Neoliberal economics: The road to freedom or authoritarianism? – NPR

Neoliberal economics: The road to freedom or authoritarianism? : Planet Money Nobel-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz's new book argues the road to tyranny is paved not by too much, but by too little government.

In the early 1930s, Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek, then based at the London School of Economics, jotted off a memo to the school's director, William Beveridge. At the time, the Great Depression was wreaking havoc around the world. And the ideals of classical liberalism, like democracy and free-market capitalism, were under assault. Witnessing the rise of fascist parties around Europe, Beveridge, like many others in his day, had argued fascism was the ultimate expression of a failed capitalist system. Absolutely not, argued Hayek in his memo. Fascism, with its rejection of liberal democracy and embrace of government power, actually had its roots in socialist ideas and policies.

What began as the germ of an idea in a memo became a magazine article and then, in 1944, a book, which Hayek titled The Road To Serfdom. When Hayek shopped the publication rights of the book in the United States, three commercial publishing houses rejected it. They didn't see its potential. Hayek settled for an academic publishing house: The University of Chicago Press.

The Road To Serfdom became a smashing success. Not only did it sell hundreds of thousands of copies, it blew wind into the sails of a flagging conservative movement, which had struggled to captivate the hearts and minds of mainstream America after the Great Depression.

Hayek argued that the ballooning welfare state, characterized by policies like those of the New Deal, handed too much power and control to the central government, robbing people of autonomy over their economic lives, hurting the economy, and paving the road to tyranny. He argued that freedom and prosperity could only be achieved by embracing the free market.

80 years later, economist Joseph Stiglitz who like Hayek, won a Nobel Prize in economics has a new book out with a response to Hayek and his generations of followers. "A major theme of my book is that Hayek got it 180 degrees wrong," Stiglitz told Planet Money in an interview last week. In fact, the very title of Stiglitz's book is a counterpunch to The Road to Serfdom. It's called The Road To Freedom.

Like in the 1930s, when Hayek began working on his book, populism is now exploding around the world. And Stiglitz fears some countries may be careening towards "a 21st century version of fascism." But contrary to the classic argument made by Hayek, Stiglitz says, this rise in authoritarianism "comes not in the countries where the government is doing too much, but where the government is doing too little to protect individuals against unemployment, the stresses of adaptation to globalization, to technical change, to the stresses of migration."

For a long time, conservative politicians sold lower taxes, fewer regulations, and smaller government as integral to enhancing freedom. But, Stiglitz argues, this conception of freedom is all wrong and, even worse, it has paved the way to a dangerous political era that threatens our real freedom.

For Hayek and later Milton Friedman and a whole host of other conservatives and libertarians who were inspired by Hayek's work freedom largely meant freedom from government.

Stiglitz opposes this narrow way of thinking about freedom. In his book, he offers a much different conception of freedom, which he writes is really about, using jargon from economics, "a person's opportunity set the set of options she has available."

Freedom, in other words, is "really what you're free to do," Stiglitz says. "Somebody who is at the point of starvation doesn't really have much freedom. He does what he has to do to survive." By giving that person more resources, Stiglitz says, he becomes more free. He has more options in life. In this sense, Stiglitz argues, the government can step in and give citizens more freedom by, for example, levying taxes to fund programs that eliminate poverty or help people get jobs.

Even more, Stiglitz argues, policymakers should be wary that policies that expand the freedom of some people may come at the cost of the freedom for many more people. He begins his book by quoting the Oxford philosopher Isaiah Berlin: "Freedom for the wolves has often meant death to the sheep." He uses this metaphor to criticize policies like financial deregulation, which, he says, gave more freedom to banks at the expense of the freedom of ordinary Americans.

Stiglitz goes well beyond an effort to reclaim the concept of freedom for progressives. Much of his book is aimed at bulldozing away any legitimacy for "neoliberalism" an increasingly popular term for the free-market ideology that swept America and much of the world in the 1980s and 1990s.

"Neoliberalism's crimes include freeing financial markets to precipitate the largest financial crisis in three-quarters of a century; freeing trade to accelerate deindustrialization [by, for example, gutting American manufacturing]; and freeing corporations to exploit consumers, workers, and the environment alike," Stiglitz writes. "This form of capitalism does not enhance freedom in our society. Instead, it has led to the freedom of a few at the expense of the many. Freedom for the wolves; death for the sheep."

As a member and then president of the Council of Economic Advisors in the Clinton White House, Stiglitz had a prominent seat at the table when neoliberal ideas spread beyond their traditional stronghold in the Republican Party and began being pushed by Democrats. President Bill Clinton promoted a range of free-market policies, including signing the North American Free Trade Act (NAFTA), supporting China in its bid to join the World Trade Organization, and deregulating the telecommunications and financial industries.

Stiglitz says that, behind closed doors, he fought tooth and nail against many of these policies. He notes, for example, he was successful at staving off financial deregulation that is, until he left office in 1997. Clinton didn't sign financial deregulation into law until 1999.

"I strongly opposed deregulation of finance, in part because I understood that 'freeing' the financial sector would make us all less free in the end," Stiglitz writes in his book. He blames financial deregulation for contributing to the 2008 financial crisis.

After serving in the Clinton Administration, Stiglitz again battled creeping neoliberalism, this time on a global scale as the chief economist of The World Bank. There he fought against policies like the liberalization of capital markets, which allowed global investors to more freely move money to and from poor countries. He blamed this policy for creating financial volatility and contributing to economic crises around the world.

Of course, there are many who disagree with Stiglitz's take on neoliberalism and the need for strong government involvement in the economy. They may believe the government is too dumb or corrupt to do a good job regulating the market and engineering a more prosperous and freer society. Countries like Argentina and Venezuela, where generations of left-wing leaders have pursued interventionist policies, have seen a host of economic problems, including runaway inflation and dismal economic growth.

Many economists still believe in the virtues of free-market capitalism. For example, in a new book titled The Capitalist Manifesto: Why The Global Free Market Will Save The World, Swedish author Johan Norberg argues that free-market capitalism has lifted millions and millions of people out of poverty, fostered incredible technological innovations, and brought down prices on all sorts of goods and services. Turning against it, Norberg warns, will only hurt growth, lower our living standards, and devastate many, especially the world's poor.

Now is the time, Stiglitz argues, for the United States and other nations to abandon neoliberalism and embrace a new form of "progressive capitalism," where the government plays a bigger role in managing the economy, fighting climate change, breaking up monopolies, and eradicating poverty, inequality, and joblessness.

"If we continue down this path you might say the road to serfdom we will lose some freedom because it's leading to more populism," Stiglitz says. "This populism is an authoritarian kind of populism and is a real threat to the sustaining of democracy and even, really, a market economy that actually functions."

While Stiglitz spends much of his book criticizing Republicans, many Republicans these days are more receptive to the idea that the free market is failing America and that we need greater government intervention. Senator Josh Hawley (R-Missouri), for example, has been vocal against monopolies and has sponsored various bills to break them up. Last year, Senator Marco Rubio (R-Florida) published a book, Decades of Decadence, which explicitly blasts neoliberalism, especially free-trade deals, for hurting American workers. Rubio now supports "industrial policy" handing the federal government more power to shape and grow strategic American industries (For more on industrial policy, listen to this Indicator episode). In a recent op-ed in The Washington Post, Rubio says "industrial policy" used to be dirty words in his political circle, but now he believes the federal government must play an active role in revitalizing American manufacturing.

We asked Stiglitz whether the growing bipartisan consensus that the government needs to play a bigger role in the economy gives him any hope that his vision may actually come into being. Stiglitz, a staunch Democrat, began by criticizing Republicans, including for pushing the unsubstantiated claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

"But," Stiglitz continued, "when I read, say, Marco Rubio's views about industrial policy, I sometimes think he may have cribbed it from some of the things that I've written," he says with a laugh. "And so there is hope that on a lot of these issues, there is an understanding that neoliberalism failed it's so obvious to me and that we have to have new policies, like industrial policies, like more competition to stop Big Tech. I do think we're moving in that direction in a bipartisan way."

By the way, Joseph Stiglitz and I had a wide-ranging conversation about freedom, economics, neoliberalism, and his views on the world's problems. We covered a whole lot more than what I could fit in this newsletter. We will be releasing an audio version of this interview to Planet Money+ subscribers soon. You can subscribe here.

Link:

Neoliberal economics: The road to freedom or authoritarianism? - NPR

Marshall native, ‘Grandmother of Juneteenth’ gets Presidential Medal of Freedom – Marshall News Messenger

WASHINGTON (AP) President Joe Biden on May 3 bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on 19 people, including Marshall native and Grandmother of Juneteenth Opal Lee.

Biden said the recipients of the nations highest civilian honor are incredible people whose relentless curiosity, inventiveness, ingenuity and hope have kept faith in a better tomorrow.

The White House said the recipients are exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States, world peace, or other significant societal, public or private endeavors.

The 10 men and nine women hail from the worlds of politics, sports, entertainment, civil rights and LGBTQ+ advocacy, science and religion. Three medals were awarded posthumously.

Lee, born in Marshall and a 1952 Wiley graduate, led the charge in championing efforts to make Juneteenth nationally recognized as a federal holiday.

The Juneteenth holiday, June 19, marks the day in 1865 when slaves in Texas finally learned that the Civil War had ended and slavery had been abolished. The news, which was delivered in Galveston by Union soldiers, came two and a half years after President Abraham Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation, which was issued in 1862 and became official Jan. 1, 1863.

