Monthly Archives: September 2021

Beyond the culture wars – New Statesman

Posted: September 4, 2021 at 5:50 am

Half a decade on, Brexit and Trump remain shorthand for the rise of right-wing populism and a profound unsettling of liberal democracies. One curious fact is rarely mentioned: the campaigns of Hillary Clinton and Remain in 2016 had similar-sounding slogans, which spectacularly failed to resonate with large parts of the electorate: Stronger Together and Stronger in Europe. Evidently, a significant number of citizens felt that they might actually be stronger, or in some other sense better off, by separating. What does that tell us about the fault lines of politics today?

Conventional wisdom has it that cultural divisions now matter most, and that plenty of people feel they have nothing in common with liberal, supposedly globalist elites. Yet that idea is not only empirically dubious; it also uncritically adopts a cultural framing of political conflict that plays into the hands of the right, if not the far right. The divisions that threaten democracies are increasingly economically driven, a development that has been obscured by the rhetorical strategies of a right committed to plutocratic populism.

Democracies today face a double secession. One is that of the most privileged. They are often lumped together under the category of liberal cosmopolitan elites, which is an invective thrown around by populist leaders, but also a term employed by a growing number of pundits and social scientists. This designation is misleading in many ways. While it is true that certain elites are mobile, they are not necessarily cosmopolitan or liberal in any strong moral sense if by cosmopolitan we do not mean folks with the highest frequent flyer status but those committed to the idea that all humans stand in the same moral relation to each other, regardless of borders.

Value commitments are not necessarily related to travel patterns; the worlds most influential cosmopolitan philosopher, Immanuel Kant, never left his hometown Knigsberg. While plenty of wealthy people make a big show of international charity work, one would search in vain for advocates of what in political philosophy might possibly be called genuine global justice. And we should not forget that, in the 1990s and early 2000s, globalisation was justified not by emphasising its beneficial effects on the world but the advantages it would bestow on individual nations.

Economic and administrative elites still follow education and career paths that are distinctly national. My students at Princeton University might go to work for a multinational company and be posted overseas, but they cannot go anywhere they cannot simply decide, for instance, to join the French elite. It is of course flattering for academics and journalists to think that democracys fate is in their hands, and that if only liberal elites somehow cared more for white working-class men in the American Midwest or the north of England, all might be well.

The point is not that cultural elites are not important of course they are. The point is that simplistic divisions of society into anywheres and somewheres famously put forward by David Goodhart in The Road to Somewhere (2017) and endlessly repeated by liberals eager to flaunt their capacity for self-criticism systematically obscure that actual decision-making elites remain far more national and far less liberal than is commonly thought.

[See also:How Raymond Williams redefined culture]

Globalisation has not brought the end of nationalism but opportunities to retreat selectively from society something from which economic and financial elites (again, not particularly liberal in their views) have especially benefited. They appear to be able to dispense with any real dependence on the rest of society (though of course they still rely on police, halfway-usable roads, and so on). With the globalisation of supply chains and trade regimes, workers and consumers do not have to be in the same country, and, as a consequence of the shift away from mass conscript armies, one also does not depend on ones fellow citizens to serve as soldiers.

An openly avowed, though also quite cartoonish, version of this secession of the economically powerful is provided by the Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel. Thiel self-identifies as libertarian (and ended up not only as an adviser to Donald Trump but as one of the figures trying to adorn Trumpism with a philosophy). In a programmatic statement published in 2009, he wrote that in our time, the great task for libertarians is to find an escape from politics in all its forms from the totalitarian and fundamentalist catastrophes to the unthinking demos that guides so-called social democracy. He put his hope in some sort of new and hitherto untried process that leads us to some undiscovered country. Since, alas, there appear to be few undiscovered countries, Thiel bet on cyberspace, outer space, and, in case none of those spaces work out, seasteading (as in: settling the oceans).

Thiels dismissive remarks about the demos provoked strong reactions in particular, his sentence that since 1920, the vast increase in welfare beneficiaries and the extension of the franchise to women two constituencies that are notoriously tough for libertarians have rendered the notion of capitalist democracy into an oxymoron. He later clarified that he did not advocate for disenfranchising citizens. Indeed, the whole point of his thinking was that the demos as such had to be written off as hopeless; the best one could do was to seek distance from ordinary folks or, put differently, secession.

Thiels pining for undiscovered countries corresponds with the sordid reality of transnational accounting tricks. As two distinguished economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman observe, US firms have in 2016 booked more than 20 per cent of their non-US profits in stateless entities shell companies that are incorporated nowhere, and nowhere taxed. In effect, they have found a way to make $100bn in profits on what is essentially another planet.

[See also:Penses by Bryan Magee]

These kinds of secessions are not undertaken by citizens of nowhere (the money does not really end up nowhere); nor does any of this have anything to do with cultural or moral cosmopolitanism, even if right-wing populists, ever ready to wage culture wars, portray things that way. But the populists critique does contain a kernel of truth: some citizens do take themselves out of anything resembling a decent social contract, for instance relying on private tutors and private security for their gated communities. In France, an astonishing 35 per cent of people claim that they have nothing in common with their fellow citizens.

Such a dynamic is not entirely new: writing about French aristocrats, the 18th-century political theorist the Abb Sieyes observed that the privileged actually come to see themselves as another species of man. In 1789, they discovered that they were not (just as some today will eventually discover that there are noundiscovered countries).

The other secession is even less visible. An increasing number of citizens at the lower end of the income spectrum no longer vote or participate in politics in any other way. In large German cities, for instance, the pattern is clear: poorer areas with high unemployment have much higher abstention rates in elections (in the centre of the old industrial metropolis of Essen it is as high as 90 per cent). This de facto self-separation is not based on a conscious programme in the way Thiels space (or spaced-out) fantasies are, and there is no undiscovered country for the worst-off. Tragically, such a secession becomes self-reinforcing: political parties, for the most part, have no reason to care for those who dont care to vote; this in turn strengthens the impression of the poor that theres nothing in it for them when it comes to politics.

