his career. He was so in love with the initial Bubly ad concept from Goodby Silverstein & Partners that hes happy to continue playing along.
I thought it would be one cool, great Super Bowl ad, he said. I had no idea that three years later, Id still be doing it. Its been so much fun, and its all done with self-deprecating humor.
The new commercial, which launches Wednesday, touts the first co-branded North American project between SodaStream and Bubly, siblings in the PepsiCo family. Bryan Welsh, general manager of SodaStreams U.S. division, said he thinks the collaboration will give existing customers a chance to experiment and have fun and attract potential new buyers.
If someones been on the fence about buying into the platform, it gives them a reason to try it, he said. We think itll build the business.
SodaStream has an existing line of fruit drops, but Welsh said the Bubly product will provide a wider variety for consumers who want to personalize their drinks. Bubly Drops are rolling out at a mix of traditional retail (Target) and ecommerce platforms (Amazon).
The good-for-you water industry is booming, he said, with an 84% year-over-year growth in sparkling water makers and a 21% jump in beverages on the market, accelerated by demand from health-conscious consumers during quarantine.
Having some points of differentiation, like customizable flavors, is key. (A six-pack of Bubly Drops include mango, grapefruit and lime, with no calories, sweeteners or artificial flavors). At-home consumption has never been higher, he said, and people are looking to have a little fun with their everyday products.
Sustainability is even more top of mind with consumers, he said, with SodaStream use replacing 8 billion plastic bottles in 2020. The Israeli company, acquired by PepsiCo in 2018, often leans into its eco-friendly message and made it the centerpiece of its Super Bowl 2020 ad starring beloved scientist Bill Nye and astronaut Alyssa Carson. Despite the popularity of that spot, dubbed Water on Mars, execs say the brand wont return to the Big Game this year.
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Michael Bubl Touts New Bubly Deal With SodaStream, Still Insists Its Named After Him - Adweek
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Mitie partners with Crimestoppers in bid to ramp up community safety across UK – Fire and Security Matters
Posted: at 8:55 am
MITIE SECURITY has joined forces with independent charity Crimestoppers in an innovative new partnership designed to help keep communities and businesses across the UK safe from crime and wrongdoing.
The newly-forged agreement will see the organisations working together to share information on criminal behaviour gathered by businesses, which can then feed into police service investigations. Mitie is the first security company to form such a partnership with Crimestoppers, thereby demonstrating its stated commitment to bridge the gap between the public and private sectors in order to help keep people, customers and communities safe and secure.
The Crimestoppers charity encourages people and organisations to anonymously share information that helps to prevent and solve crime. As well as receiving information from members of the public, Crimestoppers also works with a number of private and public sector organisations among them businesses, trusts and foundations on public awareness campaigns.
This new partnership with Mitie will be the first time the charity has worked with a security organisation to tackle crime and keep communities safe. Given that Mitie Security harbours hundreds of customers on its schedule spanning every sector, this collaboration will also help to create new relationships between Crimestoppers and businesses that have not worked together before.
With the partnership focused on thought leadership and knowledge sharing, Mitie will use its suite of technology solutions and work closely with its clients to bring together relevant anonymous data on criminal behaviour and create incident reports. This evidence will then be shared with local police forces to support their investigations and help keep criminals off the streets.
Global Security Operations Service
The partnership is underpinned by Mities Global Security Operations Service (GSOS), its dedicated technology and intelligence-led security solution. Through the GSOS, Mitie brings together the latest technology, 20,000 security officers and a team of intelligence experts and analysts, in turn creating a 360-degree approach towards security.
From businesses in villages through to farms, rural crime affects thousands of people and communities across the UK countryside. Mitie will work with Crimestoppers to create a dedicated Rural Crime Steering Committee designed to address this issue. Alongside Mitie, Crimestoppers and relevant police forces, the Steering Committees members will include other organisations with a significant rural presence, such as Police Crime Prevention Initiatives and the National Farmers Union. Bringing their own expertise and experience, members of the Steering Committee will collaborate to develop strategies to tackle rural crimes, such as theft and property damage, that cost families and businesses millions of pounds every year.
Mitie will also use its experience gained from delivering security services to hundreds of public and private sector clients to provide Crimestoppers with insights on the key security issues that businesses and communities are currently facing. Working closely with the Home Office, Crimestoppers will then use this information to create national awareness campaigns that assist in tackling these challenges.