President Joe Biden signed the holiday into law in 2021.

President Joe Biden hands a pen to Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif, after signing the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act, in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, June 17, 2021, in Washington. From left, Lee, Rep. Danny Davis, D-Ill., Opal Lee, Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., obscured, Vice President Kamala Harris, Clyburn, Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, obscured, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., and Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas. (Evan Vucci/AP File Photo)

Lee, a great-great-grandmother, decided in 2016 that shed personally trek from Fort Worth to Washington, D.C. to bring attention to the mission. With the support of her church and family, she assembled a team to assist with her walking campaign and launched a change.org petition, soliciting support in her desire to see the national recognition of a day to celebrate Freedom for All.

In her petition, Lee shared that she believed Juneteenth could be a unifier because it recognizes the fact that slaves didnt free themselves but had help from Quakers along the Underground Railroad, abolitionists both Black and white like Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison soldiers and many others who gave their lives for the freedom of the enslaved.

The celebration of Juneteenth has always been close to her heart, starting as a child growing up in Marshall, Lee said in an interview with the News Messenger in March 2023.

In Marshall, on Juneteenth, wed go to the county fairground. Oh, it would be full of music and food, there would be ballgames and food, and speeches and food, and food and food and food, she said. But when I came to Fort Worth, people just sort of celebrated in their backyards with their family and their friends.

Lee said the movement to make the observance a national holiday had already begun with the late Rev. Ronald V. Myers Sr., who founded the original National Juneteenth Observance Foundation.

Mind you, Dr. Ronald Myers had been instrumental in having Juneteenth celebrations in 43 states. And I think some of Doc rubbed off on me, she chuckled. He passed on, but I was determined to have Juneteenth a national holiday; and so, I guess I took up the mantle.

And I tell people, anybodys grandma wouldve done it, you know, she said.

... I thought that if a little old lady in tennis shoes was walking from Fort Worth to Washington, D.C., thats 1,400 miles, somebody would take notice, she said. And so, to walk two and a half, 2.5 miles each time was to symbolize that the enslaved didnt know they were free for two and a half years.

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Marshall native, 'Grandmother of Juneteenth' gets Presidential Medal of Freedom - Marshall News Messenger

Srinivasan on Open Letters, Protests, Free Speech, and Academic Freedom – Daily Nous – Daily Nous

Amia Srinivasans specialty, it seems to me, is making sense of moral ambivalence: detecting, dissecting, and sometimes defending its reasonability, even in the face of unavoidable and urgent decisions.

[Knot by Anni Albers]

It begins with the matter of signing open letters:

An open letter is an unloved thing. Written by committee and in haste, it is a monument to compromise: a minimal statement to which all signatories can agree, or worse a maximal statement that no signatory fully believes. Some academics have a general policy against signing them. I discovered that was true of some of my Oxford colleagues last year, when I drafted and circulated an open letter condemning Israels attack on Gaza and calling for a ceasefire. Some, like those who are in precarious employment or whose immigration status isnt settled, have good reasons for adopting such a policy. Others understandably dont want to put their name to something that doesnt perfectly represent their views, especially when it might be read as a declaration of faith. I always cringe at the self-importance of the genre: though open letters can sometimes exert influence, stiffly worded exhortations hardly suffice to stop states, militaries, bombs. And yet, a no open letters policy can serve as a convenient excuse when one is hesitant to stand up for ones political principles.

Srinivasan has signed several open letters about Gaza, and recently signed an open letter committing her to an academic and cultural boycott of Columbia University, owing to how it handled student protestors. Then:

In April I was asked to sign a letter opposing the University of Cambridges investigation into Nathan Cofnas, a Leverhulme early career fellow in philosophy. A self-described race realist, Cofnas has written widely in defence of abhorrently racist particularly anti-Black views, invoking what he claims are the findings of the science of heredity.

She shares her many reservations about signing the open letter, but also her reason for ultimately signing it:

Do we think that students should be able to trigger investigations into academics on the grounds that their extramural speech makes them feel unsafe? Do we want to fuel the rights sense of grievance towards the university, when their minority presence within it is owed to the robust correlation between education and political liberalism, not some Marxist plot? Do we want to empower university administrators to fire academics on the grounds that they are attracting negative publicity? Do we think there is any guarantee that a further strengthened institutional power will only be wielded against those whose views and politics we abhor? If we say yes, what picture of power theirs and ours does that presume?

But thats not the end of the discussion, for theres the question of whether her taking a principled stand is her also being a sucker for her political opponents:

free speech and academic freedom are, for many on the right, ideological notions, weapons to be wielded against the left and the institutions it is (falsely) believed to control, the university most of all [and] the free-speech brigade has found justifications for the draconian repression of student protest.

Theres also the question of the extent to which the free speech brigade understands how academic freedom and freedom of speech come apart, or how even different considerations in favor of free speech might be in tension with each other:

After signing the letter criticising the investigation into Cofnas, I was written to by someone from the Committee for Academic Freedom, which bills itself as a non-partisan group of academics from across the political spectrum. He asked me whether I might consider signing up to theCAFs three principles. I looked them up: I. Staff and students atUKuniversities should be free, within the limits of the law, to express any opinion without fear of reprisal. II. Staff and students atUKuniversities should not be compelled to express any opinion against their belief or conscience. III.UKuniversities should not promote as a matter of official policy any political agenda or affiliate themselves with organisations promoting such agendas. I thought about it for a bit. Im on board with PrincipleII, so long as we dont think that asking staff and students to use someones correct pronouns is akin to demanding they swear a loyalty oath. Principle I is problematic, because it doesnt register that academic freedom essentially involves viewpoint-based discrimination that indeed the whole point of academic freedom is to protect academics rights to exercise their expert judgment in hiring, peer review, promotion, examining, conferring degrees and so on. And PrincipleIIIwould prevent universities from condemning, say, Israels systematic destruction of universities and schools in Gaza, which I think as educational institutions they are entitled to do.

Discussion welcome, but read the whole thing first.

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Srinivasan on Open Letters, Protests, Free Speech, and Academic Freedom - Daily Nous - Daily Nous

Responds To Speaker Johnsons Politico Interview: This Just Shows Our Movement is Winning – Reproductive … – Reproductive Freedom for All

For Immediate Release: Friday, May 10, 2024

Contact: [emailprotected]

Reproductive Freedom for All Responds To Speaker Johnsons Politico Interview: This Just Shows Our Movement is Winning

Washington, DC In a newly released interview with Politico, Speaker Mike Johnson sided with President Trump in saying the federal government has no role in protecting abortion rights. When asked if he anticipates putting forth any abortion legislation before the election, Johnson said no.

Reproductive Freedom for All President and CEO Mini Timmaraju released the following statement in response:

Mike Johnsons flip-flopping on abortion just proves our movement is winning and that Republicans know theyre losing. Leaving abortion to the states is not a moderate position, as 21 states are already enforcing horrifying bans with devastating consequences.

Voters have made it clear to the GOP that we will not tolerate abortion bans. Mike Johnson and congressional Republicans have shown time and time again they are willing to do anything in their power to restrict our reproductive freedom, and we cant trust them.

We demand a federal response to the abortion crisis and call on the press to ask the Speaker if he will support federal protections. We demand nothing less from our federal government than locking in the federal right to abortion and expanding access.

###

For over 50 years, Reproductive Freedom for All (formerly NARAL Pro-Choice America) has fought to protect and advance reproductive freedom at the federal and state levelsincluding access to abortion care, birth control, pregnancy and post-partum care, and paid family leavefor everybody. Reproductive Freedom for All is powered by its more than 4 million members from every state and congressional district in the country, representing the 8 in 10 Americans who support legal abortion.

Continued here:

Responds To Speaker Johnsons Politico Interview: This Just Shows Our Movement is Winning - Reproductive ... - Reproductive Freedom for All

Protecting journalists and promoting media freedom: New rules enter into force – European Union

Independent, fact-based journalism helps protect our democracies by exposing injustices, holding leaders to account and allowing citizens to make informed decisions. Journalists, who sometimes work at great personal risk, should be able to work freely and safely. This lies at the heart of EU values and democracies. This week, two pieces of EU legislation enter into force which will ensure greater protection of journalists and further support media freedom:

These initiatives are part of a European strategy for the media, building on theEuropean Democracy Action Planand theMedia and Audiovisual Action Plan. A recent study also shows that EU countries are making progressin implementing the Commissions Recommendation on the protection, safety and empowerment of journalists. The new rules will help ensure that journalists can carry out their work in a healthy media landscape.

For more information

European Media Freedom Act

Regulation establishing a common framework for media services in the internal market and amending Directive 2010/13/EU (European Media Freedom Act)

EU Directive on protecting persons who engage in public participation from manifestly unfounded claims or abusive court proceedings (Strategic lawsuits against public participation)

Media and digital culture

Media and pluralism

European Democracy Action Plan

Media and Audiovisual Action Plan

Study on measures to improve journalists safety

Video on strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs)

Link:

Protecting journalists and promoting media freedom: New rules enter into force - European Union

The Price of Freedom: Americas Unjust Cash Bail System – Brown Political Review

This piece was produced in part with the financial support of the Stone Inequality Initiative. The Brown Political Review maintains editorial independence over all columns and stories published.