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How does all this relate to the rise of right-wing populism and todays threats to democracy? Like all parties, populist ones offer what the social theorist Pierre Bourdieu once called a vision of divisions: they provide, and promote, an interpretation of societys major political fault lines and then seek to mobilise citizens accordingly. That is not in itself dangerous. Democracy, after all, is about conflict, not consensus, or what James Mattis, Donald Trumps ill-fated secretary of defence, called fundamental friendliness (which, lamenting the lack of political unity in his country, he was sorely missing in the second decade of the 21st century).

The promise of democracy is not that we shall all agree, and it does not require uniformity of principles and habits, as Alexander Hamilton had it. Rather, it is the guarantee that we have a fair chance of fighting for our side politically and then can live with the outcome of the struggle, because we will have another chance in a future election. It is not enough to complain that populists are divisive, for democratic politics is divisive by definition.

The problem is that right-wing populists reduce all conflicts to questions of belonging, and then consider disagreement with their view automatically illegitimate (those who disagree must be traitors; Trumps critics were not so much wrong on merit as, according to his fans, un-American). Populism is not uniquely responsible for polarisation, but it is crucial to understand that its key strategy is polarisation. Right-wing populism seeks to divide polities into homogeneous groups and then insinuates that some groups do not truly belong or are fundamentally illegitimate.

In this world-view, instead of being characterised by cross-cutting identities and interests, politics is simplified and rendered as a picture of one central conflict of existential importance (along the lines of if the wrong side wins, we shall perish). Thus, disquiet about the double secession is channelled by right-wing populists into collective fear or even a moral panic that the country is being taken away from us. In the US in particular, that fear helps to distract from questions of material distribution; what the political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson have called plutocratic populism combines relentless culture war with economic positions that are actually deeply unpopular even with conservative voters, but which are continuously obscured by conjuring up threats to the real that is, white, Christian America (or white Christian England, for that matter). While some Republicans speak out for a kind of working-class conservatism just as the Conservative Party has its advocates of red Toryism there is no way that the Republican Party in its present form will implement any such agenda. In this respect, Trump was typical: stoking the feelings of socio-economic-cum-cultural victimhood of his supporters, and then passing a tax cut of which 80 per cent went to the upper 1 per cent. While the jury is still out on Boris Johnsons levelling up agenda, the fact is that One Nation Toryism has also often remained mere talk.

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Here, then, lies the gravest danger to democracy: in the face of what they perceive as an existential threat, citizens are more willing to condone breaches of democratic principles and the rule of law (it is easier, for instance, to portray judges as enemies of the people). The Yale political scientist Milan Svolik cites a revealing natural experiment in social science to make the point: on the eve of an election in Montana in 2017, the Republican candidate Greg Gianforte body-slammed a Guardian reporter. Plenty of people had already voted by absentee ballot; only those going to the polls on election day by which time three major Montana newspapers had withdrawn their endorsement of Gianforte could directly punish the GOP politician for his behaviour. And what happened? In highly partisan precincts, party loyalty trumped respect for democratic norms. Populists seek to deepen a central division in society and simplify it into a question of whether you are for or against the leader. Thus they make it more difficult for their supporters to put democracy and the rule of law above their partisan interests.

So how should liberals and the left fight back? For one thing, they should resist an uncritical adoption of the anywheres-versus-somewheres frame. Whats more, they should resist the mainstreaming of the far right, or racism lite, that some European social democrats think promises a revival of their electoral fortunes. Some point at Denmark and the mostly symbolic measures adopted by a nominally left-wing party to prove its toughness on immigration and Islamism. But, as the French economist Thomas Piketty and others have shown, most of those who abandoned social democratic parties did not defect to the far right. Instead, since the 1970s, they stopped going to the polls altogether.

Getting people to re-engage in politics is fiendishly difficult. But in their contrasting ways Boris Johnsons former chief advisor Dominic Cummings and the strategists of the Spanish left-wing upstart Podemos proved that it can be done. You can bring citizens to vote who appear to have checked out of the political system entirely, if you offer them an image of their interests and identities that they can recognise. There is Trumps talk of finding votes in the sense of election subversion, but there is also the genuinely democratic practice of finding votes by seeking out those who consider themselves abandoned. And, once again, there is nothing undemocratic about drawing clear lines of conflict: criticising other parties is not the same as calling them illegitimate, populist-style.

Any social democratic programme that seeks to re-engage voters must not be neoliberalism lite, in which deregulation is the default, along with low taxation and disciplining of workers through harsh incentives to accept more or less any job (all policies adopted by Gerhard Schrder, for instance). It must also involve a serious effort to explain which basic interests are shared by those who ceased participating altogether and those who abandoned social democratic parties for Green parties, or even the centre right (in some countries such as Germany).

It is not a mystery what these interests might be: most obviously, functioning national infrastructure and an education system that puts serious resources into helping the worst-off (the vast inequalities of existing systems, where wealthy parents can simply bring in more tutors, was cruelly demonstrated during the pandemic, when even affluent parents faced realities they had never confronted before).

It is not naive to think that Joe Biden might be providing the right model here. He has resisted getting mired in debates about cancelled childrens books, critical race theory, and other topics relentlessly promoted by right-wing culture warriors. Instead, he is making a surprisingly serious effort to address the secession at the top of society, going after tax avoidance. He is even trying to drag countries along which have made tax avoidance a national business model, and, for good measure, he might be able to drag the Thiels, Musks, Bezoses and Bransons of this world back down to earth.