Jason Towse, managing director of business services at Mitie, commented: Were very excited to be teaming up with Crimestoppers in this ground-breaking partnership. Whether youre talking about individuals or businesses, crime is never victimless. Were committed to bridging the gap between the public and private security sectors to help keep our clients safe, as well as the communities where we operate. By working collaboratively with other key stakeholders in the security industry, including renowned organisations such as Crimestoppers, we can all play a vital role in helping to keep criminals off the streets.
Working in collaboration
Mark Hallas OBE, CEO at Crimestoppers, responded: One of the most powerful things we can do in responding to the continual changing face of crime is to work collaboratively. Im delighted that weve formed this unique partnership with Mitie Security which will make a difference in tackling wrongdoing. Crimestoppers has been giving people the ability to speak up 100% anonymously about crime since the independent charity started life over 33 years ago. Providing this opportunity to share knowledge helps build confidence in communities, which then ultimately leads to greater safety and security for us all.
Crimestoppers 0800 555 111 telephone number and website (crimestoppers-uk.org) gives people the power to speak up and pass on information about crime 100% anonymously.
Alongside its national campaigns, the organisation engages hundreds of volunteers across the UK who help it promote its services to those that need to hear about them. Indeed, every region of the UK boasts a Crimestoppers team responsible for raising awareness of the charity and running local campaigns about issues that affect their area.
In point of fact, circa ten people are arrested and charged every day as a result of information given to Crimestoppers. Since its inception, Crimestoppers has received over 2.2 million actionable calls resulting in more than 151,000 arrests and charges. Upwards of 139 million worth of stolen goods have been recovered and over 367 million worth of illegal drugs seized.
Back in 2005, Crimestoppers launched the UKs Most Wanted initiative on its website which allows the public to view images of criminals and pass on vital information about their potential whereabouts. This initiative has been highly successful, with over 4,300 arrests made to date.
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District Attorney Candidates Win Big Against ‘Tough on Crime’ – Reason
Posted: at 8:55 am
You might have missed it amid all the shouting about the 2020 election, but the most populous county in the United States will now have a reform-minded district attorney.
Challenger George Gascn beat incumbent Jackie Lacey 5446 percent in November to become the top prosecutor of Los Angeles County, which has a population of 10 million. It was the most significant win of the cycle for criminal justice reformers who in recent years have focused on local prosecutor races.
D.A.s wield an enormous amount of power and discretion in the criminal justice system, deciding which crimes to prioritize, how to charge defendants, and whether to seek high bail amounts. During the last few election cycles, a wave of well-funded progressive candidates have run for prosecutor's offices in major cities, turning what were once sleepy races into hotly contested battles over criminal justice reform.
The L.A. district attorney race was one of the most closely watched in the country. The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department has been beset with accusations of misconduct, secrecy, and excessive force. Black Lives Matter activists criticized Lacey for failing to prosecute fatal police shootings. Gascn, who was San Francisco County's district attorney until 2019, has promised to reopen investigations into killings by police, focus on rehabilitation and drug treatment rather than incarceration, eschew much-abused penalty enhancements for defendants who allegedly belong to gangs, and refrain from seeking the death penalty.
"I think that this has been a campaign that has been driven by passion, by an honest commitment to reimagine our criminal justice system, moving away from punishment," Gascn told the local ABC station. "It's really about redemption."
Gascn wasn't the only prosecutor to win office with promises to change the status quo. Voters in Austin, Texas, and Orlando, Florida, elected two former defense attorneys to be their top prosecutors.
In Austin, Jos Garza is the new Travis County district attorney.The Appealreported that his platform included declining to prosecute drug cases involving simple possession or the sale of less than a gram, "a policy that would effectively decriminalize small quantities of any controlled substance in Austin."
That move would go further to decriminalize drugs than Dallas and Bexar counties, where district attorneys said they would stop prosecuting people for possessing trace amounts of drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine.
In Orlando, Monique Worrell will be the next state attorney for Orange and Osceola counties. Worrell's campaign platform included ending cash bail, using incarceration only as a last resort, limiting cases in which juveniles are charged as adults, and creating a special investigations unit focused on criminal accusations against police.