Richard Griffin spent two days in Michigans Wayne County Jail as his family scrambled to find the funds to cover his $850 bail. Arrested for having a handgun in his car and an outstanding warrant due to an unpaid traffic ticket, Griffin quickly found himself embroiled in a troubling situation. While in jail, he missed his first day of work and was unable to warn his employer that he would be absentcausing him to lose his job. On top of this, he had arranged an appointment with a social service agency to seek emergency rental assistance, but his 48 hours of incarceration prevented him from attending it. Without the appointment, he was unable to secure aid and was subsequently evicted. Although Griffin endured a far shorter pretrial detention with a lower bail than most people accused of a crime, the cash bail system still acutely damaged his life. His situation is not unique. Hundreds of thousands of individuals across America are currently awaiting trial behind bars.

It is easy to imagine that justice is a givenan impartial, unyielding concept that a liberal, democratic society will always uphold. For millions like Griffin, however, justice is an unattained ideal. In the United States, those without money are incarcerated while they await trial, whereas those who can post bail await trial freely in the community; Lady Justices scales tip when the wealthy tip her. The structures forged to prevent crime have created an inherently unjust system in which freedom can be boughtif you can afford it. The cash bail system criminalizes poverty, corrupting the fundamental notion of being innocent until proven guilty and necessitating nationwide reform.

Between 1970 and 2015, the number of people incarcerated before being tried increased by 433 percent, largely due to judges relying more heavily on cash bail. When put into context, this figure is even more shocking: Two-thirds of those locked up in Americas local jails have not even been convicted of a crime. In 2015, courts typically set bail at $10,000 for feloniesa staggering number considering the fact that the median annual income for individuals in pretrial detention was $15,109. In 2022, 37 percent of Americans surveyed by the Federal Reserve said they could not afford to fully cover a $400 emergency expense immediately, meaning they would have to borrow money or sell possessions to do so. Some reported they would not be able to afford it at all. Because it is so often imposed on people who cannot pay, bail has become an insurmountable financial burden for countless Americans, threatening to irreparably disrupt their lives.

While the profound impact of spending months or years in pretrial detention is evident, even a brief period of incarceration can wreak havoc on individuals and their families. Spending just one day in jail can diminish a persons employment prospects and heighten the risk that they will lose their job. Research also indicates that spending greater than 23 hours in jail increases a persons chances of rearrest. When faced with these troubling prospects, individuals unable to post bail find themselves caught in a dilemma with no favorable options: borrow money from the predatory bail bonds industry, languish behind bars, or plead guilty. Unfortunately, many choose the last optiondefendants who are incarcerated pretrial are significantly more likely to enter into plea deals. Compared to those who are not detained pretrial, defendants in jail submit guilty pleas almost three times quicker. Poor defendants thus face an uphill battle within a system that is supposed to be impartial and just.

"In the United States, those without money are incarcerated while they await trial, whereas those who can post bail await trial freely in the community; Lady Justices scales tip when the wealthy tip her."

Despite the clear moral impetus, reforming the cash bail system is no politically easy task. Republicans and Democrats alike are wary of being perceived as pro-crime because of the publics heightened fears about rising crime rates; a November Gallup poll revealed that a majority of American adults felt that the criminal justice system was not tough enough. In the 2022 midterm elections, many of the most hotly contested races involved politicians who debated crime policy, with candidates from each party slamming their opponents with soft-on-crime accusations. Republicans have targeted a slate of anti-cash-bail candidates, including Senator John Fetterman (D-PA), accusing them of being soft on crime due to their support for criminal justice reform. On the flip side, Democratic candidates like Oklahomas Joy Hofmeister have criticized Republicans for being ineffective at addressing crime, citing their record of supporting bipartisan clemency initiatives intended to benefit those sitting in prisons.

Whats often overlooked in the political rhetoric against cash bail reform is the nature of the crimes being committed in the first place. Over 95 percent of crime in the United States is nonviolent, indicating that most people who are arrested can safely await trial in their communities rather than in holding cells. Moreover, cash bail reform is not a novel idea. It has been implemented to varying degrees in New York State, Washington, DC, and Illinois. In all of these cases, cash bail reform has led to a decrease in the likelihood of rearrest, proving that public safety concerns are unfounded. In Harris County, Texas, dropping cash bail for those charged with nonviolent offenses led to a 6 percent drop, not increase, in recidivism. Moreover, cash bail reform does not, in reality, decrease the rate at which defendants show up to their trialsnullifying the logical underpinning of cash bail programs. For politicians, resisting cash bail reform is merely a convenient way to appear tough on crime without actually presenting substantive solutions to underlying criminogenic issues. However, reform doesnt have to be uniform. Governments threatened by opponents who stir up fear of societal disorder can start with milder reforms, including reducing cash bail for nonviolent cases or ensuring that defendants have access to counsel before their bail hearings, rather than debating more controversial policies like eliminating bail entirely. States can also opt to try out reforms in specific counties before enacting statewide reformsIllinois, for instance, analyzed cash bail reforms in Cook County before eliminating cash bail statewide. Regardless of the approach, reform is necessary nationwide to ensure that we no longer allow bail to deprive people like Richard Griffin of their jobs, homes, and livelihoods. Your access to justice should never be determined by the thickness of your wallet.

More:

The Price of Freedom: Americas Unjust Cash Bail System - Brown Political Review

A Prayer for Freedom from Mom Guilt This Mother’s Day – Your Daily Prayer – May 12 – Crosswalk.com

A Prayer for Freedom from Mom Guilt This Mother's Day By Kristine Brown

Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground outside your Fathers care. (Matthew 10:29 NIV)

On Mothers Day, my young adult son gave me the sweetest card. He wrote a message expressing how much he appreciated everything Id done for him growing up. I couldnt help but get emotional. Seeing his gratitude etched on the page in his own handwriting was a priceless gift for this momma. But right in the midst of that special moment, my mind began wandering back to mistakes Id made, regrets, and times I felt incapable as a mom.

Raising a child is by far the most difficult thing Ive ever done. Everything I did impacted this little person God put under my care. Yet often I felt like I was doing this mothering-thing all wrong. So many times throughout the years I fumbled through, questioning my decisions and second-guessing my choices. Then, the second-guessing would lead to mom guilt. I convinced myself that my mistakes would eventually have a negative effect on my child.

Mom guilt can be a destructive thing if we let it. We want to do our best to bring up our kids in a healthy, loving, and God-honoring environment. But when we put unrealistic expectations on ourselves, self-condemnation can surface, which is not Gods will for us. His Word says, Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. (Romans 8:1) God wants us to bring our cares and concerns as moms to him. He also wants us to walk confidently with the Holy Spirit in the work he appointed us to do.

Matthew 10:29 reveals Jesus own words to the disciples. Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground outside your Fathers care.

In the context of this verse, Jesus was giving his twelve disciples the authority to do the work he called them to do. Yet he didnt sugarcoat the intensity of what they would face. He laid it all out before them, then reminded them of their worth in the eyes of God. So dont be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows. (Matthew 10:31)

Like the disciples, moms are called to important work. Yes, it will be hard. Many days, we will be afraid to make the wrong decision and agonize over every little thing. But we will press on, anyway. Even when we feel like were failing, we can choose courage instead of fear. Jesus reminder about our Fathers care provides a much-needed pep talk for times when mom guilt makes us question our abilities to raise our children well.

This Mothers Day, let me encourage you to find freedom from mom guilt. Jesus awaits with love, understanding, and grace. Lets take our mistakes to Jesus and trust in the Holy Spirit to continue leading the way.

Lets pray:

Dear God, Thank you for motherhood. The journey is a hard one, but you are always faithful. This Mothers Day, help me reflect on your goodness and grace in my life. Help me let go of mom guilt and find the freedom to enjoy this beautiful work you have called me to do. Lord, most days, I feel like Im making one mistake after another. I try to pray and do the right things for my child, but I worry about messing up. As moms, we want the best for them. I also know you love my child even more than I do. You are the ultimate Protector and Guide. May your Holy Spirit direct my thoughts, actions, and decisions as a mom. Forgive me for past mistakes and help me live free from guilt and fear of making the wrong choices where my child is concerned. Your Word tells me that we are never outside of your care. Thank you for being the greatest example of a loving parent. In Jesus name, I pray, Amen.

Image credit: Image generated using AI technology with Dall.E2024/ChatGPT

For more spiritual growth resources, check out the 5-day email study Walking with Rahab by todays devotion writer, Kristine Brown. Youll find weekly encouragement to help you become more than yourself through Gods Word at her website,kristinebrown.net. Kristine is the author of the book Cinched: Living with Unwavering Trust in an Unfailing Godand its companion workbook.

Teach Us to Pray is a FREE prayer podcast hosted by iBelieve writer Christina Patterson. Each week, she gives you practical, real-life tips on how to grow your faith and relationship with God through the power of prayer. To listen to her episode on What to Pray in the Morning for a Worry-Free Day, click below!

Now that you've prayed, are you in need of someone to pray for YOU? Click the button below!

VisitiBelieve.comfor more inspiring prayer content.

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A Prayer for Freedom from Mom Guilt This Mother's Day - Your Daily Prayer - May 12 - Crosswalk.com

Illinois ‘Freedom Caucus’ reacts to memo urging $800 million in budget cuts – AdVantageNEWS.com

For weeks, Gov. J.B. Pritzker has boasted about his proposed 2025 budget as being balanced, but it appears that the numbers arent adding up. Some are saying "I told you so."

In a memo from Deputy Gov. Andy Manar, state agency directors are being asked to prepare for $800 million less in available revenue.

Manar said it has "become clear that opposition to proposed revenue is significant enough to direct agencies to prepare for the possibility of reductions to proposed spending" and "we must prepare to implement a potential balanced budget scenario with $800 million less in available revenue."

