Daily Archives: August 14, 2021

Is Tucker Carlson the right’s Jon Stewart? – The Week Magazine

Posted: August 14, 2021 at 1:35 am

Why is there no right-wing Jon Stewart? Around the time the erstwhile Daily Show host ceded his seatin2015, you may recall this was a much-considered topic. Conservative Daily Show knockoffs don't have a good track record the best-known may be The 1/2 Hour News Hour, a short-lived program that owes nearly all its fame to its frequent citation as an example of the failings of the right-wing Stewart shtick.

I haven't thought about that question in years, but a snippet of a Monday Atlantic piece about vaccine acceptance by fans of Fox News pundit Tucker Carlson first reminded me, then reframed the question: What if the right-wing Jon Stewart is already here? What if it's Carlson?

Most of the vaccinatedTuckerviewers see the show primarily as a form of entertainment. They like that Carlson veers offbeat, like the time he claimed theNational Security Agency spiedon him, and that he sticks it to the libs a little. They find other media commentators condescending. Where liberals see an angry, deluded racist, conservatives see a politically incorrect Jon Stewart. These Carlson fans don't look to him as a source of genuine vaccine information, but as a funny id who stirs things up. [The Atlantic]

The obvious objection here is that Carlson presents himself as a serious political commentator while Stewart always insisted most famously, to Carlson himself on Crossfire he was merely a comedian. I find that objection pretty compelling, honestly, but here are three things that give me pause.

First, there's what happenedwhen push came to (legal) shove. While defending Carlson against a defamation suit, Fox lawyers described his show as entertainment in which the "general tenor" indicates to viewers they're hearing"non-literal commentary," not "actual facts."

Second, in its fully realized form, c. 2010-2015, Stewart's Daily Show never dispensed with the crude and juvenile comedy, but polling showed millions of viewers took him quite seriously as a pundit and news source. In 2004, on Crossfire, Stewart's protest about his rolewas credible, but by the end, he was simultaneously comedian and serious commentator.

Third, consider the Atlantic quote itself. I've no doubt many of Carlson's viewers see him wholly as a straight news man, our time's Walter Cronkite or whatever. But some subset looks at him and sees their side's Jon Stewart. And as humor is in the eye of the beholder, maybe they're right.

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LETTER: What’s more valuable: profits or the planet? | Saltwire – SaltWire Network

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It is claimed that F. Scott Fitzgerald once told Ernest Hemingway that the rich are different from the rest of us.

Hemingway is said to have replied that They have more money, and some people think that Hemingway believed that was the only difference.

Whatever these two American authors may have had in mind, I can state with conviction that the rich are different from us in much more than their wealth. Having a lot of money does something to your mind; attitudes, feelings, ways of looking at the world, etc.

Now, Ive seen some strange things in my time, but one of the strangest Ive seen in the few days was an article in the Financial Post, a newspaper that caters to those who prefer money to almost everything else. Its by a fellow by the name of Ron Wallace.

Ive never met Ron, but Im willing to believe hes a debonair fellow in lots of ways his hair neatly combed, his suit just that little bit too tight as demanded by current fashion, probably plays a good game of golf, or poker, or something you know the sort of thing.

My problem with this Ron is that he thinks we shouldnt do anything about global warming if it could be detrimental to Industry, including, if you please, the fossil-fuel industry.

To my financially nave mind, this sounds like Lets not do anything about global warming if China and Russia dont do it first.

As I say, Rons probably more attuned to matters financial than I am; I just try to live on my pension, avoiding big-ticket items like suits that are too tight.

As a matter of fact I did once have a suit, and it was too tight, although it wasnt even close to being in fashion in the mid-eighties. I was overweight; still am actually.

Back to money.

Having a lot of it rots the brain. Being able to buy whatever you want, just because you want it, sets up an insatiable appetite for more. We used to call these people misers, but thats no doubt politically incorrect today, so I wont even suggest that the Financial Posts clientele are m*s*rs.

They just think money is better than other things.

What worries me, when I reflect on it, is that there are people who think financial profit is more important than physical survival.

We know that were perilously close to missing our chance to save Planet Earth, but rich people are worrying about what itll do to their dividends. We know the answer to that one too: your dividends will die with you. They wont be worth the paper theyre

printed on.