"We will seek incarceration only when it is absolutely necessary to protect the physical safety of others or when all other interventions have failed," Worrell's campaign website said. "We will generally not request prison sentences for drug and other victimless offenses, unless unusual and extreme circumstances are present."
In Honolulu, Hawaii, a retired judge was elected district attorney on a promise to clean up the office. The incumbent Honolulu prosecutor was on paid leave between November 2018 and September 2020 amid an FBI investigation into local corruption.
Cook County, Illinois, State Attorney Kim Foxx, who in 2016 became one of the first reform candidates to take over a major metropolitan prosecutor's office, cruised to reelection. Her office, whose jurisdiction includes Chicago, has undertaken an unprecedented transparency initiative, releasing detailed data on its charging decisions and outcomes.
Meanwhile, the race for New Orleans D.A. was set to be decided by a December 5 runoff between two candidates who both have pledged to reform the office to -differing degrees. The Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office became a high-priority target for criminal justice reformers after 12-year incumbent Leon Cannizzaro announced that he would not seek reelection.
The American Civil Liberties Union in 2017 sued Cannizzaro's office over its practice of sending fake subpoenas to crime victims and witnesses, and his office once used a habitual offender enhancement to obtain a sentence of 20 years to life for a man convicted of stealing a candy bar. New Orleans will now have a chance to bring its criminal justice system into the 21st century.
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Arts Pantheon – The Daily Star
Posted: at 8:55 am
Mashrur Arefin's 2019 novel, August Abchhaya, is full of moments that evoke the blood-stained memory behind the language of conflict. One such moment arrives in the intense exchange between the narrator-protagonist and Sarafraz Nawaz, prominent local citizen and the head of the local Mosque and the Madrassah committees. The liberal, artistic protagonist knows that the conservative Sarafraz sahib disapproves not only of his uninhibited lifestyle, but more importantly, of the ideology that supports it. More than anything else, he despises the narrator's pantheistic belief of the manifestation of God in all reality, in the manner of Hindu and Buddhist tantric practitioners, not least because it draws in its fold the beauty of women and possibly helps to disguise his "immoral" desires.
"Glory be to God for dappled things
For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow
For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim"
In mid-Victorian England, a Jesuit priest named Gerald Manley Hopkins fought the pangs of his religious conscience for writing poetry of such Keatsian beauty about the sensuous beauty of the universe. How can an ordained priest take such delight in the senses? His answer was Pantheism. Who else but God can create such beauty? Hence, "Pied Beauty", the poem which thus opened ended with these lines;
All things counter, original, spare, strange;
Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)
With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;
He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change;
Praise him."
Pantheism the perception of divine beauty in all reality has historically bridged religions to a range of aesthetic and philosophical visions and lifestyle practices. It involves a broadening of horizons that helps to keep a sense-loving Jesuit priest such as Hopkins in the fold. But it also evokes hostility in the upholders of traditional faith, as evident in Sarafraz Sahib's suspicions.
Is the suspicion about the pluralization of divinity? Of worshipping many embodied gods as opposed to The Great Abstract One? When Rabindranath wrote the line: "Ami roopsagore doob diyechhi orup roton pabo bole" "I have dived in the ocean of forms to find the formless treasure" his pantheism became a credo for polytheism. One worships a range of images as the formless God is to hard to imagine.
Artistic narration needs both kinds. In a famous chapter of Mimesis entitled "Odysseus' Scar," Eric Auerbach contrasts Homeric and Biblical narration: the former is externalized, sensory, digressive, while the latter is more obscure and abstract, directed unrelentingly toward a single goal. Unlike the Homeric epics, which take delight in sensory effect and lie and fabricate when necessary, the biblical stories lay claim to the singularity of an absolute truth.
Hinduism shares with Hellenism the sensory appeal of polytheism. It is the beauty of Saraswati, the goddess of learning, sitting with her book and her musical veena; the appeal of the blue Krishna, playing his flute and wielding his fatal weapon, the chakra; the terrifying beauty of the demon-slaying goddess Durga; even the violent rhythm of Shiva's dance of destruction that earns him the name "Nataraj," the lord of dancers. But the beauty of Brahminical Hinduism is also limited to its caste-beneficiaries. As the caste-oppressed intellectual Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd says in his memoir, as a boy in his village, he would wake up in the middle of the night to the nightmare of Saraswati as a ghost, ready to kill him as he nurtured dreams of education, unpardonable hubris for a lower-caste child.
