Is gambling research biased? You bet it is, says shocking new report into industry

Saturday, 17. January 2015

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Is gambling research biased? You bet it is, says shocking new report into industry

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Stacked odds: the study claims that vital research has been undermined
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Academics at the University of London have found that vital research was being undermined because it is dependent on the industry for funding

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Critical research into the effects of gambling has been hampered and blocked because it is dependent on the betting industry for funding, a report reveals today.

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A “cosy club mentality” between the industry, the Government and researchers is preventing vital betting reforms being passed, it says.

Current policies are not holding the industry to account because almost no independent research is carried out, warns the study by Goldsmiths College at the University of London.

Its academics have been scrutinising betting for three years, taking anonymous testimony from researchers and those in the industry itself. They found that vital research was being undermined because it is dependent on the industry for funding. The Responsible Gambling Trust (RGT), funded by betting businesses, also pays for much of the research into the industry. Anthropologists at Goldsmiths say this makes studies far less questioning than they need to be. One British researcher told the study: “I can’t think of a single leading researcher who hasn’t taken money from the industry”. This sentiment was echoed by many of the 100-plus  insiders who gave testimony.

A gambling industry worker said: “The gambling world suffers from what I would call a cosy club mentality. There is a lack of challenge between various parties and therefore the overall governance of gambling, particularly in Britain, is kind of weak because people aren’t grappling with one another in a way that could actually ensure greater safeguards and more meaningful policy making.”

Rebecca Cassidy, the lead researcher in the study, said: “This research shows that the gambling industry, charities that are funded by contributions from the industry, and the government have too much influence over research.

“Instead of placing the blame for so-called ‘problem gambling’ at the feet of the individual, they should instead focus on how the industry and the state benefit from certain policies.”

A worker with 11 years’ experience in the industry said: “[It] doesn’t want research that threatens profits, like work on fixed-odds betting terminals. They are the goose laying golden eggs.”

Another researcher? said: “I’ve never known anything like the way that some of these gambling academics are in bed with the industry.”

One academic chose not to complete research that was critical of the industry. She said: “I was really scared about potentially annoying the industry and then getting my reputation trashed, because I saw that happen… and it really was horrible. So I had a choice, say everything is fine. In other words, lie.”

 

Gambling Revenue: A Bad Bet for NJ? By Megan Madison October 13, 2014 12:35 PM

Saturday, 17. January 2015

Gambling Revenue: A Bad Bet for NJ?

By Megan Madison October 13, 2014 12:35 PM
WOBM RADIO NEW JERSEY  92.7

New Jersey lawmakers often turn to gambling as a revenue stream to fund much needed state projects.  But in today’s world of shuttered casinos and slouching profits, is that really our best bet?

 

Townsquare Digital

Addiction counselor Arnie Wexler says no – and he says he sees only one outcome when the gambling industry fails to live up to the expectations.

“Now that’s going to be a shortfall,” said Wexler.  “Where’s that money going to come from?  The people of New Jersey are going to have to pick up that shortfall because New Jersey is a balanced budget state.”

And as a former compulsive gambler himself, Wexler has another concern about using gambling as a cash cow.

“They raise revenue from gambling because they think it’s an easy way to raise revenue, when in fact it’s destroying some people’s lives in their own constituent base,” said Wexler.

 

Wexler shares his own experiences in a tell-all book — titled All Bets Are Off: Losers, Liars and Recovery from Gambling Addiction — which is due out in December.

“It’s going to be a well-rounded book talking about my addiction and recovery, my wife’s living with this addiction… gambling in America and the addiction of compulsive gambling across the country,” Wexler said.

 

CAN BE PRE ORDERED AT BARNES AND NOBLE OR AMAZON

 

NEED HELP FOR GAMBLING ADDICTION CALL ME AT 888 LAST BET   ARNIE WEXLER

The NBA isn’t taking a hard-line position against sports betting anymore !!!

Saturday, 17. January 2015

 
The NBA isn’t taking a hard-line position against sports betting anymore !!!
Commissioner Adam Silver, speaking at the Bloomberg Business Summit in New York, said on Thursday that the league will eventually profit from legalized gambling on sports in the future,
It’s inevitable  that there will be legalized sports betting in more states than Nevada and we will ultimately participate in that,” said Silver, 52.
“If you have a gentleman’s bet or a small wager on any kind of sports contest, it makes you that much more engaged in it,” Silver said. “That’s where we’re going to see it pay dividends. If people are watching a game and clicking to bet on their smartphones, which is what people are doing in the United Kingdom right now, then it’s much more likely you’re going to stay tuned for a long time.”
 
On Dec. 11, 2009, commissioner David Stern told SI.com (the website for Sports Illustrated) that legalized gambling on the NBA “May be a huge opportunity”
 
Years ago, I was on a TV show with Howard Cossell (ABC Sports Beat). The topic was: Does the media encourage the public to gamble? David Stern, NBA commissioner said: “We don’t want the week’s grocery money to be bet on the outcome of a particular sporting event”
  