It would be wrong, though, to conclude that liberals must disavow so-called identity politics and leave minorities to their fate (or at least their own devices). The most prominent movements of our time Black Lives Matter and #MeToo are not really about identity in any substantive sense; they are about claiming basic rights which others have long taken for granted. They are also not just about resentment at indignities, as Francis Fukuyama claims as if these were all emotional issues where narcissistic folks should simply pull themselves together. Nor are they just about abstract values, as Adrian Pabst recently charged in these pages. There is nothing abstract about not wanting to be shot by police or be harassed by powerful men.

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Less obviously, it is also not true that claims by minorities are somehow more likely to lead to polarisation and irresolvable political conflicts. It is conventional wisdom that one can negotiate over material interests more easily than over identity, as trade unions and employers reliably did during the heyday of postwar European social democracy. For many there is also a seemingly self-evident lesson from recent years: if you dont want populist-authoritarian white identity politics, you should shut up about the identity of black and brown people, for otherwise you are simply providing more ammunition for populist race and culture warriors.

Yet identity and interests cannot be so neatly separated. That is true today, and, if we didnt suffer so badly from historical amnesia, we would not claim that things were all that different in the golden age of social democracy. Socialist parties never fought only for wage increases and better working conditions; they also struggled for dignity and collective respect. Think for instance of Red Vienna, made by socialists into a showcase for working-class culture and uplift during the interwar period.

[See also:The West isnt dying its ideas live on in China]

Even when conflicts are about identity, this does not mean that compromise and negotiation are automatically impossible. We do not necessarily all assume that there is an inner, true, unchanging self, as a romantic conception of identity would suggest. People are able to rethink their political commitments and what really matters in both private and collective life; what is regularly ridiculed by the right as woke today is only one example of how political self-perceptions and hence identities can change.

Conversely, it is far from obvious that conflicts over material interests can always be resolved in a rational, amiable manner. We have forgotten to what lengths the owners of concentrated wealth might go to defend themselves from claims to redistribution (and we are not fully aware of what they are already doing today: the political scientist Jeffrey Winters refers to expensive lawyers and accountants specialised in tax avoidance as a powerful wealth defence industry).

One reason why we have forgotten this is that no political leader has seriously tried to take anything from secessionists at the very top; Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, and Barack Obama were part of a long historical arc of neoliberalism in which some progressive change was possible but the basics of the Reagan-Thatcher revolutions were never seriously questioned. In the United States, the Republican Party has been radicalised in recent years and is bent on undermining democracy through voter suppression and election subversion even though, economically, there hasnt been much of a threat to its backers yet. That is an ominous sign of what reaction a genuine liberal commitment to addressing the double secession might provoke.

Jan-Werner Mller is professor of politics at Princeton University. His most recent book is Democracy Rules (Allen Lane)

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Recovery of children in unmarked graves at the top of First Nations election priorities – CTV News

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TORONTO -- The Assembly of First Nations is hoping to bring the atrocities of residential schools back into the national conversation after releasing its election priorities for the campaign.

The document, entitled The Healing Path Forward, outlines the five main priorities the AFN hopes the federal parties address in their own platforms:

Were asking every party to commit to them, whether theyre aligned with their platform or not, AFN National Chief RoseAnne Archibald told CTVs Power Play on Tuesday. We want them certainly to incorporate more of these into their platform if they havent already done so.

When it comes to residential schools and unmarked graves, the AFN is specifically calling for funding to communities affected by these graves, investing in strengthening and rebuilding First Nations and providing a National Indigenous healing organization.

These are our children, these are our loved ones, Archibald said. When you think about First Nations issues and whats happening in our communities, its our children who are affected. Its our children living in overcrowded homes of 10 or 20 people, its our children who are receiving education thats not on par with non-Indigenous children. Our children are still being taken by child welfare systems.

While Indigenous issues and residential schools had been a hot-button issue across Canada earlier this summer, the election campaign has been fairly quiet on the topic to date.

The fact that we just came out with our document today, will put that issue back onto peoples plates in terms of having them answer some of these questions, Archibald said.

Its an ongoing issue, itll be at least a few years before we get through all of this ground penetrating radar to examine all of the schools across Canada. So its an ongoing issue and its going to be at the forefront and were going to keep talking about and making sure that all of our children are recovered.

For a group of demonstrators outside Manitobas legislative building whove vowed to remain camped on the grounds until all the school sites have been searched, the lack of discourse has been frustrating.

Even though there are still children being found, theres still a lot of stories coming to light, I feel like were still at a stand still because there are officials who are neglecting to speak about it, said Aaliyah Leach, a co-organizer of the group.

As part of the document, the AFN is also calling for all parties to fully implement the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions calls to action, work in partnership with First Nations to implement Indigenous water rights, provide resources for recovery from the pandemic and return Crown lands to First Nations.

We need to get to equality and equity and justice for our children and for our community and this election time is the time to start talking about this, Archibald said.

Its estimated that Crown lands, both provincial and federal, make up upwards of 89 per cent of Canada and Archibald said the request is part of a growing land back movement.

It is a part of reparations, she said. If you think about the size of Canada, all the nations that were here prior to contact, this land was given to us by the creator we have sacred obligations to this land.

According to CTVNews.cas platform tracker, the Liberals have pledged $18 billion in funding over the next five years to improve the quality of life and create new opportunities for Indigenous communities. Meanwhile, the Conservatives have promised funding for the search of unmarked graves and $1 billion in funding to support mental health and drug treatment programs.

The NDP are promising to fully fund the search of all residential schools for more unmarked graves and to fully implement the 94 recommendations from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). The Green Party is pledging to implement every recommendation from Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Two Spirit report, the TRC and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

The Bloc Quebecois is pledging to replace the Indian Act with a new set of nation-to-nation treaties.

The AFN is not supporting any party because it says work will need to be done regardless of which party forms the next government. The AFN adds that there are 50 Indigenous candidates running in this election, 28 of whom are from the NDP.

