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An old Cherokee is teaching his grandson about life. "A fight is going on inside me," he said to the boy.


"It is a terrible fight and it is between two wolves. One is evil—he is anger, envy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego." He continued, "The other is good—he is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion, and faith. The same fight is going on inside you—and inside every other person, too."

The grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather, "Which wolf will win?"

The old Cherokee simply replied, "The one you feed."

First People - The Legends. Cherokee Legend of Two Wolves. November 16, 2004. [accessed April 7, 2012].

Monday, December 26, 2011

Prince George's works hard to bring back gambling facilities while the rest of country goes on-line



               Prince George's County is working to bring brick and mortar gambling facilities to its citizens. Economic development is touted as reason enough to move ahead as if the county leadership were introducing a novel cutting edge industry to its communities. Never mind that the cutting edge gaming and gambling industry is moving to the internet and on-line. Thanks to the GOP rushing through legislation to control and regulate the industry (the law of unintended consequences coming into play), on-line gambling is now ruled legal by the US Department of Justice.[1] The states and Washington, D.C. will be rushing to set up their own on-line gambling enterprises while Prince George's County build yesterday's gambling operation.[2] Prince George's County's political elite are like gamblers at a craps table who see a winning bet and make the same bet one roll later. It is left to the citizens to wonder why we continue to be behind the eight ball on the short end of the economic stick.

               Prince George's County's political leaders are once more considering gambling in the county ostensibly to close the looming budget deficit. Any idea that gambling would, as a small side affect, offer financial benefit to a few well connected stakeholders is of course not the reason given for bringing gambling to the county. Any thoughts about how well gambling worked in the past are conveniently not discussed because history is irrelevant when it comes to short term gain and profit. 


               Without a doubt gambling in Prince George's County will expand the marketing opportunities for those who manage the facilities and enhance reasons for visitors to come to Prince George's County. There is, however, no discussion of unintended consequences or unexpected problems that may arise with the introduction of gambling to our neighborhoods. And there are a lot of assumptions of how beneficial this enterprise will be for the tax payers of Prince George's once the managing companies take their cut from the top. There is no discussion of letting the tax payers get their piece of the action before the speculators take their share; for as always Prince George's County's citizens come last.

               Gambling according to Noël Laureate, Paul A. Samuelson, "...involves simply sterile transfers of money or goods between individuals, creating no new money or goods. Although it creates no output, gambling does nevertheless absorb time and resources. When pursued beyond the limits of recreation, where the main purpose after all is to kill time, gambling subtracts from the national income."[3]  This seems strangely appropriate given how the powerful decision makers in the  county  view the ordinary citizens. The development and construction of a gambling facility, on the other hand , most assuredly does create wealth for a few. A couple of questions arise naturally from any consideration, the first being: Are there costs involved that exceed the obvious economic development benefits; and, the second: Who actually gains and who really loses? These questions in and of themselves are not enough to warrant automatic opposition to a private industry s efforts to bring the gaming business here; after all gambling has a long history in the county.[4] If tax payer dollars or incentives are part of the project then there is most assuredly a problem.

               What Prince George's County's entrenched leadership seems to be unaware of is that a fundamental criterion for economic development, sustainability and long term success is for a project to increase a region's net exports not just enrich a few quickly.[5] The amount of goods or services exported needs to be increased or the amount imported decreased. This is how income can increases. A California report on gambling notes that "[p]rojects can be an  economic success in terms of profit without doing either of these things, but those profits come at the expense of other businesses."[6] 


               One unexpected consequence of bring gambling to Prince George's County could be economic gain for its neighbors. Other Washington area jurisdictions may gain from having the gambling center near their borders enabling orders for goods and services to be filled by the rest of the metropolitan region. Senior managers could live in Virginia and bring their wages back to their communities. Their quality of life would not be affect because they successful externalized (dumped) gambling onto Prince George's County.  It is a sign of the arrogance of the elites' diminished capacity to find 21st century development ideas in favor of short term  gain for a few that positions Prince George's County as a poster child for social and environmental justice issues. We, the People, deserve better.  


see reply to Anonymous' comment: http://princegeorgian.blogspot.com/2011/12/anonymous-support-for-gambling-in.html            
                


[1] WHETHER PROPOSALS BY ILLINOIS AND NEW YORK TO USE THE INTERNET AND OUT-OF-STATE TRANSACTION PROCESSORS TO SELL LOTTERY TICKETS TO IN-STATE ADULTS VIOLATE THE WIRE ACT
Interstate transmissions of wire communications that do not relate to a “sporting event or contest” fall outside the reach of the Wire Act. Because the proposed New York and Illinois lottery proposals do not involve wagering on sporting events or contests, the Wire Act does not prohibit them. September 20, 2011
MEMORANDUM OPINION FOR THE ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, CRIMINAL DIVISION. [accessed December 26, 2011[http://www.justice.gov/olc/2011/state-lotteries-opinion.pdf
[2]   - Boom in Internet gambling ahead? US policy reversal clears the way. Christian Science Monitor [accessed December 26, 2011] http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2011/1226/Boom-in-Internet-gambling-ahead-US-policy-reversal-clears-the-way
   - Department Of Justice Flip-Flops On Internet Gambling. Forbes. [accessed December 26, 2011] http://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanvardi/2011/12/23/department-of-justice-flip-flops-on-internet-gambling/
   - Justice Opinion Finds Room for Web Gambling. Wall Street Journal. [accessed December 26, 2011] http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203686204577117090156001780.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