The icons of polytheism can haunt as well as nourish, depending who you are.
***
But to identify religious faith with a conservative, even reactionary position might be a knee-jerk reaction for people on the secular left. This has repeatedly turned out to be a false instinct. There have been many progressive religious thinkers, even among those canonized as prophets. But writing in 2002, Ruth Vanita made an observation of curious but pointed significance unlike the continuing presence of the Islamic or the Christian left, which collaborate with the secular left in different parts of the world, there is no Hindu leftwing in India, none left any more the pun is unavoidable. Marxist thinkers and writers flock to Durga Puja celebrations on the streets and pray to shrines at home, but very few have tried to integrate leftist and religious thinking in the context of Hinduism. Thinkers like Ashish Nandy and Ramchandra Gandhi, who attempt to do so, are a tiny minority.
Why this lacuna? The reasons, Vanita argued, has much to do with the shame heaped on polytheistic Hinduism in the 19th century. This was essentially the work of British colonialism, which successfully labeled idol-worship as savage and backward. The British were confounded by Hinduism, which they found harder to understand than Islam which was, like Christianity, monotheistic and based on a single text. Hinduism, with its textual and iconographic plurality, was much more like ancient Greek and Roman religions that Christianity had wiped out centuries earlier. Though Hinduism, which proved resilient through many centuries of attack on its temples and idols, was not to be wiped out easily, the modern method of attack was quite insidious: it took the form of shaming English-educated Indians regarding Hindu rituals, especially those relating to idol-worship. "The best evidence of this shaming," writes Vanita, "is the way new Hindu organizations, such as the Arya Samaj, who rightly embraced such causes as women's education and the eradication of untouchability, felt compelled to also renounce polytheism and idol-worship." Liberal and educated Indians continued to internalize the shame of polytheism; not long after the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, whom Vanita calls the last left-wing Hindu, the Hindu left got lost between the stridency of the Hindu right and the shame felt by the secular left regarding Hindu polytheism.
The literary intelligentsia, especially as it has been forged through colonial modernity and the resistance to imperialism, has gradually moved further and further away from religious iconography, donning a secular mantle. The disenchantment with faith that in Europe energized the Enlightenment and forged the secular form of the novel found its way to India too, through anticolonial movements no less than through movements of colonial modernity. From the Bengal Renaissance to the Progressive Writers' Movement in Urdu, Hindi, and other north Indian languages, this disenchantment has gained pace, nowhere more so than in the English language literatures of India, produced almost exclusively by the urban, English-educated bourgeoisie.
But it would be madness to deny the tremendous aesthetic and emotive power of religion. Literature, and all art, have lived ancient lives enabling and being enabled by the beauty, emotion, mystery and terror of religion till secular modernity pried them apart. Subsequently, this has become a reality all across the subcontinent, across all religions. We are left wondering: can Arefin's narrator and Sarafraz Sahib even find a common language in which to voice their differences?
Saikat Majumdar's novels include The Scent of God (2019) and The Firebird (2015).