For Real Carriere, a political science professor at the University of Manitoba, the amount of Indigenous candidates in the election is crucial to keeping Indigenous issues in the campaign conversation.

Thats very important to Indigenous people to have that representation and its very important for those representatives to represent Indigenous issues, he said.

With files from The Canadian Press

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Simcoe-Grey candidates weigh-in on reconciliation with First Nations – CollingwoodToday.ca

Posted: at 5:50 am

CollingwoodToday asked local candidates how they are committed to supporting Indigenous communities with clean drinking water and actions proposed by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission; here are their responses

CollingwoodToday.ca asked each of the federal candidates in Simcoe-Grey a series of six questions via email. The following responses were submitted by the candidates and/or their campaigns. The answers have not been checked for accuracy;they represent the candidates platforms and opinions. External links have been removed.

Visit collingwoodtoday.ca/canadavotes2021 for more coverage of the federal election. Voting day is Sept. 20 and advance voting starts Sept. 10.

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Q: We are a rich country in many ways, but many of our First Nations reserves still dont have clean drinking water. The tragedy of residential schools has ripped open the hurt and trauma many of our Indigenous families have felt for generations. Many of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) recommendations remain unheeded. How would you address these issues and help heal these wounds?

Ken Stouffer, CHP: It grieves me to see our virtue signalling prime minister donating billions of dollars of our money to countries and causes all over the world when many of our First Nations reserves dont have clean drinking water.

We should address needs like this in Canada before we start giving money away to causes outside Canada.

At this point, Im not familiar with the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. It would be good to review those recommendations and take action where it makes sense to do so.

Nick Clayton, Green: The first step towards reconciliation is acknowledgement. This is why land acknowledgements are important, but they are just the beginning.

The next step is understanding. First Nations are diverse and culturally rich, and we need to do the work to get to know the culture through Indigenous delivered curriculum in schools, and funding and support of Indigenous creative media.

First Nations are the original form of government on this land. Self-determination is not something that Indigenous populations need our permission to do, we just need to stop undermining it. As a first sign of respect, we must acknowledge the colonial racist roots of the RCMP, and cease using them as an oppressive force in our nation-to-nation relations.

First Nations have always desired a side-by-side, mutually beneficial relationship with European colonizers, and we have been the abusers in that relationship through attempted cultural genocide and exploitation. We may not have personally committed the abuse, but it is our responsibility to mend the relationship. In doing so, we may also mend our relationship with the natural world.

I would support fully enacting the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Report, and end the expansion of TMX pipeline.

Terry Dowdall, Conservative: The Conservative Party supports the process of reconciliation with Canadas Indigenous peoples.

It was a Conservative government that created the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in 2007, which recognized the lasting and damaging impact of the Indian residential school system on Indigenous culture, heritage and language. The recent discovery of bodies is a somber reminder of this tragic part of our history.

Included in our response plan is a commitment to implement TRC Calls to Action 71 through 76, fund the investigation at all former residential schools in Canada where unmarked graves presently and may exist, and ensure that proper resources are allocated to reinter, commemorate, and honour any individuals discovered through the investigation, according to the wishes of their next of kin.

We are disappointed that another promise to First Nations was broken when the government failed to keep its promise to end long-term drinking water advisories. Not only will a Conservative government honour the promise, we will recognize safe drinking water as a fundamental human right. We will also work with Indigenous communities to find new approaches that will help ensure water systems investments are protected and continue providing clean drinking water in the long term.

Lucas Gillies, NDP: I lived in Nunavut as a young boy, and have experienced some of the harsh conditions that our First Nations and Inuit people live in. I also got to experience the excitement and hopes when the new Territory of Nunavut was created, as a result of land claims negotiations.

The NDP will fully implement the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Truth and Reconciliation Commissions 94 Calls to Action in good faith, and in true and equal partnership with Indigenous communities across the country. We have to acknowledge our colonial history and create legally binding commitments to fair and equitable redress going forward, not fight against Indigenous residential school survivors in courts or chronically underfund vital services like water and housing. The NDP would fund the search for grave sites at former residential schools, a special prosecutor to hold those accountable for harm done to children and require churches and governments hand over any and all records. The NDP would fund community-driven solutions for healing.

Adam Minatel, PPC: This is a very simple task to overcome. We have some of the most ingenious drilling contractors that are contracted out globally to help third world nations with water wells and supply, but they are never consulted to see how their services can enrich our reserves.

Conversely, the Canadian Forces has some amazing engineers who would be happy to assist in the operations (mostly affecting northern reserves) and get this accomplished. Politicians have long used the Indigenous community as their token exchange talking points, and continue to do this as witnessed by pipelines (that had well over 90 per cent support of the communities they would traverse). These facts on Indigenous communities are constantly misled in media who use them as headline fodder, while the communities just wish to operate under sovereign rule, and be left to operate with minimal government interruption, which we intend to do.

Bren Munro, Liberal: I will always work to build a better future for all, and that means working in true partnership with First Nations, Inuit and Metis. I will strive to build relationships with the Wendake-Nionwentso, the Mississauga, the Anishinabewaki, the Ho-de-no-sau-nee-ga, and the Petun, the traditional caretakers of the land which I hope to represent.

The Liberal government was the first to fully recognize, track, and commit the needed funding to end boil water advisories on reserve. To date, Liberals have lifted 109 long-term drinking water advisories, built 99 water treatment plants and funded 436 upgrades, and prevented 188 short-term drinking water advisories from becoming long-term. There is more work ahead, and we have a plan to end all remaining long-term advisories. We are committed to seeing it through to the end.

Liberals have committed to implementing all TRC calls to action and have recently accelerated progress towards this goal.