The fact that some countries are dragging their feet on cutting carbon emissions is no reason to just say Shaggit! and stop trying.

Ed HealyMarystown

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Machine Learning Could Identify Extremists From Their Anonymous Online Posts Homeland Security Today – HSToday

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Two Illinois Institute of Technology graduate students have published research examining whether extremists can be identified through their anonymous online posts using machine learning and open-source intelligence software.

Andreas Vassilakos (ITM/M.A.S. CYF 21) and Jose Luis Castanon Remy (M.A.S. ITM 2nd Year) published Illicit Activities Beneath the Surface Web: Investigating Domestic Extremism on Anonymous Social Media Platforms in HOLISTICA Journal of Business and Public Administration. Dr Maurice Dawson, Illinois Tech assistant professor of information technology and management, and Tenace Kwaku Setor, assistant professor of information science and technology at the University of Nebraska Omaha, co-authored the paper.

The researchers examined online platforms such as Reddit and 4chan, where anonymous extremist rants and thoughts can be found easily. Domestic terrorists in California and New Zealand posted manifestos on these platforms before carrying out mass shootings. In each of these two cases, the shooters identified themselves as white nationalists and used these social media platforms to anonymously post their radical ideas and perceived viewpoints of population groups that conform to their own fanatic identities in political, ethnic, and social status.

We collected actual messages from forums like Reddit and 4chan, Vassilakos says. Specifically, we reviewed subreddits [topic-based posts] that were focused on politically incorrect and racial context. Through these platforms, we were able to analyze data that was posted in plain text. We did not interpret the content, but collected it verbatim.

The researchers used Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) software, widely used by the United States government, to collect input values and data from the social media posts, which were then moved into a spreadsheet for analysis. By combining OSINT with artificial intelligence and machine learning techniques, the researchers hope to be able to identify anonymous posters.

With this intelligence-gathering strategy, we can collect publicly available data to conduct our analysis, Vassilakos says. People are often not careful when they share data on the internet. Combining OSINT and other machine learning tools, we can excavate much information that can lead to valuable conclusions.

After identifying these posts, an investigation into who originated the post can begin. Using tools such as Maltego, the researchers can examine IP addresses, MAC addresses, and mobile devices to unveil the identity of the poster.

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The Orwell Foundation gives in to cancel culture – The Week Magazine

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In 2020, the Orwell Foundation awarded its book prize in political writing to Some Kids I Taught and What They Taught Me by former teacher Kate Clanchy. According to the judges, "Clanchy's reflections on teaching and the stories of her students are moving, funny, full of love and offer sparkling insights into modern British society."

On Tuesday, the foundation had second thoughts. With the book facing criticism of ostensibly demeaning descriptions of minority, immigrant, and autistic students, the foundation issued a statement acknowledging "concerns and hurt" about the book and distancing itself from "individual judging panel decisions."

The Orwell Foundation statement wasn't the worst response to the controversy, which provoked a torrent of online abuse. The author herself issued a groveling apology before tweeting that "I am not a good person...You are right to blame me, and I blame myself." She announced that she will rewrite future editions of the book to avoid offense. The book's publisher also declared itself "profoundly" sorry for the episode.

While its actual content is less egregious than those remarks, the foundation's response is symbolically more damaging. Orwell is best remembered as the creator of a dystopia in which totalitarian ideology, pervasive surveillance, and constant editing of the past to meet the political requirements of the present make individuality impossible. By refusing to defend the book it once honored and the judges who selected it, the Orwell Foundation is confirming its namesake's fears.

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The census is about to set our politics on fire – The Week Magazine

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Get ready for a new round of "white replacement" tirades from Tucker Carlson.

The Washington Post reports that when the first demographic breakdowns from the 2020 census are officially unveiled later this week, they'll show that the number of white people in the country isshrinking. White people will still command a majority, but by thinning margins making up less than 60 percent of the population, and composing less than half of the under-18 population. By 2045, it's expected that whites will lose their majority status altogether.

The news is likely to have terrible effects on our politics.