Pritzker proposed a nearly $53 billion budget in February that included about $1 billion in tax increases.

The most controversial tax hike is a proposed increase in the cap on the net operating loss deduction for businesses estimated to raise about $526 million, which has been met with wide scale opposition.

Several Republican lawmakers held a news conference Thursday and essentially said we told you so.

State Rep. Adam Niemerg, R-Diederich, questioned Pritzkers priorities.

It is absolutely unbelievable that he would double down on his orders and raise taxes on the working people of Illinois while illegal immigrants continue to receive handout after handout, said Niemerg.

State Rep Marty McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, is a member of the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, whose members realized that new taxes would have to be implemented to balance the proposed budget.

It flew directly into the face of what the governor was saying in his February address and his flowery fiscal forecast suddenly fell to pieces, said McLaughlin.

State Rep. Chris Miller, R-Hindsboro, said the governor and the Democratic-controlled General Assembly lack fiscal discipline.

Weve grown the government since J.B. Pritzker came into office by $15 billion dollars, and yet they dont have enough money to cover the costs because all they know how to do is tax, borrow and spend, said Miller.

The General Assembly has until May 31 to pass a budget with simple majorities.

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Illinois 'Freedom Caucus' reacts to memo urging $800 million in budget cuts - AdVantageNEWS.com

Minnesota needs an ERA that includes gender and reproductive freedom – Star Tribune

Opinion editor's note: Star Tribune Opinion publishes a mix of national and local commentaries online and in print each day. To contribute, click here.

In recent weeks, Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life (MCCL), one of the state's leading anti-abortion groups, announced a million-dollar ad campaign arguing against a proposed Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) that includes protections for gender and reproductive freedom.

If passed by the Minnesota House and Senate in the remaining days of this legislative session and subsequently approved by Minnesota voters in 2026, the amendment would enshrine equal rights for all in the state Constitution with clear protections for women, LGBTQ community members and pregnant people, regardless of pregnancy outcomes ("House DFLers push for expanded ERA on ballot," front page, April 7). This explicit protection means that reproductive freedom would be protected in Minnesota, no matter who sits in the governor's office, Legislature or the courts.

The irony of MCCL's ad campaign, which has been scrutinized by the media and lambasted by Minnesotans on Reddit, is that groups like MCCL are exactly why Minnesota needs the ERA.

Founded in 1968, MCCL is part of the national movement that spent decades working to overturn Roe vs. Wade and ban abortion in every state. In Minnesota, MCCL has been responsible for passing myriad laws since the 1970s to make getting an abortion in Minnesota harder and more expensive.

While a lawsuit filed by Gender Justice was able to reverse many of these longstanding restrictions on abortion access through a court ruling made in 2022, there is no guarantee that a future Legislature, court or judge would uphold the reproductive freedom we have in Minnesota today.

Minnesota's ERA would do three things:

First, it would guarantee equal rights under the law regardless of sex or gender, with protections for reproductive freedom. Neither Minnesota nor the U.S. Constitutions have guarantees on the basis of sex or gender. States that have abortion bans either have no constitutional protections in place like Minnesota or they have outdated language that judges argue does not protect reproductive freedom.

Second, it would protect all Minnesotans from discrimination under the law, regardless of their sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression.

And third, it would offer every Minnesotan the strongest possible protections against discrimination based on race, national origin, ancestry, disability, and sex and gender so every person is included, and no one is left out.

By enshrining the values of freedom and equality in the Minnesota Constitution, we can close the door on any future attempts by groups like MCCL to introduce state laws that aim to roll back progress now, and in the future.

The need to pass the ERA is urgent. In 2023 alone, lawmakers across the country introduced more than 1,400 bills attacking reproductive freedom and transgender rights. In 2024, we have seen Arizona reinstate an 1864 law banning abortion and criminalizing doctors, the Alabama Supreme Court rule that embryos created through IVF are children, and the state of Florida enact a six-week abortion ban for its 22 million residents.

When given the chance, Minnesotans have a track record of supporting reproductive freedom and equality for all. In 2012, Minnesota became the first state in the nation to reject a constitutional amendment that would limit the freedom of LGBTQ+ couples to marry, paving the way for marriage equality. After the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, Minnesota voted in its first-ever pro-reproductive-freedom majorities into the Legislature.

Minnesota has the opportunity to continue this legacy through a constitutional amendment that is long overdue. We urge lawmakers to pass the ERA and allow Minnesotans to vote our values and stand firmly for equal rights, once and for all.

Megan Peterson is executive director of Gender Justice, a Minnesota-based nonprofit legal and policy advocacy organization dedicated to advancing gender equity through the law.

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Minnesota needs an ERA that includes gender and reproductive freedom - Star Tribune

The state of global press freedom in 10 numbers – Columbia Journalism Review

This past Friday, May 3, was World Press Freedom Day. The date marks the anniversary of the Windhoek Declaration, a 1991 statement, named for the capital of Namibia, that asserted the need for an independent and pluralistic African press. As the UN puts it, the annual event is a reminder to governments of the need to respect their commitment to press freedom, but also a day of reflection among media professionals about issues of press freedom and professional ethics, as well as a chance to pay tribute to journalists who have lost their lives in the line of duty.

Each year, World Press Freedom Day brings with it a welter of statistics on the state of press freedom around the worldno few of them offered up by Reporters Without Borders (RSF) alone, in its influential World Press Freedom Index. (The index ranks 180 countries and territories worldwide from best to worst on press freedom, according to five indicators spanning political, economic, legislative, social, and security considerations.) Journalists, of course, do not live or work by statistics aloneand, as Ive written before in this newsletter, press-freedom statistics are often contested, sometimes bitterly so, with the picture they paint depending, among other factors, on who we consider to be a journalist, what aspects of their experience we measure, and what aspects are even measurable in the first place.

Still, this picture can be revealingand on this years World Press Freedom Day, it showed a global crisis for the press that, on numerous metrics, is only getting worse. Below are ten figures from this years World Press Freedom Day, what they show, and, sometimes, what they dont.

At least 1 journalist was killed on World Press Freedom Day. According to Voice of America, Muhammad Siddique Mengal, the president of a local press club, was traveling in a car in Pakistans Balochistan Province when an assailant on a motorcycle attached a magnetic bomb to the vehicle, which blew up seconds later. The perpetrator has not been identified, but VOA notes that Balochistan has lately experienced almost daily attacks mostly claimed by ethnic Baluch insurgents and that the region is home to other militant groups; Pakistans security services have also been accused of attacking critics there. The killing came one day after the Committee to Protect Journalists raised the alarm about a series of recent death threats targeting Hamid Mir, a prominent Pakistani TV journalist (who has been attacked before, as I wrote in 2022). On Friday, Mir described Mengals killing as a message to all independent journalists in Pakistan.

3 journalists were called out by name in a statement that President Joe Biden issued to mark World Press Freedom Day: Austin Tice, an American journalist who was abducted in Syria in 2012; Evan Gershkovich, the Wall Street Journal reporter jailed in Russia since last year; and Alsu Kurmasheva, a journalist with the US-funded broadcaster Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty who is also in jail in Russia. (She is a dual US-Russian citizen.) Biden has repeatedly spoken the names of Tice and Gershkovich. By my count, this was only the third time that he has publicly mentioned Kurmashevas nameand the second time in less than a week, after he said, during remarks at the White House Correspondents Dinner, that Russian president Vladimir Putin should release Evan and Alsu immediately. This recent uptick is notable: as I reported recently, critics have argued that Bidens administration could be doing more to highlight Kurmashevas case. Her husband told me that he would like to hear Biden say her name more often.

10 journalists worldwide are worthy of particularly urgent attention, according to the One Free Press Coalition, a collective of international news organizations that aims to highlight the cases of threatened media workers. The coalition launched its 10 Most Urgent list in 2019 and updated it monthly; it apparently stopped doing so in 2022, but has just relaunched the list as an annual project pegged to World Press Freedom Day, according to its website. Gershkovich and Kurmasheva lead the latest list, which also draws attention to the plight of jailed reporters in Ethiopia, Hong Kong, Rwanda, and Myanmar. Also on the list are three journalists Ive written about in this newsletter: Jos Rubn Zamora and Gustavo Gorritiveteran muckrakers in Guatemala and Peru, respectivelyas well as Shireen Abu Akleh, a Palestinian American reporter for Al Jazeera who was shot and killed while covering an Israeli raid in the occupied West Bank in 2022.

26 journalists deaths in the line of work have been condemned by UNESCO since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7 and Israel responded by bombarding Gaza. UNESCO cited this figure in a press release announcing that Palestinian journalists covering Gaza would collectively receive this years World Press Freedom Prize, an award given in honor of Guillermo Cano, a Colombian journalist who was assassinated outside his newspapers offices in 1986. In the same release, UNESCO attributed its Gaza figure to information from partner NGOs and said that it is reviewing dozens of other cases. Indeed, its figure is significantly lower than similar data maintained by various other groups; CPJs tally of media workers killed in the conflict currently stands at 97, while the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) tally stands at 109 and regional groups peg the total higher still. As I wrote recently, how this figure is calculated has been a source of controversy. As of last month, RSFs tally stood at 105, but the group had to that point only determined that 22 of those journalists were killed in the course of their worka distinction that a Palestinian press group has blasted as tantamount to whitewashing Israeli crimes.