The devastating discoveries of thousands of unmarked graves at residential schools serve as a solemn reminder of the ongoing need for truth and reconciliation. We will continue to work with Indigenous communities to make sure that all of these graves are found

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Qld treasurer to testify in mayor’s case – Daily Liberal

Posted: at 5:50 am

news, national

Queensland Treasurer Cameron Dick is among the witnesses expected to give evidence in a committal hearing for a mayor accused of influencing upgrades to a road on which he owned property. Former Moreton Bay mayor Allan Sutherland is accused of manipulating the timing and scope of a project affecting land he bought in 2010 on Paradise Road in Burpengary which he intended to develop, crown prosecutor Sarah Farndon told the court on Friday. He is facing two misconduct charges after an investigation by the state's Crime and Corruption Commission Proposed road upgrades were part of a larger project concerning a sports complex development. A second entry and exit for the complex upgrade was needed for both safety and traffic flow management, Brisbane Magistrates Court was told. From at least 2016, the scope of the project included upgrades to the whole of Paradise Road, council's director of engineering, construction and maintenance Anthony Martini said under examination by Sutherland's lawyer Saul Holt QC. A second charge of misconduct in public office relates to allegations Sutherland lobbied for an amendment to the planning scheme affecting service stations, said to potentially benefit his proposed Paradise Road development. Mr Dick, as then planning minister, rejected the proposed amendment according to a letter to Mr Sutherland - parts of which were read to the court on Friday. Mr Holt said the manner in which the minister rejected the amendment was a "pretty big deal". It was "very unusual", Mr Martini agreed. The committal hearing before magistrate Mark Nolan continues. Australian Associated Press

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September 3 2021 - 1:44PM

Queensland Treasurer Cameron Dick is among the witnesses expected to give evidence in a committal hearing for a mayor accused of influencing upgrades to a road on which he owned property.

Former Moreton Bay mayor Allan Sutherland is accused of manipulating the timing and scope of a project affecting land he bought in 2010 on Paradise Road in Burpengary which he intended to develop, crown prosecutor Sarah Farndon told the court on Friday.

He is facing two misconduct charges after an investigation by the state's Crime and Corruption Commission

Proposed road upgrades were part of a larger project concerning a sports complex development.

A second entry and exit for the complex upgrade was needed for both safety and traffic flow management, Brisbane Magistrates Court was told.

From at least 2016, the scope of the project included upgrades to the whole of Paradise Road, council's director of engineering, construction and maintenance Anthony Martini said under examination by Sutherland's lawyer Saul Holt QC.

A second charge of misconduct in public office relates to allegations Sutherland lobbied for an amendment to the planning scheme affecting service stations, said to potentially benefit his proposed Paradise Road development.

Mr Dick, as then planning minister, rejected the proposed amendment according to a letter to Mr Sutherland - parts of which were read to the court on Friday.

Mr Holt said the manner in which the minister rejected the amendment was a "pretty big deal".

It was "very unusual", Mr Martini agreed.

The committal hearing before magistrate Mark Nolan continues.

Australian Associated Press

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Meditation Isnt Mere Therapy Its a Living Relationship With Almighty God – National Catholic Register

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Mental health has received greater emphasis this lockdown year isolation, loss of jobs and businesses, the effect on churches and schools and the simple irrationality of the rules can be wearing. It has been so chaotic a year that it shouldnt surprise us when meditation is promoted as a path to mental and physical health.

Breathe, a self-care magazine, touts 34 ways to lift your mood, embrace mistakes and find your purpose. A smartphone app called The Calm collaborated with HBO Max for a World of Calm series, featuring celebrity narrators. In January 2021, the Headspace app launched the first of its Netflix shows titled Headspace Guide to Meditation. And the CARE channel screened in hospitals juxtaposes nature scenes with soothing music on endless loop.

In the process, meditation has turned a religious practice into therapy. It has gone beyond spiritual, but not religious to not being spiritual at all.

But when Eastern-style meditation first rose to popularity in the 1960s, its goals were finding divinity within oneself, the visualization of deities, becoming one with the cosmos and attaining enlightenment. Some forms of yoga involve Hindu gods. Tibetan Buddhist yidam meditation involves visualization of deities. New Age meditation promoted pantheism and polytheism. The promised enlightenment was transcendent.

The 1960s were also a turbulent time with the Vietnam War, assassinations and riots, yet meditation was still considered a path to nirvana beyond the mundane world. It was assumed that meditation would have a religious basis leading to a religious enlightenment.

But nowadays, meditation is more pragmatic. An example would be Andy Puddicombe, the founder of Headspace. He spent a decade trying to become a Buddhist monk, venturing to places such as India, Nepal and Thailand. In the end, he decided, according to his website, to demystify the mystical. The website states, The techniques in the Headspace app stem from both the Burmese and Tibetan Buddhist traditions, even though some of the names have been changed from the original translation to make them more accessible.

Accessibility and demystification mean draining meditation of its original religiosity. In a sense, it is Buddhism without the Buddha. It exemplifies the 9th-century koan attributed to the Chinese monk Linji Yixuan, who said, If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him. The koan is often interpreted as the rejection of external spiritual authority, be it from a monk or the Buddha himself. The seeker has the final say. It is completely subjective.

In this suddenly complex post-Christian world, subjectivity is good, and demystified meditation is now about increasing productivity, getting better sleep and lowering stress. Dave McKay, CEO of the Royal Bank of Canada, wrote, I know several colleagues who have begun the practice of meditation for the first time in their lives as a result of using the Headspace app, so Im proud were giving all employees an accessible introduction to improving their mental health fitness. This fitness seems to be congruent with productivity to the company.

Headspaces Introduction to Meditation video offers the simple directions of Breathe in/Hold/Breathe out as soothing music plays. The Calm app has a Sleep Story with comedian Stephen Fry telling a relaxed story about Frances lavender fields in Blue Gold. These meditations arent focused on the spiritual and transcendent. One could argue that Blue Gold, for example, is focused on the grandeur of creation, rather than how it reflects the greatness of the Creator.