I wonder how many addicted gamblers placed the first bet they ever made on an NBA game. !!
It’s a change in tune for the NBA, which in 2012 joined the NCAA, NFL, MLB and NHL in suing New Jersey over its efforts to bring legalized sports betting to its casinos and race tracks. During deposition testimony in the New Jersey case, former NBA Commissioner David Stern scolded Gov. Chris Christie for his efforts.  “The one thing I’m certain of is New Jersey has no idea what it’s doing and doesn’t care because all it’s interested in is making a buck or two,”
 ( Seems like that’s all the N.B.A  wants to do now is  a buck or two,” )   Stern said in November 2010, according to court documents.
In 1999 I was asked to fly to New York to the National Basketball Association office in Manhattan and met with league officials, x players and union officials, concerned about players’ gambling. I was told, “We have a problem, and we’re trying to find out how bad the problem is”  “We have players gambling on airplane trips loosing all kinds of $” Officials asked me to keep my calendar open for the spring of the following year and said to me that they wanted me to address every team and player in the league. They then flew my wife in, and we had a second meeting they asked us develop questions that were going to be given to the players to answer. “We need to know how big the gambling problem is in the N.B.A ,” When I hadn’t heard from the N.B.A, I called and asked, “When do we start?” The talked were cancelled, and the response I got was this: “They said that the higher-ups didn’t want the media to find out”
In May 1996, Horace Balmer, the NBA’s vice president for security, had two speakers flown to Norfolk, Va., whose messages were even very disturbing. Michael Franzese, a former mob boss who fixed professional and college games for organized crime, and Arnie Wexler, who for 23 years was a compulsive gambler. Franzere said, “I talked to the NBA
rookies earlier this season . . . and it’s amazing how many confided to me that they have gambling habits. I’m not going to mention their names, but if I did, you would know them” “I personally got involved in compromising games with players, and it all came through their gambling habits.’ ( THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT -May 11, 1996 )
 ==========================
You would think that the N.B.A. would be more understanding about the gambling !
  Just look at some of the headlines in the past================
 Multiple NBA sources say Allen Iverson is facing alcohol and gambling issues that have derailed his career and threaten his post-basketball well-being,
 
Charles  Barkley claims gambling problem has cost him $10M
 
Antoine Walker has a scheduled court in Las Vegas in a case involving an $822,500 gambling debt.
 
Michael Jordan was spotted at the baccarat pit of an Atlantic City casino in the wee hours of the morning before game two of the Eastern Conference Finals.
 
NBA referee Tim Donaghy is now in recovery for his gambling addiction. “I kept waiting for a Knicks game when Stafford, Bavetta and Kersey were working together. It was like knowing the winning lottery numbers before the drawing!”)
      ARNIE WEXLER CCGC
      ASWEXLER.COM
     
      HELP LINE FOR GAMBLING HELP   888 LAST BET
      561 249 0922   CELL 954  501 5270

Arnie and Sheila Wexler have provided extensive training on Compulsive, Problem and Underage Gambling, to more than 40,000 gaming employees (personnel and executives) and have written Responsible Gaming Programs for major gaming companies. In addition, they have worked with Gaming Boards and Regulators, presented educational workshops nationally and internationally and have provided expert witness testimony. Sheila Wexler is the Executive Director of the Compulsive Gambling Foundation. They also run a national help line (888 LAST BET) and work at Recovery Road, a treatment facility in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida that specializes in the treatment of those suffering with gambling addiction

Gaming regulators may allow wagering on Olympics/ HOW ABOUT COCKA ROACHS RACES ,DOG FIGHTS,COCK FIGHTING

Saturday, 17. January 2015



HOW ABOUT COCKA ROACHS RACES  ,DOG FIGHTS,COCK FIGHTING  

Gaming regulators may allow wagering on Olympics

Howard Stutz, Las Vegas Review-Journal · January 15, 2015 at 7:49 pm
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The Gaming Control Board will consider a regulation change next month that would allow Nevada sports books to accept wagers on the Olympics.

The only question is whether or not the betting would be allowed on all Summer and Winter Olympics events, or just a handful of popular competitions.

During an hourlong workshop Thursday to discuss the idea — initially proposed by South Point casino owner Michael Gaughan — there was clearly widespread support for the activity from the gaming industry.

Sports book operators CG Technology, William Hill US and the Westgate Las Vegas all submitted letters of support for the idea.

South Point attorney Barry Lieberman said allowing bets on the Olympics would be “an enhancement of wagering in Nevada and increase the menu” of events that can be offered.

In November, gamblers wagered $535 million in Nevada, which included $400.7 million on college and professional football. Both numbers were all-time single month records.

Gaming analysts have attributed technology, such as mobile sports wagering and rules that allow wagers on games in progress, with increasing the state’s betting handle.

Lieberman said allowing bets on the Olympics would put Nevada on par with other legal sports wagering jurisdictions around the world. For example, he said the United Kingdom’s betting shops all accepted wagers on the 2012 London Summer Olympics Games.

CG Technology General Counsel Quinton Singleton told the Control Board $80 million was wagered during the London games.

“This would be good for the state,” Lieberman said. “It would increase taxation. It would keep Nevada competitive with other jurisdictions.”

Gaming Control Board members questioned if it was feasible to book wagers on all Olympics events.

Wynn Resorts sports book operator Johnny Avello said the gaming industry tried accepting wagers on the Olympics back in the 1990s, and some of the events “didn’t help business.” Avello said the most interest would be found from basketball, hockey, soccer and other events where “there was a floor or a court.”

Along with the Olympics, sports books are also seeking a change that could allow bets on nonsporting events such as the Academy Awards or reality competition television shows such as “The Voice” and “American Idol.”

Nevada does not allow casinos to accept wagers on the Academy Awards or other similar events because the outcome is known before it is actually released. Many sports books put up betting lines solely for entertainment value.

Olympics betting was discouraged in the past because the games involved amateur athletes. In recent summer and winter games, professional athletes have competed.

Lieberman said events such as figure skating, where the outcome is determined by judges, are similar to boxing and Ultimate Fighting Championship events, where judges often determine the winners.

Lieberman asked that in the final ruling, the Control Board allow sports book operators to decide on which events they want to place betting lines.

Last year, the Gaming Control Board announced an agreement with the International Olympics Committee to share information on Olympics betting to protect against illegal wagering

The move set in place the idea for Nevada to consider Olympics betting.

Contact reporter Howard Stutz at  or 702-477-3871. Find him on Twitter: @howardstutz