42 percent is the rate of increase in attacks on journalists and news outlets covering the environment in the past five years (compared with the prior five-year period) according to a new report produced by UNESCO. (The theme of this years World Press Freedom Day was journalism and freedom of expression in the context of the current global environmental crisis.) Earlier this year, UNESCO and the IFJ surveyed 905 environmental journalists in 129 countries, over 70 percent of whom said they had suffered attacks, threats, or pressure linked to their work. The report notes that such attacks have taken place in every region of the world, including Europe, where police have arrested reporters covering climate protests in the UK, France, Spain, Poland, and Sweden.

More than 50 percent of the worlds population now lives in countries colored red in RSFs World Press Freedom Indexthe groups lowest classification, reflecting poor scores on its indicators and a very serious situation for press freedom. Only 36 countries out of 180 worldwide are in RSFs red zone, but this figure is an increase on 31 last year and includes half of the worlds most populous countriesChina, Russia, Bangladesh, India, and Pakistanall of which (bar China) held or are holding elections this year. According to RSF, less than 8 percent of the worlds population now lives in places with good or satisfactory press freedom.

55 is the new ranking of the US on RSFs index, a 10-place drop from last year and a lower ebb than it recorded at any point when Donald Trump was president. The US has not placed higher than 40th since 2013, and comparing placements on the index from year to year is not an exact science anyway. But the recent dropwhich puts the US below various countries with notably hostile recent press-freedom climates, including Slovakia and Polandnonetheless reflects what RSF describes as major structural barriers to press freedom, including economic struggles and declining public trust. Not that the US was the biggest dropper in the index this year: Slovakia, for example, is down 12 places, Niger 19, Argentina 26, and Burkina Faso 28. All four countries have seen recent changes of government, be they the result of elections or coups.

177 is the new ranking on the index of North Korea, that countrys highest placement in at least a decadebut still the worlds fourth worst country for press freedom overall. For five of the past ten years, including the past two, North Koreawhich has a notoriously totalitarian approach toward independent journalism (and a more favorable one toward propagandistic cinema, as I wrote last year)has been rock bottom of the index, with Eritrea occupying that rank most of the rest of the time. Eritrea is back at the bottom this year. But Syria has now also fallen below North Koreaas has Afghanistan, where the repression of journalists has steadily intensified since the Taliban seized power in 2021, as RSF puts it. Prior to that, the country had hovered around the 120 mark for the better part of a decade.

310 BBC World Service journalists are now working in exile, according to a figure that the broadcaster released to mark World Press Freedom Day. The figure has nearly doubled since 2020, a reflection of events since then in Afghanistan and Russia, as well as in Ethiopia and Myanmar. The BBC pulled most of its staff out of Afghanistan after the Taliban took power, and moved its Moscow team to neighboring Latvia after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 and simultaneously intensified its crackdown on the press. (Last month, Russian officials labeled a BBC reporter as a foreign agent, a designation intended to confer stigma and onerous bureaucratic requirements that is also at issue in Kurmashevas case.) Some BBC journalists who were already working from exile, meanwhile, have recently been on the receiving end of an uptick in threatsnot least journalists working for BBC Persian, 10 of whom learned recently that they had secretly been convicted in absentia in their home country. Exiled Iranian journalists families have also been harassed, as I wrote recently.

2.5 billion is the amount (in US dollars) that tax authorities in Turkey fined a media company that had been critical of Recep Tayyip Erdoanostensibly on fraud charges, but actually, many critics suspected, as a political punishment. This happened in 2009, but on World Press Freedom Day last week, Jan-Werner Mller, a professor at Princeton, returned to the story to highlight the anti-press tactics to which repressive leaders (including Erdoan, who was prime minister then and is now the president) have resorted in order to maintain at least a veneer of plausible deniability. As another World Press Freedom Day arrives, news media organizations will dutifully display lists of journalists imprisoned or killed around the world, Mller wrote in Foreign Policy. It is important to acknowledge these victims. But its also time to recognize that analysts and policymakers need a new framework to understand how a new generation of authoritarian leaders disables critical coverage without putting journalists in jail or physically harming them.

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ICYMI: New York just committed $90 million to help save local journalism. Will it work?

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The state of global press freedom in 10 numbers - Columbia Journalism Review

10 countries in Africa with the best press freedom in 2024 – Business Insider Africa

It is impossible to overstate the value of press freedom in African nations. To defend democracy, encourage accountability and openness, advance socioeconomic development, and amplify the voices of various people, a free and independent media is essential.

Governments, civic society, and the international community must cooperate as stewards of democracy to safeguard press freedom and enable journalists to carry out their essential duty as defenders of democracy and the truth.

While this is hardly the case for several African countries, there are some on the continent where freedom of the press is hardly an issue.

These countries enjoy transparent coverage of current affairs, and those who have taken the profession of journalism have been made to feel safe.

One of the most important factors of a free press is its facilitation of openness and accountability in government institutions and public organizations.

Investigative journalism exposes corruption, inefficiency, and resource misuse, resulting in remedial action and the diffusion of good governance principles.

A free press also serves as the voice of the voiceless, often amplifying the plight of disenfranchised communities and peoples and fostering socioeconomic development and prosperity.

With that said, here are the 10 countries in Africa with the best freedom of the press in 2024, according to the latest annual World Press Freedom Index produced by Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

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10 countries in Africa with the best press freedom in 2024 - Business Insider Africa

‘That ain’t freedom’: Grant Cardone says this is the No. 1 ‘problem’ with America’s middle class a group he calls … – AOL

'That ain't freedom': Grant Cardone says this is the No. 1 'problem' with America's middle class a group he calls 'oppressed' and 'naive'

While economists and policymakers focus much of their attention on the middle class, real estate mogul Grant Cardone believes the category itself is becoming irrelevant.

The number one problem with the middle class is that you guys bought the idea of a middle class, he said in a YouTube Short, in which he goes on to call middle-class Americans oppressed and naive people.

Heres why he insists the middle class dream is a fallacy and what ordinary people can do to escape it.

Cardones key issue with the middle class dream is that its fueled by excessive debt and consumerism. He talks about how student debt, mortgages and car loans can trap people in lifelong debt servicing.

That aint freedom, man, he said.

Its true that ordinary families have borrowed excessively to keep up with the cost of homes, cars and education. At the end of 2023, American households collectively had $17.5 trillion in total debt, $12.25 trillion of which was tied to mortgage balances, according to the New York Federal Reserve Bank. Credit card, auto loans and student debt have also been on the rise.

Coupled with heightened interest rates, this debt burden is looking increasingly precarious.

Read more: This little-known investment strategy can save you thousands on your taxes

Theres also a demographic shift underway. Pew Research found that the number of Americans considered middle class has been steadily shrinking. In 1971, 61% of the countrys population met their definition of middle class. In 2021, that ratio was down to 50%.

More American adults, according to Pews data, are either dropping into lower-income or rising into upper-income categories. With that in mind, Cardones solution is to study people in the upper-income category and try to incorporate some of their strategies to escape the middle-income trap.

The way to get out is to study the people at the top of the food chain, Cardone recommended.

Millionaires and billionaires, he suggests, are lending and investing their money instead of borrowing it.

In particular, he points to legendary investor Warren Buffett, who was the seventh richest man in the world at $135.6 billion as of May 10, according to Forbes's real-time billionaires list. Buffett has previously recommended passive investments in low-cost index funds to help ordinary investors build wealth. Hes also famously resistant to borrowed capital.

It's insane to risk what you have and need for something you don't really need, he once told CNBC.

Resisting debt and investing in appreciating assets should be an escape plan for anyone looking to avoid the middle-income debt trap or the lower-income financial trap.

Unlike Buffett, however, Cardone prefers to invest in real estate. His company, Cardone Capital, says its portfolio consists of 39 multifamily properties and over 500,000 square feet of commercial office space.

Investors looking to follow this game plan can consider real estate investment trusts (REITs) or firms that offer investments in commercial real estate or even vacation rental homes.

This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

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'That ain't freedom': Grant Cardone says this is the No. 1 'problem' with America's middle class a group he calls ... - AOL

I was taking absolute freedom: Denis Villeneuve Sacrificed Authenticity for One of the Most Mysterious Scenes in … – FandomWire

Denis Villeneuve successfully adapted the first Dune novel with the two Dune films. The evolution of Paul Atreides into a messianic figure and the rivalry between House Harkonnen and Atreides were chronicled in the two films. Villeneuve managed to bring a lot of authenticity and grandeur to the franchise making it an unforgettable experience.

One of the most interesting aspects in both films was the opening quotes that were delivered by a haunting voice speaking in an unknown language. In a recent interview, the director revealed that those lines were uttered by an anonymous Sardaukar, and he explained why a member of the imperial army was given such meaningful lines at the beginning of each film.

Adapting a magnum opus like Frank Herberts Dune is a herculean task and maverick directors like David Lynch have tried and not fully succeeded in realizing the complex world of the books. Denis Villeneuve knew that a 100% faithful adaptation of the books would never work, so he picked and chose elements from the books that were necessary and aligned them with new elements that he introduced.

One of them was switching the person who uttered the introductory quotes in the films compared to the books. In the books, Princess Irulan mostly starts each one with her insights and thoughts. However, in Villeneuves adaptation, a haunting voice in a mysterious language speaks and the film explains to the audience what it says.

In both Dune 1 and 2, the voice opens the films with the quotes, Dreams are messages from the deep and Power over spice is power over all. Audiences believed at first that this may be a vision that Paul has where the God-Emperor is speaking to him from the future (via X). However, Villeneuve confirmed that a priest of the Sardaukar army is the speaker of those lines.

