{"id":2221,"date":"2025-02-09T12:44:44","date_gmt":"2025-02-09T13:44:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.developeternal.com\/?p=2221"},"modified":"2025-02-09T14:27:13","modified_gmt":"2025-02-09T14:27:13","slug":"prof-schlevogts-compass-no-11-legitimizing-gambling-a-study-of-the-liberal-warfare-toolbox","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.developeternal.com\/index.php\/2025\/02\/09\/prof-schlevogts-compass-no-11-legitimizing-gambling-a-study-of-the-liberal-warfare-toolbox\/","title":{"rendered":"Prof. Schlevogt\u2019s Compass No. 11: Legitimizing gambling \u2013 a study of the \u2018Liberal Warfare Toolbox\u2019"},"content":{"rendered":"
Liberals hail the explosive growth of gambling in the US. Their deregulation advocacy reveals patterns used to justify other evils, too<\/strong><\/p>\n According to George Bernard Shaw, the most popular method of distributing wealth is the method of the roulette table.<\/p>\n As a result of rapid deregulation and mesmerizing technological change, such a spinning round of fortunes\u00a0has recently reached epic proportions in the US, where revenues from gambling (which is euphemistically called \u201cgaming\u201d<\/em> by its respective lobbying associations) has exploded in a short span of time. Bearing in mind that the Irish playwright\u2019s aphorism constitutes one of his \u201cMaxims for Revolutionists,\u201d<\/em>\u00a0considerable upheaval and possibly a powerful backlash, too, may thus well be in store for the so-called land of opportunities.\u00a0<\/p>\n According to the American Gaming Association (AGA), commercial gross gaming revenue (GGR), which includes sales in the three verticals of traditional casino gaming, sports betting and iGaming (also called online gaming), increased from about $30bn in 2020 to $67bn in 2023 (the last year for which a full data set is available). The rise in GGR represents a growth rate of 122% over a period of only four years or a smoothened compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22%. Since gross gaming revenue, also called game yield, is the difference between the amount players wagered and their gains, it also constitutes the total amount lost by gamblers. Consequently, the above trajectory shows that punters\u2019 losses have been increasing at a high rate. The stellar performance of the gambling sector continued in 2024.\u00a0<\/p>\n In the first eleven months of that year, GGR, driven by a strong showing of sports betting and iGaming, reached about $66bn. The total amount of money spent on sports betting (which until 2018 was permitted only in Nevada) rose from $7bn in 2018 to an estimated $150bn in 2024<\/a> (with revenues totaling about $14bn in that year). This is equal to a compound annualized growth of sports-betting spending of 55%. According to the National Council on Problem Gambling<\/a>, a staggering 60% of adults in the US had gambled in the preceding year; about 40% of Americans admit<\/a> to placing sports bets. The US by now is the largest online gambling market in the world.<\/p>\n What is more, the betting bonanza in the US is predicted to continue unabated. Online gambling businesses alone are predicted<\/a> to rake up revenues of roughly $60bn-70bn annually by 2030. In the near future, a commercial casino may even be built in New York\u2019s Times Square, which would have been anathema only a few years ago.\u00a0<\/p>\n As regards gambling products, new, fast-growing and potentially dangerous types of wagers include, among other things, betting on election outcomes and making bets on very short-term moves in shares. Furthermore, long-shot compound bets, called parlays, which combine betting on the occurrence of several events occurring at the same time (such as several football teams winning their matches on a given day), are getting increasingly popular. Such accumulators are riskier than single wagers, but payouts are larger in case of success. Finally, peer-to-peer betting without intermediaries is on the rise, too. Obviously, the unfolding revolutionary drama of the deregulatory high-stakes gamble needs powerful backers with a convincing script not only to sustain itself, but to build further momentum.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n In this context, it comes as no surprise that the radical changes in the US gambling industry are hailed by influential liberals in politics and the media, who cushion the gambling malaise in an ensnaring narrative. Their rhetoric reveals common, interrelated patterns with respect to the manipulative techniques employed. It is therefore worthwhile studying the specific cloak-and-dagger stratagems, which are synthesized in my new model entitled the \u2018Liberal Warfare Toolbox\u2019.<\/em>\u00a0Familiarity with these hidden methods of chicanery will help critical thinkers to reveal manipulation and thus catch the put-up jobbers in their attempts to justify, normalize, and popularize gambling and other social evils, such as drugs, prostitution, abortion, and euthanasia.\u00a0<\/p>\n At the start of our journey of exposing and debunking harmful liberal sophistry, let us uncover the first stratagem in the \u2018Liberal Warfare Toolbox\u2019,\u00a0<\/em>which relies on leveraging the typical philosophical grounding of a laissez-faire approach.<\/p>\n The core argument used by liberal plotters in their advocacy for deregulation is that people should be free to enjoy\u00a0\u2013 and even harm\u00a0\u2013 themselves. Applied to the gambling case, laissez-faire proponents argue for granting people full latitude when it comes to having a flutter.\u00a0<\/p>\n The philosophical underpinning for such a line of reasoning is the concept of negative<\/em> freedom \u2013 or \u201cfreedom from,\u201d<\/em>\u00a0paired with an obvious penchant for hedonism. According to the view of those who advocate giving people maximum latitude of action, freedom, understood as a scalar social good, is the absence of constraints imposed by other social actors and thus a maximum number of opportunities.\u00a0<\/p>\n On the surface, the appeal to freedom per se, due to its pri\u0304ma\u0304 facie\u0304<\/em> persuasiveness, appears to be a clever gambit. Few people would openly and publicly profess that they oppose freedom and want to limit others\u2019 possibilities. After all, freedom is based on a noble value, that is, the belief that it is right for people to determine their own destiny by being able to make their own choices. As a consequence, enhancing freedom by removing a legal constraint, in our case, by deregulating gambling, seems to be a good policy.