It's not a new observation that the dwindling power of white Americans has driven the anti-democratic radicalization of the Republican Party. Conservatives' recent fascination with Viktor Orbn's rule in Hungary can be explained, in part, by that country's ethnic homogeneity, as well as Orbn's fierce efforts to maintain it by crusading against immigrants from Asia and Africa. Donald Trump's rise was enabled by right-wing intellectuals who lamented that "the ceaseless importation of Third World foreigners" made the country "less traditionally American with every cycle."

"Every time they import a new voter, I become disenfranchised as a current voter," Carlson grumbled on his Fox News show in April.

But immigration doesn't explain why the number of white people isgetting smaller. One demographer told the Post the phenomenon has been accelerated both by the opioid epidemic and lower-than-expected birth rates among millennials following the Great Recession. The latter development, of course, has also sparked angry culture war posturing by Republican politicians.

To the extent that these developments are rooted in despair and economic hopelessness and not, say, the predictable effects of affluence Democrats and Republicans both should be prepared to offer solutions. (Democrats are already arguably doing their part, with tax credit payments to parents, and by driving the new infrastructure bill that should create a ton of newjobs for workers of all races.) If recent history tells us anything, though, it's that the census news will create a fresh wave of right-wing anger, and that much of it will be directed against America's minority populations. Our ugly politics are probably going to get uglier.

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Funny Papers Again Column | Did You Hear the One About – King City Rustler

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What is humor? What makes us smile, what tickles our funny bones? Humor is a very serious subject for some, mostly those involved in therapy and counseling where humor has been found to be an indicator of ones emotional and mental state. But for most of us humor is what we seek, consciously or unconsciously, as escape from the mundanities of life, as small detours in times when either stress or boredom beg for respite.

In fact, humor has been separated into five basic categories: Topical, Anecdotal, Parody, Traditional and the One Liner. As a member of the Television Generation, I have laughed at the humor represented by all five categories; some of you will no doubt recognize some of the names of those who brought laughter into our homes and lives and some are people in my life who consistently made me laugh over the years.

As the television set found its way into more and more homes, those who were instrumental in both its scientific and cultural development were goaled with providing the public with reports on weather, crops marketing and government actions, what they got were game shows, soap operas, variety shows and product advertisements and only 15 minutes of news daily. It was the earlier variety shows and then later the late-night talk shows that brought laughter to our living rooms, and those most responsible for that laughter in the late 1950s through the mid-1970s were Jewish comedians.

This followed from the influence of Yiddish translated to English by Vaudeville performers from Europe, and quite often this humor was born of hardship, like this one from Manhattans Lower East Side in the 1920s:

Lady shopper to street fruit vendor: How much for the grapefruit?

Vendor: Two for a nickel.

Lady: How much for one?

Vendor: Three cents.

Lady: Ill take the other one.

Or like the once well-known story of the man taking his son along for the first time on a business trip and looking out the coach window of the train to the platform where the whole family is gathered to wish him off when the father tells the boy to Throw Mama from the train a kiss.

Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin were once a famous comedy team. Lewis was Jewish and when something would go wrong in a comedy sketch he was known to utter Up the street the soldiers are marching down; this typical of the grammatical structure one gets with Yiddish-infused English.

And, as mentioned before, many of the early television comedians were Jewish: Jack Benny, George Burns, Milton Berle, Jackie Mason, Allen King and scores of others who worked small clubs in the East and resorts in the Catskill Mountains of upper New York state, The Borscht Belt. It was in these venues comedians mastered the One-Liner; many people know Take my wife, please, the Methuselah of one-liners from Henny Youngman; later we knew Rodney Dangerfields My wife and I were happy for 20 years . . . then we met.

For most of us, our earliest introduction to humor comes in the form of the Knock-Knock joke; silly most of them, but to the young, silly is funny. My favorite knock-knock I heard for the first time only about six months ago: Knock, knock. Whos there? Interrupting bird. Interrupting bir. . . Gaaawwwk!! Got a granddaughter who thought that was very funny and Im sure has passed it along. Another favorite humor theme for the younger set is Why did the chicken cross the road jokes, of which there are as many answers as there are imaginations.