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These Progressives Helped Keep Hope Alive in 2020and Prepare Us for 2021 – The Nation
Posted: at 8:55 am
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Covid-19, mass unemployment, police violence, a burning planet, and a defeated president refusing to concede made 2020 the year Americans couldnt wait to end. Yet 2020 also saw a heroic pandemic response by frontline workers, mass protests against systemic racism, and a growing recognition of the necessity for big agendas: cash payments to the unemployed, Medicare for All, and a Green New Deal. The most valuable progressives of 2020 kept hope alive with activism, ideas, and music to inspire transformational change in 2021.1
(Cheriss May / NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Stacey Abrams2
When Abrams announced on December 14 that Georgias 16 electoral votes had been cast for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, applause erupted for the first Democratic presidential win in the state since 1992and for Abrams, the 2018 gubernatorial candidate who had argued all along that voter mobilization could flip swing states against Donald Trump. With her group Fair Fight, Abrams championed voter registration and mobilization drives in Georgia, Wisconsin, and other battleground states. They figured out how to draw new Black, Latinx, and Asian American voters to the polls, circumvent voter suppression, and navigate the challenges of a pandemic election, with a savvy emphasis on mail-in voting, early voting, and safe in-person voting on Election Day that will be a national model going forward. That merits applause. And the cheering will be even louder in 2022 if, as many suspect, Abrams runs for (and wins) Georgias governorship.3
(Jeff Kowalsky / AFP)
Bernie Sanders4
The senator from Vermont didnt receive the Democratic nomination in 2020, as seemed possible after his New Hampshire and Nevada wins briefly made him the front-runner in the primary race. Sanders did, however, play a critical role in securing the presidency for the Democratsworking with Biden to establish unity task forces that framed the partys agenda, and arguing relentlessly that Trump was an existential threat to democracy who must be removed from office. Sanders closed the year with a courageous effort to secure $2,000 checks for Americans who are struggling to get by in a pandemic-ravaged economy. That fight will continue in 2021, and Sanders will no doubt continue to be the Senates boldest battler for economic, social, and racial justice; for the planet; and for peace.5
(Win McNamee / Getty Images)
Ilhan Omar6
As the representative from the Minneapolis district where George Floyds death during a brutal arrest in May sparked nationwide protests, Omar immediately recognized that this police killing of a Black man was part of a broader crisis. We are not merely fighting to tear down the systems of oppression in the criminal justice system, she announced. We are fighting to tear down systems of oppression that exist in housing, in education, in health care, in employment, in the air we breathe. Trump staked his bid to win Minnesota on a campaign that viciously attacked Omars challenge to systemic racism. The congresswoman responded with a turnout drive that boosted Democratic numbers in her district and helped Biden sweep the state.7
(Office of Rashida Tlaib)
Rashida Tlaibs Justice for All Act8
A civil rights lawyer with Detroits Sugar Law Center for Economic & Social Justice before her election to Congress, Tlaib wants to put the teeth back into civil rights laws that have been undermined by conservative courts determined to give corporations and the government a license to discriminate if they just use the right code words and proxies for race, gender, and other aspects of who we are. The Michigan Democrats new Justice for All Act seeks to guarantee that victims of discrimination can vindicate their rights in the courts by restoring and expanding the protections of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Fair Housing Act of 1968, the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. National Lawyers Guild president Elena Cohen says legislation like Tlaibs is sorely needed in order to protect all people of this country.9
(Steve Apps / Wisconsin State Journal via AP)
Josh Kaul10
When Trump threatened to use federal agents to crack down on Black Lives Matter protests in cities like Milwaukee, Wisconsins attorney general decried the presidents fascist tactics, including his demonization of immigrants, his attacks on communities with large minority populations and the elected representatives of those communities, the blatantly illegal use of force against protesters near the White House, and the deployment of secret federal police to Portland, Ore. He pledged to take any appropriate legal action to prevent agents from interfering with peaceful protests, stating, I dont use the phrase fascist tactics lightly. But there is no more accurate way to describe this administrations repeated resort to and incitement of racism, xenophobia, and violence.11
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Native Vote, Menikanaehkem12
Voting is sacred. My people know that. We were not universally granted the right to vote until 1962, said Representative Deb Haaland, a tribal citizen of the Pueblo of Laguna in New Mexico who is now Bidens nominee for interior secretary, speaking at the 2020 Democratic National Convention. Grassroots organizing by groups working in tribal communities and outreach by Every Native Vote Counts, a national campaign of the nonpartisan group Native Votes, boosted turnout in swing states like Arizona and Wisconsin. Wisconsins Menikanaehkem focused on Menominee County, which shares boundaries with the Menominee Indian Reservation. In November, the county saw the sharpest swing to the Democratic ticket of any in the state and produced the highest support for Biden82 percent. Increased turnout by Indigenous voters mattered in Wisconsin, where Democrats won by just 20,682 votes.13