[3] Paul A. Samuelson, Economics, 10th ed., 1976, p. 425.
[4] Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police M.P.D. 1930  to  1939. [accessed December 26, 2011] http://www.dcmetropolicecollector.com/blank6.html

"1934 - A gambling joint just across the Prince George County line was the focus of much attention of the Vice Squad. The establishment, owned by Jimmy Lafontaine was a notorious gaming house and allegedly the headquarters of the city's lucrative numbers racket, (MPD)."

Mr. Jim Made A Million From A Casino Brooking No Booze, Women Or Guns [accessed December 26, 20011] http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1091655/index.htm

"For almost 30 years [Lafontaine] was the manager of the Maryland Athletic Club, which was one step across the District of Columbia line in Prince Georges County, where the law has always been winked at. It was the largest, most sophisticated casino between Saratoga and Havana. Nobody ever called it the Maryland Athletic Club. It was always known as Jimmy's Place—or simply Jimmy's—and if you used either of those names, any cabbie in Washington would know immediately where you wanted to be taken. Once you got near Jimmy's, you couldn't miss it, even though there was no sign out front. It sat there mysteriously silent, surrounded by a 10-foot board fence on three sides and a spur of the Pennsylvania Railroad on the fourth. It had a well-used seven-acre parking lot, evidence enough that the casino was popular among Washington's gentry."
Belair Mansion (Bowie, Maryland).Wikipedia. [accessed December 26, 2011] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belair_Mansion_(Bowie,_Maryland)

Belair [build in 1742] is recognized as the only great colonial estate where breeding of race horses was conducted during three centuries.  The estate significantly influenced the development of thoroughbred horse racing in the new world,[6] having one of only two stables to raise two Triple Crown champions.[ The mansion and its nearby stables both serve as museums, operated by the City of Bowie.

[5] Any attempt to quantify social or environmental costs is very difficult even speculative. How does one estimate the future cost to society of pathological gamblers who are in treatment or recovery.  As a rule development in Prince George's County chooses to set aside the difficult challenge of opportune costing and go for the immediate profits paradigm.
[6] Gambling in California. 1997. Roger Dunstan. [accessed December 26, 2011] http://www.library.ca.gov/crb/97/03/Chapt9.html

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

It is always interesting when one side tells their story and decides to leave out very important facts so as to keep people uninformed and uneducated so they may influence them to make a decision that really does not benefit them but benefits another group.

We must realize that those areas that already have gambling and are not benefiting from the revenue generated are doing so because of mismanagement by the local government who are entrusted to act on behalf of the citizens. Correct the mismanagement and those areas would benefit tremendously from the additional revenue and jobs creation created by the taxes levied by the state and county.

Most states with gambling levy a tax at a significantly lower rate than does Maryland. Colorado levies a 20% revenue tax while Maryland levies a 67% revenue tax. That means 67% of all revenue generated from slots goes to the state of Maryland of which 5% goes to Prince George's County for them to do whatever they want and the other 62% goes directly to the state for Maryland to decide how they want to split the tax up amongst the counties for such things as education, public health services, public safety, homelessness and transportation improvements.

This means that the establishment operating the casino only gets 33% of the revenue to keep the casino operating and to show a profit.

Mismanagement is the root of all evil. Your entire arguement is directed at where the benefits are going that are created by gambling because you readily admit that wealth will be created through gambling. The question is for who. We must control and ensure that the thousands of jobs created by gambling are directed towards our community here in Prince George's county just as we must control the Billions of Dollars of small business contract opportunities that will be created as well. They must not go to surrounding counties, Virginia, or Washington, DC but remain here within Prince George's county.

The 62% of the casino revenue taken in by the state must be allocated in a way that fairly reflects the needs of the state but takes into account and rewards the location of where the gambling facility is located. Our Prince George's County State Delegation must assert itself and ensure our County receives its more than fair share of the casino tax.

Finally, we must ensure that we have Minority and Prince George's County equity ownership in any gambling facility or gaming internet venue that will derive its revenue from our County residents. This helps to keep the wealth and associated benefits within our County.

What is at stake here is billions of dollars and job creation in an economy that is down and people are losing their jobs and their families are hurting.

DO NOT TELL ME, THAT WE IN PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY ARE NOT SMART ENOUGH TO CORRECTLY MANAGE THE BILLIONS OF DOLLARS AND NEW JOBS THAT WILL BE GENERATED BY GAMBLING. VOTE AND PUT THE RIGHT PEOPLE IN OFFICE. OUR CHILDREN'S FUTURE IS AT STAKE. WE MUST NOT BE AFRAID TO ACCEPT THE BENEFITS DERIVED FROM THE GAMING INDUSTRY WHILE WATCHING ALL AROUND US REAP THOSE BENEFITS FROM OUR HARD EARNED MONEY.