Read More...As the Chicago Cubs’ quest for a fair stadium refinancing deal continues to drag on with the Wrigleyville community throwing up roadblocks to slow down the settlement process, a new and potentially viable option to Wrigley Field has emerged.
Rosemont mayor Brad Stephens told me this morning in a CSNChicago exclusive that he is willing to give the Cubs and the Ricketts family a 25-acre parcel of land in the village that is a prime piece of real estate large enough to accommodate a new ballpark ...
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1 2 >My next question is why Chris Christie is such a buffoon:
They sued Delaware in 2009 for the same thing, and argued that legalizing sports gaming hurts them because it clouds their image of putting forth a clean game with an honest effort.
I believe New Jersey, Delaware, Iowa, and Maryland (Florida and Pennsylvania have discussed it but are waiting to see what happens) are all making a push for legal sports gaming. If those states are successful, many other states will want to follow suit.
I'm not sure why Nevada should be legally entitled to have a quasi-monopoly on sports betting. Especially as more and more different forms of gambling are slowly becoming legal and spreading around the country into more and more places.
What, legally, prevents the feds from doing this? I agree its unfair and a stupid policy, but legally I'm not seeing what prevents it. To be fair, I haven't given it a ton of thought so I'm sure I'm missing something.
But Christie's question about what gives them the RIGHT to do it is one worth asking. I'm not sure how it's in the public's best interest to prop up state-run monopolies in a few places like Nevada.
But like #6, I haven't given it a ton of thought, either.
Is there a marked difference in gambling problems between North America and Europe?
I suppose you could ask the same thing about alcohol. Having spent a month back in Canada in August it was depressing how inconvenient it was to get booze at 2am.
What, legally, prevents the feds from doing this?
The analysis is the other way around. Enumerated powers, &c &c.
Okay, the commerce clause gives Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce. Gambling happens across state lines. So what would stop the feds from letting some states engage in this and others not?
In the vast majority of MLB/NBA/NFL/NHL games, one of the teams travels across state lines in order to play the game. That's enough to make the commerce clause applicable, I'd think.
I dont think "gambling" in state A includes the act of a team traveling from state B to State C to play the game, any more than the Intergalactic Federation would have jurisdiction over my betting my next door neighbor on what happens with the Mars Rover. Can a NJ resident legally bet on Portland@Phoenix under the full faith and credit clause?
I have no idea if some other constitutional precept is being violated here but if a court were to hold the commerce clause does not permit such regulation it would be a landmark holding.
Is there a marked difference in gambling problems between North America and Europe?
I suppose you could ask the same thing about alcohol. Having spent a month back in Canada in August it was depressing how inconvenient it was to get booze at 2am.
I've found that people are more or less the same wherever you go. People everywhere love boozing and gambling. The ease with which you can do these things just depends on the laws. I split my time between New York and Las Vegas. The suburbs of Vegas are just like the suburbs of New York, except when you enter a CVS in Vegas you can play slots and buy hard liquor. I'd think drug stores in New York would be very happy to sell liquor and install slot machines if the law allowed it.
The fact that five sports leagues are suing under the premise that it hurts their interstate commerce suggests to me that gambling affects interstate commerce.
But isn't MLB exempt from anti-trust action because it was deemed not to be interstate commerce? :)
Other than the Euro?
The whole 'live and let live' argument does not make sense when you consider there is an inherent statement of support from the government when they change the laws to allow for it. Perhaps if a court imposed an order citing the existing law was illegal, but the actions of the legislature reflect value judgments. To say nothing of states further legitimizing it by regulating it and taxing it. And to say nothing of states entering partnerships or subsidizing to promote the underlying activity for the benefit of tax revenue.
Yes, and I can't imagine what would ever happen to the NFL if people started betting on their games.
Because they are Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Delaware.
Verily. But on the other hand, Nevada is Nevada, and they've made it work.
I can see the constitutional argument, but the other states have got senators/representatives too. It's not like the other states don't have the legislative power to demand an even playing field, one way or the other.
I always wanted to sue MLB and the MLBPA for allowing casinos to use my work as a player without proper compensation. And if that didn't work, try to acquire the use of MLB team names for my own commercial use. If MLB lets Vegas use team names and post odds for profit, what prevents me from trying to use team names for profit, as MLB is not actively protecting their names despite knowledge of their economic usage by others?
¹ Not to mention unprofitable!
A different question is how can the state be sued at all here? The 11th amendment precludes states from being sued without their consent, doesn't it? Presumably New Jersey isn't consenting.
Like a fly on the wall?
All four of those states have the option to have sports gaming under federal law, but have never elected to use that right until 2009 when Delaware legalized it in their state legislature.
I believe even now, their sports wagering is pretty limited, nothing like what you can wager on in Nevada.