Living United for Change in Arizona (LUCHA)14
Trump won Arizona by more than 90,000 votes in 2016, but he lost it by 10,457 votes in 2020. What changed? The Arizona Republic reported that increased turnout among Latinx voters was critical for Democrats, as 63% of their votes went to Biden and 36% to Trump, according to exit polls. Many unions and grassroots organizations contributed to the turnout spike. One of the most innovative was LUCHA, a group born in the struggle against anti-immigrant laws, which in cooperation with Seed the Vote and Peoples Action embraced an innovative deep-canvassing strategy designed to reach out to undecided and conflicted voters and engage in real conversations. It worked.15
American Constitution Society, Alliance for Justice, Demand Justice16
To counter the Federalist Societys relentless drive to pack the federal bench with right-wing activists, the American Constitution Society, led by former senator Russ Feingold, came up with a plan to jump-start the Biden-Harris administrations judicial selection process. Immediately after the election, the ACS delivered a list of hundreds of qualified prospects that would bring diversity to the courts. The Alliance for Justice, led by nomination expert Nan Aron, and allied groups also provided a list of potential nominees. And Brian Fallon and the crew at Demand Justice were already formulating strategies to get Bidens nominees confirmed.17
Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez18
When former Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel, once a key fundraiser and power broker in Bill Clintons administration, was floated for a top job under Biden, Rodriguez, the Chicago alderwoman and member of the City Councils powerful caucus of Democratic Socialists, penned a scathing letter putting him on a DO NOT HIRE list. That letter evolved into a petition to Biden signed by thousands of Chicagoans, which recalled that Emanuel covered up the 2014 police murder of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald and closed 50 elementary schools. The petition stated, If you want to root out systemic racism, defend democracy, and build a society that leaves no one behindall worthy goals mentioned in your victory speechwe can think of few people worse for the job than the man who earned the nickname Mayor 1%. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Representative-elect Jamaal Bowman amplified the themes as the outcry went national. The pushback showed how progressives can and must put pressure on the new administration.19
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Representatives Barbara Lee and Mark Pocan and the Defense Spending Reduction Caucus20
Faced with a pandemic and an economic meltdown, Wisconsins Pocan argued in May, Increasing defense spending now would be a slap in the face to the families of [those who] have died from this virus. Pocan and Californias Lee rallied 93 House votes for a July amendment to cut Pentagon spending by 10 percent; Vermonts Bernie Sanders secured 23 Senate votes. Lee and Pocan then formed the Defense Spending Reduction Caucus. Lee, who was recently honored by the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft for her long struggle to move U.S. foreign policy away from endless war and toward vigorous diplomacy, has warned that warped budget priorities harm Black and brown people the most. We cant keep spending billions for weapons while leaving our people defenseless against COVID, she said.21
Fair and Just Prosecution22
The ranks of progressive prosecutors swelled in November with the elections of George Gascon in Los Angeles, Monique Worrell in Orlando, Fla., and Jos Garza in Austin, Tex. Nationwide, innovative district attorneys are generating fresh ideas for police accountability, ending mass incarceration, reforming drug laws, and addressing systemic racism. Fair and Just Prosecution brings them together to share strategies for moving away from past incarceration-driven approaches and advancing new thinking that promotes prevention and diversion and increases fairness.23
(Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)
Bonnie Castillo24
Unions were on the front lines of the pandemic, protecting their members and their communities as Covid-19 swept America. No labor leader battled harder than Castillo, a registered nurse and the executive director of National Nurses United. Starting in January, the union demanded that nurses get protective gear to save their own lives and the lives of their patients. NNU forced hospitals to change policies, demonstrated outside the White House, and kept an eye on the big picture. Explaining that so much injustice in our society is amplified by Covid-19, Castillo decried the racial inequities of a for-profit health care system and championed Medicare for All. As legendary United Farm Workers union leader Dolores Huerta said, Bonnie does not just work to heal patients; she works to heal society.25
Zephyr Teachout, Jennifer Taub, Stephanie Kelton26