In an interview with The New York Times, the director explained that this was done to add layers to the Sardaukar army who were mostly known for their powerful ways and their determination in battle. Villeneuve wanted to show a rich character-driven moment with these quotes, revealing their thoughtful and philosophical side. He deliberately took this creative liberty from the book to provide this depth to this group of people. Villeneuve said,

I thought it would be interesting to have a tiny bit of insight that they are not just tremendous warriors, but they have spirituality, philosophical thought. They have substance. Also, their sound was designed by Hans Zimmer. I absolutely loved how it feels like its coming from the deep, from the ancient world.

Frank Herbert said beginnings are very delicate times. By starting with a Sardaukar priest, I was indicating to the fans that I was taking absolute freedom with this adaptation, that I was hijacking the book.

Villeneuve clearly did not want the Sardaukar to be reduced to just an army that the Emperor and Harkonnens use in their fight against the Atreides. The Sardaukars are also insightful and can provide thought-provoking statements like any other character in the film. Thus, Villeneuve elevates the characters in such ways even though he takes narrative liberties.

Anya Taylor-Joy made a surprise cameo in Dune: Part Two as Pauls sister Alia Atreides (from the future, he sees her as he ingests the Water of Life). Denis Villeneuve had always had her in mind for the role but it seemed initially that she wouldnt be able to do it due to her busy schedules for Furiosa.

In an interview with Variety, Taylor-Joy stated that she kept on telling Villeneuve that everything would work out and she would be able to shoot her scene amidst shooting for Furiosa (by making adjustments). Both did not give up and finally, the director was able to cut a deal with the studio to make it happen. The actress said,

Before I even sat down, he was like, I want you to be in Dune, but you cant do it! Taylor-Joy recalls. I was like, Please? I skipped all the stages of grief and went straight to begging I was like, I can do this. I can be in Australia and Abu Dhabi at the same time. He wanted me to be part of the universe. We kept in touch. I just had this feeling that it wasnt over.

Villeneuve has started writing the third Dune film which is expected to finish off his Dune narrative. Taylor Joy is currently gearing up for the release of Furiosa, hitting theatres on May 24, 2024. Fans can watch watch the first Dune on Max and rent Dune: Part Two on Prime Video.

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I was taking absolute freedom: Denis Villeneuve Sacrificed Authenticity for One of the Most Mysterious Scenes in ... - FandomWire

Key no vote on Alabama gambling bill suggests looking to next year Alabama Reflector – Alabama Reflector

A stalled gambling package in the Senate could be dead unless a member flips their vote or theres some real fancy jumping through hoops, Sen. Greg Albritton, R-Atmore, said Monday.

Albritton, who handled the package in the Senate but ultimately ended up voting against it, said that unless the Senate can get unanimous consent to suspend the rules for a new conference report, the upper chamber is stuck procedurally.

I dont think [unanimous consent] would happen. Were stuck. We either have to vote the [constitutional amendment] up or down or just leave it in the basket, Albritton said.

But he said the bill could still come up for a vote in the last days of the session, and any one of the nay votes could change.

That sounds easy enough, but the other problem that comes in is how many of the yes votes have already turned back to no. Every time we bring this up, we lose votes, Albritton said.

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And Albritton said his no vote wont change this year. He said he might change it next year if he gets a more palatable bill that [he] can vote for.

Albritton said the compromise would constrict the Poarch Band of Creek Indians (PCI) involvement in the industry while allowing other entities to grow. The Poarch Band, a federally recognized tribe that operates casinos in Atmore, Montgomery and Wetumpka, had sought to submit a final bid on any casino licenses issued.

In the compromise, Albritton said, there is no mechanism for PCI, based in Atmore in the senators district, to enter into a compact with the state because the state isnt offering something of value, such as another site off tribal land.

He said that while PCIs opposition was part of the reason for his nay vote, he voted in support of the bill before going to the conference committee, when he said PCI had been lobbying against it.

Gambling bills stalled in Senate as Alabama Legislature nears adjournment

Two other aspects of the bill kept him from voting for the compromise from the conference committee. There was no authorization for sports betting, which he said is a growing industry; there was no regulation for online gaming, whether it be slots, poker or roulette.

We have not done anything to control, restrict, oversee or tax that. Those are two growing portions of the industry that we just ignore with this bill, he said.

Sen. Garlan Gudger, R-Cullman, one of the lawmakers assigned to the conference committee, said in a phone interview Monday that the Senate thought expanding casino gaming, especially with an open bid process, and legalizing sports betting was too much for right now. Gudger said addiction is a concern when it comes with electronic sports betting, especially for young people.

It changes the whole course of, really, their life, just based on something they really didnt know that much about except were having fun or were trying to get out of some other debt or just make some easy money, Gudger said.

But he said that from their estimates, over $1.2 billion is being spent on sports betting in-state currently. He sees the need for lawmakers to have that discussion, but he said that it came on too quickly.

We felt like in the Senate, from the House version, that we werent ready for that, but I do think there is an appetite to look into that as time goes on, Gudger said.

House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter, R-Rainsville, said last week that hes not in the mood to work on another piece of legislation, saying its one of those things you cant win.

Rep. Chris Blackshear, R-Smiths Station, sponsored the original gambling proposal in the House. When asked about the chances of working on another piece gambling legislation in next years session, he had a definite, one-word response.

ZERO! Blackshear responded in a text.

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Key no vote on Alabama gambling bill suggests looking to next year Alabama Reflector - Alabama Reflector

Casino Hubs: 5 Airports That Serve Major Centers Of The Gambling Sector – Simple Flying

Summary

Among all leisure destinations worldwide, few are as unique in their scope as gambling hubs, to which millions flock annually in search of luck at some of the world's largest casinos. As a result, passenger demand for these major centers for the gaming industry is extremely strong, and airlines are quick to compete on some of these lucrative routes.

The airlines serving gambling hubs often include a mix of low-cost leisure-focused carriers in addition to the long-haul legacy carriers one would expect. Equivalently, the large airports that serve as major gateways for these gaming areas are similarly massive and often service traffic from multiple continents.

Photo: Philip Pilosian | Shutterstock

Across the board, however, gambling hub airports have a uniquely large number of flights from leisure-oriented airlines and are less oriented toward business travelers. In this article, we will examine five of the world's largest gambling hub airports and what makes these facilities so special.

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Unarguably the world's largest gambling hub, Las Vegas attracts tens of millions of passengers annually from all corners of the world. The city is not only notable for the many casinos located across its famous strip, but is also host to a number of events and professional sporting teams. In 2024, the Super Bowl was held at the city's Allegiant Stadium, named for the popular hometown leisure airline.

Photo: ZikG | Shutterstock

The airport is among the busiest that serve any of the world's major gambling hubs and is, as one might expect, heavily bolstered by leisure-focused low-cost carriers. Nonetheless, there are a number of major international legacy carriers that also serve Las Vegas, such as KLM from Amsterdam Schiphol International Airport (AMS) and Virgin Atlantic from London Heathrow Airport (LHR).

In fact, passenger demand has been so overwhelming for Las Vegas that the city has begun the process of developing another airport. Nonetheless, this facility will not be operational until at least the mid-2030s.

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Atlantic City International Airport is a unique, small airport located in Southern New Jersey that serves not just the nearby gambling center of Atlantic City, but also the greater South Jersey region as a whole. The facility, which is also a joint operating base for the New Jersey Air National Guard, is also home to the 177th Fighter Wing's F-16 fighter jets.

Photo:Robin Guess | Shutterstock

The only commercial operator at the airport is, unsurprisingly, leisure-focused Spirit Airlines. Interestingly, however, is that the carrier serves a number of leisure destinations in the American Southeast from the facility, demonstrating a lack of interest in Atlantic City from major population centers.

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Located in Eastern Macau, this facility serves as the primary gateway to the largest gambling hub in Asia. The relatively small facility sees traffic from across the continent and serves as the primary hub for flag carrier Air Macau.

While a mid-size airline by Asian flag carrier standards, Air Macau does operate flights from the facility to over a dozen destinations across China and Southeast Asia. Most major Asian airlines operate nonstop flights from their hubs to this popular gambling destination, but the airport does lack service from major European, American, or Middle Eastern airlines.

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Arguably, the largest gambling hub in Europe is in the city-state of Monaco, where the legendary casino of Monte Carlo is located. The small nation, however, lacks a proper airport due to its small size and, as a result, relies heavily on nearby Nice Airport to serve as its primary gateway.

Due to its nearby proximity, a number of airlines operate nonstop services to Nice and market the nearby gambling destination. Many carriers also offer helicopter transfers to Monaco, notably including Emirates, which recently announced new connections via helicopter operator Blade.

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The second-largest airport in Nevada, RNO serves the greater Lake Tahoe area, and offers flights to dozens of destinations across the United States from all major airlines. The city, which is home to casinos, is a popular gambling destination nestled amid a picturesque alpine lake.

Photo: EQRoy | Shutterstock

The airport offers services to most major destinations in the Western United States, with a few nonstop flights to East Coast transportation gateways. For example, JetBlue operates seasonal service to the airport from its primary hub at John F Kennedy International Airport.

It is also important to note that not all traffic to RNO is driven by the gambling industry. The airport, like many others in the alpine west of the United States, serves a number of world-class ski resorts in the area.