Other humor is funny, but not silly. There are times when we need a dark humor just to overcome the dark times and so we resort to what is known as Graveyard Humor; a light look at a serious situation. Examples of this type of humor go back as far as the founding of the country: in meeting of the Continental Congress it was remarked that the endeavor to separate from the English Crown would require all members participation, we must all hang together. Whereupon Benjamin Franklin dryly responded, Or most assuredly we will all hang separately.

George Gobel on Johnny Carsons The Tonight Show once lamented that his uncle was always annoyed that he never received any respect for his wartime duty, and when Carson asked, What did your uncle do in the war? Gobel replied, He was a look-out at Pearl Harbor. Thats funny even though thousands lost their lives that day; I have never heard such a joke about Sept. 11, 2001. A lesser cousin to graveyard humor is the edgy, almost politically incorrect humor found in older sketch comedy routines; and example goes something like this:

Tell me, Mr. Bones, how do I keep my dog from biting me on Monday? The answer is simple, Mr. Tambo, you shoot the dog on Sunday! A version of this joke appeared in the musical White Christmas.

But for modern comedians, and audiences, the telling of jokes doesnt work near as well as the anecdotal humorous story, the telling of personal events in ones life. Often, or always, in such re-tellings expand those aspects, which strikes a humorous tone. Such humor is found in the writings of Mark Twain, James Thurber and other early American writers; today all stand-up comedians, TV and film/video writers and cartoonists rely almost entirely upon this type of humor.

In my own life, I have written in this publication and in a couple of short stories for writing classes over the years about the time, as a bag boy at Safeway here in town, I ended up inside an upside-down shopping cart; painful for me but funny for others.

I said I would mention some people in my life who over the years made me laugh as joke tellers, not just their material but their delivery being of equal standing. Well, Im out of space so let me just say, Thanks for memories, Jimmy Jones and Stephen Bruce Scettrini.

Take care. Peace.

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Opportunity and the OBC Bill – DTNext

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Chennai:

The debate, for the most part, was uncontentious, and all MPs in both the Houses were keen on demonstrating their support for the Constitution (One Hundred and Twenty-Seventh Amendment) Bill. A cynical way of looking at this unusual consensus is that nothing unites the political class as much as electoral opportunity. The principle thrust of the amendment Bill, after all, is to pave the way for States and Union Territories to make their own Other Backward Class (OBC) list.

Essentially, the Bill was required to side-step the Supreme Court verdict, which held that only the Centre had the authority to prepare an OBC list, a power that flowed from the Constitution (102nd Amendment Act). The latter was passed by the Narendra Modi government to confer constitutional status on the National Commission for Backward Castes. While the Centre argued that its intent was never to strip the States and the UTs of their right to draw up OBC lists, the Opposition had a point in saying that by introducing another Amendment Bill, the Centre was only trying to clean up a mess of its own making.

But exactly what social purpose will the Bill serve? It is possible that this will give a fillip to demands for a caste census to determine the percentage of OBCs in States and UTs. It is likely that demands by one community or another to be placed in the OBC category will grow louder. What such legislations do not ensure, and this in many ways is the nub, is a greater share of reservation for the backward classes. This remains capped at less than 50 per cent by the so-called Mandal judgment of the Supreme Court in 1992 (Indira Sawhney v. Others).

In the interim, the significance of the decision lies more in the airy realm of political signalling. With a number of States going to the polls next year most critically, Uttar Pradesh the BJP probably believes that this move will increase its traction with the OBCs. This is our decision and we will see to it that the community gets justice, thundered Amit Shah at a rally. There is no doubt that the OBC community is a major constituent and is critical to determining electoral outcomes in a number of States. The BJP has made considerable headway in winning its support in recent years, as clearly revealed by the election results from the northern States.

Whether such Bills make a tangible difference in the electoral arena is unclear. But at the very least, it does not hurt and provides a talking point. In the Lok Sabha, Akhilesh Yadav accused the BJP of misleading the OBCs, by providing them token representation. The SP leader is not incorrect in suggesting that the real power is elsewhere in the BJP, which is something of an anomaly as an upper caste party with a lower caste electoral base. Such arguments will play out strongly as Uttar Pradesh goes to the polls in February 2022, quite easily the most significant electoral contest until the 2024 general election.