The legal argument is that Congress banned ALL sports betting in 1992, in all states
(Pause)
Oh, Nevada already had full sports betting, so Congress couldn't take it away. The other 3 (Montana, Oregon, Delaware) only had limited sports betting, and they can have that as well.
The Delaware case was them saying they wanted Vegas-style betting, since they had NFL betting in 1992 already. But the court ruled that they only had those parlay-style bets (the 'tickets' where you'd bet 4 games at 10 to 1 odds, basically), so that's all they can offer at their casinos now. Which they do, but they don't get a ton of business because they can't do straight bets.
Incidentally, the law was sponsored by ex-Knick/US Sen (from NJ) Bill Bradley, who said he didn't care to be treated like a "poker chip" by bettors.
Say that some states have a law requiring certain people to pay a poll tax. When congress and the president later on pass a law banning all poll taxes, the courts don't usually say that certain states are "grandfathered" in and get an exception.
So I'm still not sure exactly what is so special about sports betting that it can have this sort of special legal niche carved out.
The Constitution is explicit on this - where there's joint jurisdiction, federal law takes precedence. The issue is probably that Congress chose to make exemptions for states that already had sports betting, not that Congress had to do that or the courts forced them to do it. If they hadn't made exceptions, they might well have faced filibusters. The NV sports books are a big business in Nevada, and the Orregon football betting is run by the state.
Regarding the discussion of whether the state should protect people from their worst demons: one can argue that legal, regulated gambling leads to harm-reduction relative to gambling with illegal bookies. The bookies can probably be put out of business by legal gambling, and then the opportunity to gamble on credit with money you don't have will go away. Bookies now assume you can pay up and then go after you if you don't. If all the people who legitimately can pay up choose legal gambling, there will be basically nowhere to bet for the people who can't pay up.
Well, if what you say is true then what Howie Menckel said in post #36 isn't really true, and we're right back to Christie's question as to what the basis is for Congress to do something like that.
I always feel like posting a variation on this in all the politics threads. But usually end up just soaking up other people's opinions until someone brings up something history related.
Have you tried being vehemently ambivalent?
Strident apathy might be worth looking into as well.
Or not.
Who cares?
All but casual sports gamblers also use foreign sites though, I certainly do. Single games have lousy odds at the monopoly, they have done a clever thing though, they give reasonable odds on a win for either side and a totally horrendous one for the draw. That way they can compete with sites that have better returns to the punters, as most don't want to bet the draw anyway.
*) Except the horses, that is run by a company owned by the tracks, though they pay gambling taxes.
**) Is that's why the government shows little interest in enhancing our crappy math eduction?
It never occured to me before that Swedish Chef was actually from (or lived in) Sweden.
Maybe I shöuld put döts över all my ö:s. Just as a reminder.
$$$$$$$$. If NJ gambling interests could pull together enough capital to get Congress in their back pocket the way Vegas has, NJ would have sports betting.
Gambling was heavily deregulated in the UK in 2005, and since then there has been a huge extension both to the number of betting shops, and their opening hours. There was never any shortage of betting shops, but from observation I'd guess that the number has tripled since then. Before then, opening hours were limited - Sunday opening was a recent innovation, and the shops would only open in the evening when there was racing happening, so 4 or 5 nights a week in the summer. Now they're pretty much open 9am-10pm seven days a week, and if there's no racing happening in the UK then they'll show any racing they can find anywhere in the world, or they show virtual racing.
I'm not sure what you mean here. In truth, the distinction between betting shops and casinos has shrunk, as the betting shops have installed Fixed odds betting terminals. In theory these could be any kind of game, but in effect are all roulette machines. Although less heavily regulated than before 2005, casinos are still more heavily regulated than betting shops, so I'm not entirely sure why the betting shops are allowed these - they effectively turn the betting shop into a low rent casino.
There are claims that the 2005 changes have led to an increase in the number of problem gamblers, but a cursory google search suggests that the most extreme figures produced are only at the edges of statistical significance. What I can say is that in my opinion, betting shops are far less pleasant places than they used to be - 15-20 years ago when I used to work in them they were largely social places where regulars would come and spend the day betting in relatively small amounts on the day's racing, then go home. I wouldn't dream of working in one now, due to the ridiculous opening hours and the change in the clientele - most of the people who'd spend the day betting on the horses have migrated to online betting, and the roulette machines draw a different kind of client entirely, and there are reports of staff being threatened. In short, I was in favour of the changes before they were introduced, but in retrospect I'm, less sure.
Re this New Jersey thing, I've no idea of the relevant constitutional law, but for a federal government to be able to give a subset of states a monopoly over any field of commercial enterprise instinctively seems wrong.
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