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Casino Hubs: 5 Airports That Serve Major Centers Of The Gambling Sector - Simple Flying

Sports gambling creates a windfall, but raises questions of integrity here are three lessons from historic sports-betting … – The Conversation

Sports betting is having a big moment across the United States. While gambling on sports has been legal for decades in countries such as the U.K., it wasnt until 2018 that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could legalize sports betting. Before then, sports betting had been permitted only in Nevada.

After the Supreme Court decision, the floodgates opened. Many states were happy to legalize sports gambling, enticed by the opportunity for more tax revenue. As of May 2024, sports gambling is legal in 38 states and Washington, D.C. Americans wagered nearly US$120 billion on sports in 2023 alone.

Until about 10 years ago, sports leagues in North America were apprehensive about if not totally against legalizing sports betting. The long history of sports gambling scandals in the U.S. led many to worry that legalizing sports betting would tarnish their sports credibility and image. The NCAA was one of many governing bodies that objected to legalizing sports gambling nationwide.

But now that the Supreme Court has blessed it, sports leagues have embraced gambling, forming partnerships with brands like Caesars Entertainment. The sportsbooks and platforms have integrity monitors to track potential inconsistencies. Still, a number of scandals involving athletes and the people around them have emerged since the Supreme Court ruling.

As a professor of critical sports studies, I teach students about the history of sports betting scandals. And I think they offer lessons for the present day.

The Black Sox Scandal of 1919 helped to further organize baseball, leading to the creation of the position of commissioner of baseball, which was first assumed by former judge and known racist Kennesaw Mountain Landis. Along with maintaining the color line, arguably his most notable action was banning, for life, the players on the Chicago White Sox involved in the fixing of the 1919 World Series.

Early professional baseball regulations explicitly banned gambling, but the money was too tempting for many players to ignore and that included members of the 1919 White Sox. The players hated the teams owner, Charles Comiskey, and felt that they were underpaid. But they were unable to change teams due to the reserve clause in their contracts, which gave owners exclusive rights to their players in perpetuity.

A faction of the team agreed to throw the World Series. Those players were ultimately indicted by a grand jury and went to trial. They were acquitted of criminal charges, but Landis suspended all of the players connected to the fix including superstar Shoeless Joe Jackson, who admitted taking money from a teammate but maintained he was innocent of game fixing.

This was the the most notable of several attempts to fix baseball games early in the 20th century, as the game grew in popularity and a number of people associated with baseball, including players, managers and even umpires, looked to cash in.

Athlete salaries have soared in recent decades. However, this money hasnt shielded players and others involved in sports from the grips of gambling addiction.

There are no rules banning athletes from sitting at a blackjack table or even gambling on other sports. Numerous players have wagered millions of dollars, with some athletes building up massive debts due to addiction.

These debts can lead to such desperation that athletes decide to risk their careers. Baseball legend and admitted compulsive gambler Pete Rose continues to sit outside the Hall of Fame because he bet on baseball games.

The most substantial gambling scandal in modern sports came in the NBA during the 2000s, involving referee Tim Donaghy. He admitted to providing information on NBA games, including those he officiated, which allegedly influenced his calls. Donaghy served time in prison as a result. So it isnt just players who get in trouble.

There have been several major point-shaving scandals in college basketball history, most famously at the City College of New York in the 1950s and at Boston College in the late 1970s the latter of which involved Henry Hill, the subject of the blockbuster film Goodfellas.

The increasing use of prop, or proposition, bets, which focus on a specific outcome within a game rather than the overall result, has created a new point of vulnerability for student-athletes. While influencing an entire team is hard, history shows that individual players are more susceptible to pressure. A point guard or quarterback can slow down the game and reduce the margin of victory.

And while todays unpaid student-athletes have the same financial incentives to cheat as earlier generations did, they face a new pressure: Theyre often surrounded by gamblers on campus and on social media. Betting is pervasive not only at large universities but at smaller schools, too. According to NCAA surveys, 1 in 3 student-athletes have faced harassment from gamblers, ranging from derogatory comments to death threats.

The sportsbooks have very little incentive to address potential violations, so its up to organizations that oversee sports to ensure the integrity of their games.

NCAA President Charlie Bakers suggestion to ban prop bets is a good first step: The more individual players and gameplay are isolated, the easier it is for improprieties to occur.

Providing more guidance for players and different types of punishments for different transgressions could also be useful. Gambling violations that dont affect competition outcomes should be treated differently from ones that do. The NCAA already does this by meting out lighter penalties for student-athletes who wager on other teams and sports as opposed to their own.

Providing treatment for players and others suffering from gambling addiction would be helpful as well, and theres some evidence that open discussions of gambling addiction in European soccer have had a positive impact.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has suggested implementing federal oversight to eliminate the uncertainty of state-by-state regulations. Although scandals are still likely to occur, gambling commissions like the one in the U.K. can provide a framework for federal licensing and oversight.

The suddenness of states adopting sports betting has led to a windfall of profit for gambling companies and tax revenue for the states. But it may also endanger the integrity of sports. As policymakers mull how to address the issue, they might be wise to learn from history.

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Sports gambling creates a windfall, but raises questions of integrity here are three lessons from historic sports-betting ... - The Conversation

Shohei Ohtani’s ex-interpreter agrees to plead guilty in $17M sports gambling scandal – NBC Los Angeles

L.L. Bean has just added a third shift at its factory in Brunswick, Maine, in an attempt to keep up with demand for its iconic boot.

Orders have quadrupled in the past few years as the boots have become more popular among a younger, more urban crowd.

The company says it saw the trend coming and tried to prepare, but orders outpaced projections. They expect to sell 450,000 pairs of boots in 2014.

People hoping to have the boots in time for Christmas are likely going to be disappointed. The bootsare back ordered through February and even March.

"I've been told it's a good problem to have but I"m disappointed that customers not getting what they want as quickly as they want," said Senior Manufacturing Manager Royce Haines.

Customers like, Mary Clifford, tried to order boots on line, but they were back ordered until January.

"I was very surprised this is what they are known for and at Christmas time you can't get them when you need them," said Clifford.

People who do have boots are trying to capitalize on the shortage and are selling them on Ebay at a much higher cost.

L.L. Bean says it has hired dozens of new boot makers, but it takes up to six months to train someone to make a boot.

The company has also spent a million dollars on new equipment to try and keep pace with demand.

Some customers are having luck at the retail stores. They have a separate inventory, and while sizes are limited, those stores have boots on the shelves.

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Shohei Ohtani's ex-interpreter agrees to plead guilty in $17M sports gambling scandal - NBC Los Angeles

UK stakes its claims to second spot in worldwide online gambling – Euronews

Online gambling in the UK has risen significantly during and post-pandemic, as tax-free winnings, affordability and convenience all contribute to a surge in gambling across the UK.

The UK has bagged second spot in the top online gambling nations list in 2024, with a projected revenue of about 11.01 billion (12.80 billion), according to Statista data about gambling revenue, compiled by the Japanese online casino guide for 61 countries.

This is just behind the US, which is expected to see about 18.41 billion in revenue this year. Australia took the third spot, with a projected revenue of 8.11 billion.

27.9% of UK consumers revealed that they had gambled online, with the country expected to see a rise of 7.4% in gambling revenues this year. However, this is projected to be the fourth-lowest gambling revenue increase this year. From 2024 to 2028, the UK is likely to see gambling revenues inch up 3.84% per year.

On the other hand, the US is expected to see a rise of approximately 20.3%, with Australia estimated to see a surge of 10.5% in gambling revenue this year, and about 5.12% annually until 2028. 21.1% of Australian consumers have also highlighted that they have already experienced online gambling.

Across the surveyed gambling nations worldwide, the jump in revenue is expected to be about 12.9%.

Japan came in at fourth place, with an estimated online gambling revenue of 4.95 billion this year, a 12.7% rise from 2023. About 7.9% of Japanese consumers are likely to gamble online this year, with 11.3 million people projected to be participating in the industry by 2028.

Emiko Matsuda, editor-in-chief of Japanese online casino guide said, in an email note, The surge in online gambling can be attributed to a variety of factors such as the pandemic, which meant many betters transitioned from wagering on sports to online gambling, and the data suggests that this shift is permanent.

Gambling culture is deeply ingrained in the UK, with a large market for sports and online betting especially. According to YouGovs Global Gambling Profiles data, about 49% of UK online gamblers spend more than 5 on fantasy sports and sports bets per month.

25% of online gamblers also went for slot machines, with 17% choosing casino games and 18% opting for bingo, with gamblers spending 5 and upwards for these games per month.

The lottery is also extremely popular in the UK, with Lottoland UK estimating that more than 70% of adults in the UK enter the national lottery regularly, coming up to nearly 45 million people.

However, perhaps surprisingly, football and horse-racing are not the sports that tend to see a very high amount of betting activity in the UK. Instead, sports such as cricket, tennis, boxing, rugby and golf see gamblers spend more than 200 a month, according to Global Gambling Profiles data.

Online gambling in the UK rose rapidly both during and after the pandemic, when traditional sports events such as horse racing, cricket and football faced considerable restrictions.

Now, even though these events are back to normal, the draw of online gambling still persists. This is because online gambling offers a range of advantages, such as several games and options, at the tips of gamblers fingers.

The convenience of online gambling means that visits to casinos are not always required, with players often able to access their favourite games from the comfort of their homes. Furthermore, gambling winnings in the UK are tax-free, which can be a major incentive for players to keep going and bet higher amounts than before, in the hopes of winning bigger.