This kind of meditation has a strictly utilitarian goal: calmness, even passivity. Stress relief is now its primary purpose. It goes beyond dealing with pressure it seeks eliminating stress altogether in the name of self-care.

Taking care of oneself, though, is not enough. What if youre not treating the right person? Then what? All that work would be for nothing. Discovering the authentic self is of prime importance.

The term authenticity used to be applied to reality. Is that money real, or is it a forgery? Is this painting or manuscript authentic? Is that signature authentic? The teaching of the Church is authentic when grounded in Tradition.

Today, however, it is applied to the self. Authenticity replaces truth. It is deeply relativistic because people differ and have differing experiences and is the authentic self the self at 20, 30, 42 or 70? It devolves into a scornful (John 18:8), What is truth?

The modern I am true to myself supplants Our Lords I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life (John 14:6). Our Lords statement is absolute and objective.

Church teaching shows how meditation can guide us beyond relaxation to God. A day at the beach is relaxing. But the Catechism of the Catholic Church states (2705), Meditation is above all a quest.

The concept of a quest is active. While current trends in meditation are centered on passivity and making people docile, a quest is an active march to a goal. The Christian epics of the Holy Grail, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and the Lord of the Rings are about striving. Quests are not relaxation; they are challenges.

In the case of Christian meditation, it is an active quest to live the life of Christ, which was anything but passive. Our Lord sought baptism from his cousin to begin his life of teaching. He called the Twelve Apostles. He actively healed, preached and performed miracles. He repeatedly told Sts. Peter, James and John that the endpoint of his mission was crucifixion, death and resurrection. He endured heroically, not passively. His mission is the foundational quest.

Crucially, Christian meditation the quest acknowledges suffering. It doesnt promise the perfect escape from discomfort. In the Salve Regina, there is the line mourning and weeping in this vale of tears. St. Junpero Serra prayed the Salve Regina nightly as he founded missions in California from San Diego to San Francisco. Christian meditation doesnt flee from pain but faces it by focusing on Christs many sufferings. It acknowledges reality rather than dismissing it as an illusion.

In sum, the greatest difference between Christian and Eastern meditation is that Christianity does not deny the reality of suffering, let alone stress. The idea of escaping the pressures of life because they dont exist is nonsensical. And in the modern era, peace cannot be found in relativism either, because we dont experience life relatively, but in stark, absolute terms.

Catholics look at the source of authenticity, the Bible. St. Paul, who knew his share of suffering, wrote (2 Corinthians 1:5, 7), For as we share abundantly in Christs sufferings, so through Christ we share abundantly in comfort too. For we know that as you share in our sufferings, you will also share in our comfort. In uniting our sufferings and stress with Christ, we find true comfort the peace the world cannot give.

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Meditation Isnt Mere Therapy Its a Living Relationship With Almighty God - National Catholic Register

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Sports betting in Arizona: Here is what the D-backs, Caesars sportsbook might look like – ABC15 Arizona

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PHOENIX When Caesars Entertainment's sportsbook opens outside Chase Field in early 2022, fans will be able to bet on their favorite sports teams and match-ups, eat and drink.

Soon, so will fans at Cardinals, Coyotes, D-backs, Rattlers, Mercury, and Suns games, as well as at TPC Scottsdale and Phoenix Raceway, home to the PGA's Phoenix Open and NASCAR Championship race series, respectively.

Or, they can wager from their cell phones.

Fantasy sports betting became legal in Arizona on Aug. 28, 2021, with live sports betting set to begin on Sept. 9, 2021, which also happens to be the start of the NFL regular season.

All are hoping it turns out to be a windfall for everyone.

In addition to the sports teams, ten Arizona tribes were awarded betting licenses: Fort Mojave Indian Tribe, Navajo Nation, Quechan Tribe, Tonto Apache Tribe, Tohono O'odham Nation, Hualapai Tribe, Ak-Chin Indian Community, San Juan Southern Paiute Tribe, San Carlos Apache Tribe, and Ft. McDowell Yavapai Nation were also awarded gaming licenses.

Caesar's Entertainment, Inc./concept rendering

On Wednesday, Caesar's Entertainment and the D-backs released concept renderings of what their sportsbook will look like. It will replace the Game 7 Grill in the plaza outside the ballpark.

The 20,000-square-foot building will have two floors of sports-betting space -- both live tellers and kiosks, an indoor bar and dining room with LED screens, an outdoor patio, VIP lounge, and broadcast studio.

Caesar's Entertainment, Inc./concept rendering

While construction and subsequent renovations are not expected to be completed until early 2022, beginning Sept 9, people will be able to place bets at windows 21-25 at Chase Field. Five kiosks will also be installed on the north side of the plaza, the D-backs said.

The Phoenix Suns partnered with FanDuel. The Phoenix Mercury partnered with Bally. The Arizona Cardinals partnered with BetMGM. TPC Scottsdale partnered with DraftKings. Arizona Rattlers partnered with BetRivers. Phoenix Speedway went with Barstool Sportsbook.

The Arizona Coyotes have not announced a partnership.

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FuboTV’s Sportsbook Is Coming in Q4 – The Motley Fool

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The fast-growing, sports-first streaming service fuboTV (NYSE:FUBO) has been growing in popularity with both consumers and investors over the last year as it innovates and executes. But this streaming-TV service may be just getting started. The company's subsidiary, Fubo Gaming, has been busy securing market access agreements to launch a new sports-betting app, positioning the company to take market share in the fast-growing digital sports gambling market. Its latest approval is in Iowa.

Here's what investors should know about fuboTV's ambitious new business -- and how it could help the growth stock.

Image source: Getty Images.