Recovery from the many crises of 2020 will require bold thinking, and three great public intellectuals provide it with books that challenge monopoly power, neoliberalism, and corruption. Teachouts Break Em Up: Recovering Our Freedom From Big Ag, Big Tech, and Big Money (All Points Books) argues for trust-busting as a necessary response to inequality, climate change, the consolidation of economic power, and the systemic disenfranchisement of women, immigrants, and people of color. Taubs Big Dirty Money: The Shocking Injustice and Unseen Cost of White Collar Crime (Viking) explains that the crimes of the billionaire class are never victimless. Keltons The Deficit Myth: Modern Monetary Theory and the Birth of the Peoples Economy (Public Affairs) provides an antidote to deficit hawks who claim theres not enough money for Medicare for All and a Green New Deal.27
Amy Hanauer28
Since taking over in 2019 as executive director of Citizens for Tax Justice and the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, Hanauer has been calling out the economic fallacies that pass for policy in Washington. When Senate Republicans gamed the Covid-19 relief debates, Hanauer warned, Senator McConnell is circulating a hoax of a plan withtwo enormous giveaways to corporations: a liability shield for companies whose policies contribute to their employees getting sick, and a tax deduction for business meals. Making the connection between regressive tax policies and rising inequality, Hanauer and her team crunch numbers and build arguments for taxing the rich and lifting up the working class.29
Hood to the Holler30
When Louisville Black Lives Matter activists and their allies demanded justice for Breonna Taylor, a Black medical worker shot and killed during a police raid, Kentucky legislator Charles Booker joined them on the streets. He didnt stop there. Booker took the racial justice message to rural Kentucky, mounting a campaign that almost had him winning the Democratic nomination to run against Mitch McConnell. After the primary, Booker formed Hood to the Holler, a grassroots movement to build a new Southern strategy that breaks down barriers to discussions of racial justice and generational poverty.31
Long Time Passing: Kronos Quartet and Friends Celebrate Pete Seeger32
Commissioned by the FreshGrass Foundation to celebrate the 2019 centennial of Seegers birth, the always innovative string quartet and talented vocalists like Maria Arnal, Sam Amidon, and Aoife ODonovan reimagined the folk singers songbook and added numbers from artists influenced by his radical humanity. Long Time Passing (Smithsonian Folkways) is both musically and politically brilliant. Its version of Zoe Mulfords The President Sang Amazing Grace, featuring the Ethiopian American singer Meklit, achieves the rare feat of being painful, beautiful, and healing at the same time.33
(Julien Hekimian / Getty Images)
Janelle Mones Turntables34
Turntables ignites with the singers call for a different vision with a new dream and this promise: We kicking out the old regime. Written for Stacey Abramss voting rights documentary, All In: The Fight for Democracy, the song (and a brilliant accompanying video with a spoken-word invocation from James Baldwin) aligns history with a new generations demands for systemic change. Its release capped a remarkable year for Mone, which began with a riveting Academy Awards performance that saw her celebrating Black History Month and pioneering women before declaring, Im so proud to stand here as a Black queer artist telling stories.35
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Rootz announces the launch of third online casino – Yogonet International
Posted: January 15, 2021 at 2:41 pm
W
heelz is built on Rootz's own gaming platform that allows for seamless navigation and the provision of real-time rewards, wrapped in a colourful and engaging interface.
Since debuting with flagship brand, Wildz in 2019, the developer has been recognised for their rapid ascent through numerous industry award nominations. With their third portfolio addition, the veteran crew is hoping to wow even more online casino enthusiasts by leveraging machine learning that has proved so successful with previous ventures, fine-tuned over the course of several years.
In-house smart systems comprise an essential component in Rootz's toolkit, with their influence felt across all key areas of the business, such as AML and Rewards. Payment times at Wheelz are also some of the fastest in the industry, supported by robust processes developed over time. As to the face of the brand, there is one recent revelation that is giving the Malta-based operator particular cause for excitement.
Rootz has agreed to partner up with showbiz legend David Hasselhoff - of Baywatch and Knight Rider fame, to act as Wheelz brand ambassador. "The Hoff", as he is affectionately known in circles worldwide, is expected to return to his acting roots as the star of Wheelz TV ads, and the collaboration will even see the Hollywood megastar Hoff feature in his own dedicated bonus games at Wheelz. The Hoff admits to feeling at home in the casino environment, even telling Wheelz: "If I had to pick a favourite casino game, it would definitely be craps."
Hasselhoff may be happy to hear his favourite game, plus a host of other dealer-dealt live streamed table games, are on offer at Wheelz - along with hundreds of popular video slot titles. As he has done throughout life, the star will be looking to bring his own brand of cool to the party at Wheelz, stating: "That word cool, is a real big word to me."
Pulling off a major coup in the capture of Hasselhoff, the trailblazers at Rootz are confident they've acquired arguably the biggest global star ever to represent an MGA-accredited online casino. As yet there has been no word on whether The Hoff will be travelling to Malta as part of his obligations, but the situation was left marked 'watch this space' by a Rootz representative when pressed.