Another reason gambling has gained a lot of popularity in the UK is due to increasing affordability, with several slot games allowing players to start with only 1. Gambling regulations in the UK have also strengthened, making several players feel much more confident spending money on various online gambling sites.

However, online gambling still poses significant risks in some cases, not least, the possibility of addiction, bankruptcy, fraud, scams and increased substance abuse. These in turn, may also cause rising problems at work and in interpersonal relationships.

Public Policy Exchange said on its website, The UK government estimates that 0.5% of the adult population has a problem with gambling (as many as 2.5% of people, according to a 2023 Gambling Commission survey), 3.8% are gambling at at-risk levels, and 7% are affected negatively by other peoples gambling.

Over 420,000 people in the UK lose 2,000 or more in online gambling each year. The governments economic analysis from 2023 estimates the direct financial cost to government associated with harmful gambling to be 412.9 million.

To help decrease the risks of financial loss, the UK government has imposed a levy of 2 on individual stakes on online slot machines for players under 25 years old, with a limit of 5 on individual stakes for people over 25.

Charles Ritchie, co-chair of Gambling with Lives said regarding this levy, on Public Policy Exchanges website, If the levy is going to be effective, then it would need to deliver significantly greater funds to the treatment system. Expenditure on treatment for drug and alcohol harms are many orders of magnitude greater than what is being suggested for gambling.

The 2 limit for under-25s is a step in the right direction, but 5 for over-25s is another missed opportunity to stop the harm to millions and the devastation caused by gambling suicides. Stake limits offer some harm reduction, but the products are still highly addictive, so we also need much slower spin speeds, affordability checks and proper public health information about the dangers.

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UK stakes its claims to second spot in worldwide online gambling - Euronews

Art Rooney II gambling his reputation that change will result in Steelers success – Still Curtain

Amongst NFL Owners, Dan Rooney was a giant. Art Rooney II probably took more after his grandfather. Art Rooney Sr. never had a successful team until the 1970s; however, he was a beloved City and NFL owner. It was Dan Rooney who built the team by hiring Chuck Noll. Art Rooney II arguably is no Dan Rooney. Since Art Rooney II took control of the team, he hardly seemed at the forefront of running the team. He stayed in the shadow of Mike Tomlin and Kevin Colbert.

That's no longer the case. Though it's been a while since assuming ownership, he seemed to have gotten fed up with the Steelers' lack of post-season success. So, he felt he needed to shake up the status quo, considering the Steelers valued tradition and have done things year in and year out in the same manner. Patrick Peterson and Darnell Washington found that out the hard way in their original jersey number requests.

Peterson wanted his number seven, and the Steelers said that that number was no longer in circulation. Darnell Washington wanted his college number 0. Steelers management responded by saying no, you get traditional jersey numbering like everyone before you. The Steelers always found free agents on the cheap, which worked because the Steelers still made the post-season regularly. They didn't fire assistant coaches mid-season, either.

Mr. Rooney's impatience with the team's lack of playoff success has led to a clear mandate for the Steelers. This season, it's no longer business as usual. Under Omar Khan's guidance, the team has shown dedication to fulfilling the owner's vision of a Steelers team back in the habit of winning in the playoffs. This renewed focus on success should inspire hope and optimism among Steelers fans.

Mr. Rooney's apparent need to break some ties with past traditions began late in 2023 when the Steelers suffered a humiliating loss to a rookie backup quarterback leading the Cleveland Browns. While theSteelersoffense remained stagnant the entire game, Enough was enough. Previously, firing an offensive coordinator mid-season seemed sacrilegious. Not anymore. The Steelers promptly fired Matt Canada the next day.

Mike Tomlin said he decided to do the deed, And Art Rooney II said it was his decision. As admirable as it is with the head coach and owner working in unison, Mr. Rooney has had a firm hand in showing Matt Canada the exit. Then came his statements at the end of the season when he said the Steelers needed to find new success in the post-season.Omar Khan has taken this mandate personally and is determined to fulfill Mr. Rooney's request in a way that upended Steelers normalcy.

Only Omar Khan could find a way to add players to the Steelers roster in the typical miserly Steelers fashion, being Russell Wilson and Justin Fields, while still giving Linebacker Patrick Queen a large contract that normally the Steelers do not do in free agency. Then, with his signing, even more tradition went out signing. Patrick Queen requested number 6. It's not a typical Steelers linebacker number they give out. The Steelers agreed all the same. Whereas Darnell Washington didn't get his way, Patrick Queen did, so much for business as usual.

Then Omar Khan wasted no time sending Kenney Pickett packing after only two seasons. Granted, he didn't sound like a team sport in the end, but it was a statement that the Steelers will follow through, implement Mr. Rooney's mandate, and do everything necessary to win in the playoffs.

If these changes work, then he comes out the winner in that he made the Steelers' General Manager and head coach make the tough decisions needed to transform the team. If they fail, then some may question whether Mr. Rooney decided to take things a little too far to try to win another championship. Yet fans do need to feel excited about the direction things are headed.

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Art Rooney II gambling his reputation that change will result in Steelers success - Still Curtain

Professional sport commissioners are fighting to preserve league integrity amid gambling scandals – The Conversation

Integrity is the word on the lips of every professional sports league commissioner as investigations into gambling unfold and punishments are handed down.

Players, coaches and other personnel associated with sport organizations are expected to uphold high standards of conduct and integrity to make professional sport worthy of the publics time and money.

CFL Commissioner Randy Ambrosie referenced integrity when he announced in late April that defensive lineman and three-time Grey Cup champion Shawn Lemon had been suspended indefinitely. Lemon was found to have engaged in sports wagering while he was a member of the Calgary Stampeders, even betting on a game in which he himself participated.

The integrity of our game is of the utmost importance, said Ambrosie. Any other factors career performance, actions in community, timing, frequency or size of wagers hold no weight when the legitimacy of the CFL can be called into question.

Ambrosie stressed the gravity of the matter, wanting fans to know his office was adequately addressing the issue. He also clarified that Lemons misdeeds didnt impact any game outcomes.

This incident is the latest in a string of gambling-related issues that professional sports leagues have faced recently. The rise of sports betting, fuelled by the proliferation of online platforms and the legalization of gambling in many jurisdictions, has brought new complexities to the world of sports.

Adam Silver, Commissioner of the NBA, faced a similar issue in April when the NBA started investigating Toronto Raptors forward Jontay Porter for allegedly betting on games.

The investigation concluded that Porter had indeed violated league rules and he was banned from the NBA. He allegedly disclosed confidential information about his health to an NBA bettor before a March 20 game against the Sacramento Kings.

In addition, during his time with the Raptors G League from January to March, Porter placed at least 13 bets on NBA games totalling US$54,094. None of the bets were on games in which he played and he ended up making a profit of $21,965 from all the wagers.

In a statement, Silver said:

There is nothing more important than protecting the integrity of NBA competition for our fans, our teams and everyone associated with our sport, which is why Jontay Porters blatant violations of our gaming rules are being met with the most severe punishment.

Porters penalty was the first lifetime ban issued by the NBA since 1954 when Jack Molinas was permanently bounced for wagering on games that involved his team, the Fort Wayne Pistons.

Silvers stiff brand of justice was a public message: the NBA was prepared to protect the integrity of its game because the fans need to be able to trust the product.

The role of the MLBs commissioner was created in 1920 for just that reason: to restore public faith in professional baseball after eight members of the Chicago White Sox were indicted on criminal charges that alleged they fixed the 1919 World Series.

They were found not guilty amid several irregularities, including vanishing evidence in the form of self-incriminating statements. Justice wasnt served and everyone knew it.

Kenesaw Mountain Landis was installed as MLBs first commissioner. A former judge, he provided the penalty when the courts didnt lifetime bans for all eight implicated players. The public seemed satisfied that the cheats got their just deserts and faith was restored.

Almost a century later, Landis approach one rooted in a deterrence theory of punishment remains the standard for those that bet on games in which theyre involved.

Present-day league commissioners have learned from Landis how to handle gambling infractions, but missed his lesson on how to avoid them. Landis demanded that club owners rid their respective ballparks of any trace of gambling by being vigilant and stomping it out. Landis applied the wisdom: an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

But this is not the state of modern sport. Commissioners and the owners they serve fully embrace the proliferation of legalized sport gambling. Thats where the money is. Leagues and teams have partnered with wagering sites to pad their wallets.

In 2021, the Ottawa Senators were the first to wear a gambling advertisement with a BET99 helmet sticker, making players skating billboards for sport betting.

The irony was lost on no one when Ottawa Senators forward Shane Pinto was the first modern NHLer suspended for a gambling infraction in 2023.

Gone are the days when Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle were banned from MLB because they accepted jobs as Atlantic City casino greeters in their retirement.

Players, current and former, have cozied up to gambling interests in league-allowed ways, advertising their product on television for all children included to see. It resembles the star-studded cast of athletes that pushed Chesterfield cigarettes decades ago, which used sports stars to appeal to young boys.

Anti-gambling advocates are pleading for the sports industry to re-think its approach to betting, but the practice has only become more pervasive and accessible.

The impact has been disastrous. Kids as young as eight-years-old are hooked and its only going to get worse.

In the end, sports leagues will protect the integrity of the game: theres money in preserving the trust and loyalty of their audiences. But will these same leagues demonstrate the integrity necessary to reverse course and protect vulnerable members of society from developing a gambling addiction? Theres no money in that, so dont bet on it.

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Professional sport commissioners are fighting to preserve league integrity amid gambling scandals - The Conversation