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Kohler Barnards Zille moment: The absurdity of comparing SAs Olympic medal count with that of the Netherlands – Daily Maverick

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Ismail Lagardien

Ismail Lagardien is a writer, columnist and political economist with extensive exposure and experience in global political economic affairs. He was educated at the London School of Economics, and holds a PhD in International Political Economy.

Much as one tries to accept and promote free speech as part of democracy, it is difficult to keep a lid on the most wilfully expedient and their pitiful attempts at intellectual occlusion. We tend to look to EFF leader Julius Malema to say tortured things out of context or make claims that are intellectually superficial, which do no more than whip up the emotions of his followers. The DAs Dianne Kohler Barnard is not above such lowbrow manipulation. Just for the record, the ANCs Maite Nkoana-Mashabane has given us a few gems.

Anyway, Kohler Barnard sent out a tweet at 10.04am on 9 August in response to a tweet, by one Hans-Erik Iken, which celebrated the medal haul of the Netherlands at the Tokyo Olympics: Not bad for a tiny country with about 17 million people in it

In a mild case of bile rising, Kohler Barnard tweeted: And we brought home how many? The subtext being that a country of close to 60 million people (South Africa) ought to have achieved much more at the Olympics and brought back a few more medals.

Whether or not you agree with them, understand them (which can be impossibly difficult), or you have generally signed up to their intellect and ideas, most rhetoricians (from Cicero to Roland Barthes or Jacques Derrida) have made statements that startle and inspire. Politicians, especially those who simply seek attention by asking rhetorical questions, and especially those who ask questions but dont hang around for answers, should be held accountable and require greater scrutiny than thinkers like Barthes or Cicero. That is probably why we focus on the oration of Malema; because he is as masterful an orator as he is a manipulator of populist sentiments.

I am not drawing ideological parallels between Malema and Kohler Barnard. I do, however, think Malema weaponises all that is generally true about the history of injustice in South Africa and throws down carefully couched threats against non-Africans. Kohler Barnard, in Zille-esque fashion, desituates her claims and observations (removing them from all the contexts that shape states of affairs). And so my response to Kohler Barnards tweet was this: Youre smart, think about history and deep wells of social, cultural, symbolic and economic forms of capital built up over more than 400 years not all of which were benign.

To anyone sceptical or amused by Twitter as a source of news and information, I would refer to the way that the platform entered the political arena when it was used by Donald Trump to political ends, and by South Africans as a firestarter.

Forms of capital

Since (at least) the publication of Robert Putnams Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community about two decades ago, there has been a glut of literature on social capital. It was about two decades ago, while I was at the World Bank, that I co-drafted a paper on social capital for Jo Ritzen, a Dutch Labour Party politician who became a vice-president at the bank. That was one of those moments when you make a contribution to a draft and follow the request of your instructor and hope your name is never mentioned. Alas, he gave me credit on the front page. I returned to academia and put all that behind me.

Anyway, those of us trained in and associated with the Critical Tradition in the social sciences (yes, Helen, including Critical Race Theory), have typically drawn on the work and ideas of the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu (I should admit my bias immediately). Bourdieu expanded the concept of capital way beyond the elementary conception, which includes forms of capital that stress material exchanges, including immaterial and non-economic and (specifically) cultural and symbolic capital.

Bourdieu explained the way that different types of capital can be acquired, exchanged and converted into other forms to the extent that its structure and distribution reproduce the structure of the social world including those structures, mechanisms and tendencies that we cannot detect with our senses. Once you understand this process, according to Bourdieu (I have also drawn on the ideas of the late Roy Bhaskar), understanding the multiple forms of capital necessarily assists with a more sophisticated understanding of the structure and function of the world around us.

Briefly, types of capital are almost always and in various ways derived from economic capital. In this way, cultural and social capital are fundamentally rooted in economic capital, but we have to be careful to not be too economistic about things. The key is to understand the ways that social, cultural and even symbolic capital retain their power precisely because of their structural relationship to economic capital. So, enough of the academic jibber-jabber.

