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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 21, 2022

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How Colleges and Sports-Betting Companies ‘Caesarized’ Campus Life

The online gambling deals have helped athletic departments recoup some of the revenue they lost during the pandemic. The partnerships bring in extra funds that schools can use to sign marquee coaches and build winning sports teams. Mr. Haller, Michigan State’s athletic director, said in a news release at the time of the Caesars deal that it would provide “significant resources to support the growing needs of each of our varsity programs.”

The partnerships raise questions, however, about whether promoting gambling on campus — especially to people who are at an age when they are vulnerable to developing gambling disorders — fits the mission of higher education.

Some aspects of the deals also appear to violate the gambling industry’s own rules against marketing to underage people. The “Responsible Marketing Code” published by the American Gaming Association, the umbrella group for the industry, says sports betting should not be advertised on college campuses.

promoting gambling to 18 year olds is the latest way in which college sports are distorting the goal of college. at uc boulder, the school gets $30 every time someone downloads an app and makes a bet. the faculty managed to ensure that this money went to the right causes, though:

“We came up with the idea that the money from the referral bonus could actually go toward diversity and inclusion and equity efforts at the university, in particular because a lot of the money in athletics are made from underrepresented minorities,” Mr. Hornstein said. A spokesman for the university’s chancellor, Philip DiStefano, confirmed that some of the money will be used to expand mental health and diversity initiatives.

Nah, drugs are always worse because of the other negative externalities aside from emptying your pocketbook.

I do hate that nothing is culturally taboo anymore. Everything has to be either explicitly codified by law or impossible to criticize. Anarcho-tyranny is the inevitable consequence of soft barriers being removed. Everything will be illegal, nothing will be equally enforced.

I do hate that nothing is culturally taboo anymore

Uhh, there are certain ideas that if stated in public will still get you pilloried, but are not directly punished by law.

I do think we've gone too far in the direction of preventing people from restricting the types of persons and businesses and behaviors they tolerate in their local area.

That is, I think a given township should be allowed to pass laws that prevent strip clubs, gay bars, abortion clinics, and/or marijuana dispensaries from operating openly in their jurisdictions. And the only justification they should need is "we find such things unhealthy and corrosive to social fabric and would prefer not to live near them."

But that statement I just made might be one of those taboo ideas that would cause outrage merely for speaking it in certain people's earshot.