"We believe we are in the early innings of a massive opportunity," said fuboTV co-founder and CEO David Gandler in the company's second-quarter earnings call when discussing its Sportsbook plans.

Differentiating the app, it will have a "Watching Now" feature that uses data from its streaming service to sync the wagering app with what a user is watching on fuboTV. "Leveraging fuboTV's first-party user behavior data to understand consumers' viewing preferences and recommend relevant bets, the company intends to turn passive viewers into active, engaged participants," the company said in a press release about Fubo Sportsbook. This marks "an industry-first integration," according to fuboTV.

In addition to securing a market access agreement in Iowa, it has obtained agreements in Arizona, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and New Jersey. The company confirmed this week that it is on track to launch in Q4.

As fuboTV prepares for an official launch of Fubo Sportsbook in Q4, the company has already rolled out free-to-play games, which management says are helping educate and train its users for real-money betting. "Free gaming serves to educate and train our customers, which we believe will ultimately reduce the learning curve and drive greater levels of adoption of our Sportsbook," said Gandler during the company's most recent earnings call.

Fubo Sportsbook will add fuel to an already powerful fire. The company's business has seen extraordinary momentum recently. fuboTV paid subscribers increased 138% year over year to about 682,000 in Q2. This led to nearly 200% revenue growth and a 281% year-over-year increase in advertising revenue. Importantly, engagement also hit new highs as streaming hours on its platform during the quarter rose 148% year over year to 245 million.

Management has high hopes for Fubo Gaming, betting that it will help improve paid customer retention, engagement, and advertising revenue, and ultimately strengthen the company's unit economics over the long haul.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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MLB Best Bets: Baseball Picks, Predictions, Odds to Consider on DraftKings Sportsbook for September 3 – DraftKings Nation

Posted: at 5:48 am

The Brewers get Freddy Peralta back off the IL for their return home Friday, so Milwaukees series opener vs. St Louis is shaping up to be a pitchers duel. But, Im still only comfortable backing one starting pitcher from that game. Heres what I like on DraftKings Sportsbook for Fridays MLB slate of games.

If you want to sweat out these picks with me, follow me on Twitter: @Nick_Friar.

John Means had a couple of rough outings mid-August, but the left-hander turned things back around in his last two starts. Although one of those rough starts came on the road, the Baltimore left-hander has been much better away from Camden Yards throughout 2021 that includes his strong start at Yankee Stadium earlier in the season.

And for all the success the Yankees experienced throughout August, they werent that tough on opposing lefties in the Bronx last month. Thats not exactly a stray from the norm for the Yankees either. As much as the Yankees are top 10 in OPS and wOBA against left-handed pitchers this season, their 2021 home OPS and ISO against left-handed pitching are middling.

Keuchel hasnt been giving up home runs like theyre going out of style recently which he did at the end of July but he still gave up one in three of his five August starts. Thats all we need on Friday.

Both Carlos Santana and Andrew Benintendi have taken Keuchel deep before, but Salvador Perez still has yet to. The Kansas City catcher is too good against left-handed pitching to not run into one at some point against Keuchel. Still, its much safer to rely on the lineup as a whole rather than Perez alone.

Keuchel is among the qualified pitchers whove been barrelled up most frequently this season. And while hes not exactly a flyball pitcher, the flies the left gives get out of the yard at a high rate.

Freddy Peralta will likely be on a tight pitch count on Friday with this start being his first after a stint on the IL. The Brewers were already being plenty cautious with him as they prepare for October, and they definitely wont mess with a cranky shoulder.

That same shoulder discomfort ended Peraltas last outing on Aug. 18, which actually came against this same Cardinals lineup. St. Louis got to him for three runs over two innings in that one a significant improvement from their performance against Peralta earlier in the season, when he held them to one run over seven frames.

But the shoulder problem undoubtedly had an impact on Peraltas last start, and the Brewers would not send him back out if he didnt feel much better. Still, the bullpen might need to help finish the first five innings off a little bit. But Im still comfortable trusting Milwaukees bullpen and Peralta to hold down a St. Louis lineup thats been middling against right-handed pitchers recently much like theyve been all season.

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MLB Best Bets: Baseball Picks, Predictions, Odds to Consider on DraftKings Sportsbook for September 3 - DraftKings Nation

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Fumble! NFL’s role in sports gambling is a recipe for disaster and it should step back – USA TODAY

Posted: at 5:48 am

Footballs interest in promoting gambling is now as robust as its desire to sell beer. This is a recipe for disaster or at least a major scandal.

Peter Funt| Opinion contributor

On a rainy weekend in 1962, three road-weary guys who were holed up at the Milford Plaza Hotel in Manhattan created The Greater Oakland Professional Pigskin Prognosticators League.

Bill Winkenbach, a part owner of the Oakland Raiders; Bill Tunnell, the teams PR man, and Scotty Stirling, a sports reporter for the Oakland Tribune, referred to it as GOPPPL.

Today, the roughly 40 million of us partaking in an annual ritual requiring inordinate time and enormous emotion, while providing great fun, call it simply fantasy football.

GOPPPL held its inaugural draft in Mr. Winkenbachs East Oakland basement.

The first pick was George Blanda of the Houston Oilers (later with the Raiders), a prize because he could accumulate points as both a quarterback and place kicker. The next selection was a Cleveland running back by the name of Jim Brown.

As one who loves fantasy football both the weekly and season-long forms I scoff at those who say its a gateway to excessive gambling and even addiction. However, I am concerned to see the NFL and its various media partners rush down the rabbit hole in pursuit of gamblings big bucks.

This year the NFL forged partnerships with three sportsbooks, in deals worth slightly less than$1 billion over five years.

Ads for gambling outlets are allowed for the first time within NFL telecasts limited, for now, to six ads per game.Next year the Arizona Cardinals will become the first NFL team with a sportsbook inside its stadium, and its a safe bet that other teams will follow.