Kohler Barnards Zille moment

My twitter response to Kohler Barnard is rooted in the idea that it is okay to compare all countries, as cartographic entities, but people are living there. In most cases the people in those countries are amassed within the borders of countries (or expelled) with or without their permission. If, however, you delve beyond the cartographic entities (the way things are) and consider the history and evolution of society (how we got to where and how we are), an infinitely better, more comprehensive picture emerges.

In other words, the Netherlands and South Africa are countries (on a map of the world) that enjoy internal and external sovereignty. But not all of them came to be as powerful or as weak as they are on the surface. The Constitution of the Netherlands dates back to 1814, with important changes in about 1983. South Africas democracy, as enshrined in the Constitution, came into force in 1996.

The Netherlands was a force in the world for much of the period between 1585 and 1740. It was an outstanding power in world trade and shipping which effectively revolutionised the global economic order. It is possible to make the argument that the power and dominance of the Netherlands provided the impetus for European colonial expansion. For instance, Antwerp would supersede what were great economic hubs (like Lisbon, Venice and Genoa), and went on to markets on all continents of the world. Dutch power between 1585 and 1740 was unprecedented in the history of global economic development.

Now, push aside the map of the world which makes South Africa, the US, Israel, the Netherlands and Saudi Arabia all equal and consider the abundance and proliferation of forms of capital accumulated by the Netherlands over the past 400 years. Then place that next to South Africas barely 30 years of democracy, with all its flaws

None of this absolves any of us from the corruption, ethical lapses, cronyism, prebendalism and violence in South Africa. What it certainly does not do, and I have to stress this, is explain away the privillege the European settler colonialists enjoyed in the country between 1585 and 1740. DM

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New Casino, Hotel Complex Nears Completion in Fresno Foothills. When Will It Open? – gvwire.com

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Work appears nearly complete on a new and larger Indian gaming casino complex less than 1,000 feet from the current Table Mountain site in the Fresno County foothills near Millerton Lake.

Construction began on the project to replace the existing casino in 2019.

Plans promised a 110,000 square-foot casino floor that will add more than 600 new gaming machines, expanded restaurant space, a 1,500-seat special event center, gift shop and childcare facility. Parking is expected to be expanded by 1,000 spaces in addition to the casinos existing 5-story garage.

The modern and sweeping design features a glass fronted hotel tower with 14 levels and 150 guest rooms a first at the Table Mountain property which began casino operations in 1987.

Altogether the new complex will offer 600,000 square feet of total space compared to the current 72,000 square foot casino-only venue.

An artists rendering of what the new casino will look like was shared alongside the environmental report provided by the Table Mountain Rancheria. (Image: Table Mountain Rancheria)

We want to build a facility that will sustain us for generations to come, said Dan Casas, the tribes legal counsel, in 2018.

The project is slated for completion this year, based on original estimates, but Table Mountain Rancheria leaders are being tight-lipped about a planned opening date.

Tribal leaders declined to answer questions from GV Wire about the status of the new complex.

Required roadwork and traffic signals leading into the new casino remain unfinished, according to Fresno County officials. Sonja Dosti, the countys public information officer, said those upgrades should be completed by November.

The current casino that now sits right next to the new casino will have its old facilities of 72,000 square footage converted into tribal governmental uses such as administrative offices or tribal services.

Officials estimated in 2018 that the new facilities would add a thousand jobs, increasing employment at Table Mountain to almost 1,454 positions.

The casino at the Table Mountain Rancheria is operated by the Monache tribe and Chukchansi band of Yokuts.

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Richmond asking citizens to give feedback on how casino money is spent – WAVY.com

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RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) The City of Richmond announced on Friday that it is launching an engagement effort to get residents feedback on how they would like the city to spend the $25.5 million that will be paid upfront by ONE Casino and Resort if voters approve the casino gaming referendum on Nov. 2.

This monetary payment is part of the resort casino host Community Agreement that the City Council recently approved on July 27. ONE Casino will pay the city the initial payment by January 2023 and make an additional payment of $1 million upon closing the financing for the project.

The city will be seeking citizen feedback from Aug. 13 to Sept. 6. They will have a digital survey, target print surveys and public meetings in English and Spanish. The engagement period will mostly be focused on Southside, but all Richmonders are invited to participate.

You can find more information about this engagement period online here.

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