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Is 2021 the year for online casino growth in the USA? – The Game Haus
Posted: at 2:41 pm
From poker to baccarat and slots to blackjack, people love to play casino games. But, while other countries and continents such as the U.K. and Europe have regulated internet gambling for years. America is yet to jump in with both feet. Even though their neighbours Canada have legalised the use of online casinos, so long as the casino company is not based in the country.
But, in the past decade, America has proved its attitude towards gambling is changing. And 2021 could be the year that sees exponential growth. Read on for more details why.
Banning the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act in 2018 marked a progressive step towards Americas approval or tolerance of gambling online.
Since then, twenty states, including Colorado, Iowa, and Pennsylvania, have decided to legalize sports betting.
PASPA intended to stop American states (except Nevada) from participating in sports betting. However, according to the American Gaming Association (AGA), of the $150 billion spent on sports betting in the U.S each year. Despite the legislation, 97% was spent on illegal sportsbooks and offshore companies.
With people choosing to place bets and gamble regardless of the legislation. It stands to reason why states are slowly coming around to the idea of permitting gambling to make it accessible, yet safe, and fair for everyone.
The Department of Justice authorized all states to determine their online gambling legislation.
Most states which have permitted online gambling have done so to serve their state. Here are four states that have approved online casinos in the last decade, accompanied by their reasons for doing so and success so far.
Several states have already passed and legalised online casino use by their citizens.
New Jersey passed an online gambling law in 2013. The law intended to expand N.J.s gambling market. And fill the void of lost gambling revenue that occurred in Atlantic City around this time. The dip in revenue was due to an increase in competition from gambling facilities in other states.
Now, the garden state draws in $225 million a year from online gambling. And N.J. owns the largest share of the online gambling market in the U.S.
The Delaware Gaming Competitiveness Act of 2012 allows land-based casinos to create gambling platforms. Just a few years after legislating internet gambling, Delaware amassed $3 million in revenue from this sector in 2016.
Following Governor Tom Wolfs approval of a bill for online gambling in 2017. Online casino games emerged in Pennsylvania in 2019.
Pennsylvania intended to legalize gambling to enhance the state and boost the economy. As of 2019, the state accrued $33.9 million from online gambling.
Today, P.A. owns the fastest-growing gambling market in the U.S. Due to increased demand for online casino games. Pennsylvanias casino providers are forming partnerships to facilitate the needs of iGaming enthusiasts.
Once the West Virginia Lottery Interactive Wagering Act was introduced in 2019, the Mountain state-permitted online casinos. A year later, the first regulated casinos on the internet commenced.
The launch of authorized online casinos proved to be more popular than West Virginias legal sportsbooks. In October 2020 alone, West Virginias online casinos accrued over $53 million.
In addition to the above, there are many reasons why online casinos benefit state governors and the public. The USA only have to look at their neighbours Canada to see the benefits the industry could bring. With many Canadians opting to play at online casino Canada, Canadas economy is boosted due to things like taxes and employment, all which could help benefit states in America.
The Government
Licensing:States can be selective about what casinos they permit and can limit the risk of gambling institutions backed by organized crime from operating in the state.
Audits:The government can regulate gambling activities online to ensure iGaming providers are safe and fair to use.
Lucrative Sector: Permitting and licensing iGaming platforms allows the government to charge for license fees and tax. Which can fund and improve the state.
Taxes gained the online gambling companies can help benefit the community.
For the people
Safe and Fair Gaming:The public will have access to approved licensed casino sites.
Accessible Gaming:Residents can play from their desktop, mobile, or tablet without visiting the casino.
Privacy:New casino players can gamble in private without the fear of being judged at a land-based casino.
According to a United States online gambling market report. Americas online gambling market will increase by a CAGR of 15.41%. Suggesting a steady yet impressive growth over the years to come.
Alongside the report, factors that will encourage the growth of the online casino in the USare as follows;
The positive impact on the economy, coupled with safer places for US residents to gamble online, presents states an opportunity thats too good to refuse.
As such, you will probably see an uptick in states instigating online gambling laws in 2021 and beyond. In a bid to protect the states public interests from organized crime groups. And to put the money from online gambling sources to fair use.
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