Footballs interest in promoting gambling is now as robust as its desire to sell beer. The NFL has unabashedly accepted three official sports-betting partners: Caesars, DraftKings and FanDuel.

Julie Stamm: Tom Brady didn't play tackle football as a kid. Neither should your child.

On the media front, several content providers have jumped into sports gambling, among them Gannett Co., the parent of USA TODAY, which recently announced a deal with Tipico USA Technology to provide gambling information.

ESPN reportedly wants to go a giant step further. It is seeking to license its name to a sports-betting company and is asking $3 billion over several years, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The Big Bang for sports gambling came in 2018 with a Supreme Court ruling that cleared the way for states (other than Nevada, where gambling was already legal) to whet their beaks.So far, 32 states and the District of Columbia have legalized wagering on sports.

One of GOPPPLs original members was a businessman named Andy Mousalimas. In a 2015 interview with the Oakland Tribune, he recalled, Wed go and root for the opposition and fans would look at us and say, What the hell are you doing rooting for that guy?

Therein was the key to the proliferation of fantasy sports and related wagering, and the reason gambling is embraced by professional leagues like the NFL. Gamblers have a rooting interest in multiple games each week, even those involving lousy teams. This is good for owners, TV networks and advertisers and a windfall for those who promote gambling.

Back in 1988, the renowned coach and commentator John Madden lent his name to a football video game developed by EA Sports. Today, it is the gold standard for computer sports. Not surprisingly, the most popular Madden game is Ultimate Team, for which users create their own rosters, just as they do in fantasy sports.

Peter Funt: If Little League genuinely cares about player safety, it will mandate C-Flaps on helmets

Taking it to a new level, DraftKings, which is now affiliated with five NFL teams, offers wagering on simulated games played on the Madden platforms. Other companies also offer cash payoffs on Madden contests. This is the ultimate gambling shortcut: No tickets, no crowds and no waiting for Sunday afternoon. Best of all, no actual teams.

All this has created a perfect storm for sports gambling. Understandably, leagues and media companies want part of the action. But theres a huge difference between the Gannett Co. selling data that might help bettors and the NFL providing tips on how to gamble on its own players. The NFLs website and TV channel offer advice about how best to bet on the very players and teams that the NFL governs. The NFL even sells an app for $9.99 a year that Projects future matchups and shows if adding a player means more wins." This is a recipe for disaster or at least a major scandal.

NFL's new sportsbook deals: A look at the hypocrisy of the league's decades-long gambling stand

The NFL should step back from direct involvement in gambling.

I worry a lot less about my friends and I becoming gambling addicts through fantasy football than I do about the NFL and its owners becoming billion-dollar pushers.

Peter Funt is a writer and host of Candid Camera. His new book is Self-Amused: A Tell-Some Memoir.

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Analysts Ask: Is a $3 Billion ESPN Sportsbook Really Worth It? – Pokerfuse

Posted: at 5:48 am

Despite being the crown jewel of US sports media partnerships, analysts with Morgan Stanley question whether an ESPN-branded sportsbook would ultimately be successful or if the costs associated with such a product make it prohibitively expensive.

The analysts add that a legacy casino company would likely be the best partner for a deal to create an ESPN-branded sportsbook in the US.

Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that ESPN, which is owned by the Walt Disney Company, has been in talks with sportsbooks, including Caesars Entertainment and DraftKings, on a multi-year sportsbook partnership valued at more than $3 billion. ESPN clinched marketing deals with both companies last year.

The deal would reportedly allow an operator to use the ESPN name to rebrand its sportsbook. A deal would also likely include a marketing component where the operator would be required to make an advertising spend on ESPNs platforms.

In a note to clients Monday, Morgan Stanley analysts said that if a licensing deal were to be reached, the devil would be in the details, including how many years and what exactly is covered, though it sounds like a betting operator would be able to create an ESPN-branded betting product.

Morgan Stanley projects the sports betting and iGaming market in the US and Canada will reach approximately $20 billion in 2025, with 25% average margins, implying $5 billion in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA). Using a formula to value the opportunity for its stocks, the firm said a deal valued at more than $3 billion would imply that more than $120 million to $200 million in incremental EBITDA would be needed to justify investment in an ESPN-branded sportsbook, or more than a 2.5% to 4% share.

Because of that, the analysts opined that they see ESPN as potentially delivering more incremental revenue to a legacy casino company than a legacy sports company as it would be attracting a different set of customers, though ability to execute efficiently would be key.

Mondays note was written by analysts Thomas Allen and Ed Young as well as research associates Nicholas DeValeria and Alexandra Ratzker.

Even so, the Morgan Stanley team pointed out that not all media companies make good betting companies. They cited several examples where popular media outlets in Europe were unable to capitalize on their position to make inroads into the sports betting space, including The Sun in the UK, Eurosport in France, Marca in Spain and La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italy.

The media partnerships in the US havent led to any clear winners so far, either, the analysts said. While Sky Betting & Gaming [SBG] is often held up as the example of a successful media brand translating into a successful betting brand, SBGs success was driven by innovative technology and unique mind share in a much more concentrated sports media market than the US today.

The analysts also said a sports betting partnership valued at more than $3 billion would dwarf other deals that have already been signed and questioned whether such a larger deal was ultimately worth it.

While ESPN is the largest media asset in the US, it shares sports coverage with NBC Sports, CBS Sports, FOX Sports and Turner Sportswhich have partnerships with PointsBet, Caesars, Flutter and DraftKings, respectively. ESPN is also partnered with regional sports networks like Bally Sports.

There is also now more competition from sports media apps, like Barstool, theScore and Bleacher Report and streaming services like FuboTV, the analysts said. While [the] economics of most of the prior deals have not been announced, PointsBet in August 2020 paid just $393 million over five years for exclusive rights for NBC Sports.

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