<\/p>\n Yet liberal schemers who promote the removal of encumbrances to action usually fail to adhere to the full doctrine of an influential thinker who is widely considered to be one of the classic proponents of negative freedom. More specifically, the philosopher John Locke, in his Second Treatise of Government<\/em>, clearly distinguished freedom from license and postulated that man needs to act in accordance with the Law of Nature, understood to be reason. The Christ Church don concluded that man is not<\/em> free to do whatever he wants (\u00a7 57). For example, he has no right to harm himself or others. Reasonable limits designed to protect man from \u201cbogs and precipices\u201d<\/em> are not<\/em> deemed to be confinements (\u00a7 57). Given that unrestrained gambling constitutes immoral license, which most likely will harm the one who indulges in it and other stakeholders, too, wagering thus needs to be rejected even on the theoretical ground of the philosophy of liberalism.\u00a0<\/p>\n It is important to note that whereas Locke viewed freedom as a normative<\/em>, morality-based concept, the modern proponents of the deregulation of gambling and other domains consider it to be a content-free and value-neutral construct. Their position is akin to radical neoclassical free-market advocates, who argue that there is no intrinsic value and the only thing that counts is the question whether there is a demand for a particular good, even if it may be harmful. Here is an example of such neoclassical value neutrality: When GDP is calculated, the market value of both harmful gambling products and beneficial services aimed at reducing the harm (such as the treatment of gambling addicts) are added up to arrive at an estimate of a nation\u2019s national income.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n At a deeper level of philosophical analysis, the concept of negative freedom, promoted by liberal non-interventionists, can be exposed as being one-sided, since it fails to take into account another pivotal concept, that is, positive<\/em> freedom, or \u201cfreedom to.\u201d<\/em>\u00a0For instance, a real or metaphorical gate may be open to you \u2013 which would constitute negative freedom \u2013 but, for various reasons, in contrast to a resourceful and empowered individual, you may not be able to walk through the opening \u2013 which means that you lack positive freedom.\u00a0<\/p>\n Proponents of negative freedom, who view latitude of action only as a social relation (focusing on obstacles imposed by others), miss the point that freedom is not only an external construct, but also an inner concept, including the lack of internal constraints, which act as inhibiting factors counteracting various enabling factors. For example, someone who is addicted to alcohol cannot be said to possess full freedom, since, because of this enslaving and debilitating condition, his capabilities are significantly reduced, and he is consequently prevented from exploiting many valuable opportunities. Since gambling ensnares punters and tends to make them addicted, it clearly risks undermining positive internal freedom.<\/p>\n Positive freedom hinges on various internal and external resources. Those include a person\u2019s own capabilities and abilities, such as a high degree of self-mastery, without which he will be a slave to disordered desires, and the creative and critical faculties needed to detect and evaluate different options, in order to avoid being brainwashed. The availability of financial resources \u2013 an external resource \u2013 can also amount to positive freedom. Given that money is coined freedom, an activity with high odds of losing money, such as gambling, tends to reduce positive freedom.\u00a0<\/p>\n The presence of both forms of freedom, that is, the negative and positive variant \u2013 <\/a>each in optimal doses and in the best possible blending \u2013 is vital for building and sustaining an enlightened and well-functioning society with high odds of providing an effective context for people to lead happy lives.\u00a0<\/p>\n This first stratagem of appealing to a higher-order good \u2013 and the ploys that will be discussed later \u2013 are used to justify other pernicious liberal policies, too. For example, advocates of abortion and euthanasia refer to the higher-order value of the dignity of human life, in order to dialectically \u2013 and rather cynically \u2013 justify the murdering of human beings in contravention of the Hippocratic Oath (\u201cI will do no harm\u201d<\/em>). The very term \u201cpro-choice,\u201d<\/em>\u00a0used as a euphemistic epithet to describe abortion advocates, hints at the concept of \u201cnegative freedom,\u201d<\/em>\u00a0which is about enlarging the portfolio of possibilities.\u00a0<\/p>\n Liberal Machiavellians intend on upending the established moral order usually employ a \u201cthin-edge-of-the wedge\u201d<\/em> approach, trying to obtain initial permission in narrowly circumscribed, often extreme, vivid and emotion-invoking cases (such as rape, where abortion is argued to be justified on the ground that the victim deserves compassion and pity). The contrivers thus shatter an initial taboo, which, as a highly charged and untouchable \u201cthird rail\u201d<\/em> in politics, previously acted as a powerful impediment to the enactment of policy reversals. After the initial breakthrough, which opened the floodgates, the intrigants push for additional changes. To achieve their objectives, they commonly use \u201csalami slicing,\u201d<\/em>\u00a0gradually and often surreptitiously dismantling further prohibitions without much notice and resistance. Finally, the formerly outlawed practice, through a process of creeping normality, eventually becomes fully legitimate and widely popularized. In other words, the Overton window (also called the window of discourse), in degrees of acceptability and acceptance has expanded from utterly unthinkable deviancy to actual standard policy based on the new norm. This means that the new practice has left the sphere of controversy and entered the sphere of consensus, where it is considered normal, with opponents having spiraled into silence.<\/p>\n Closely related to the furtherance of negative freedom is the attempt to destroy authority by claiming that it is wrong for other people, in particular individuals or groups in positions of power or entire influential organizations, to teach or simply tell others how they should live. As part of this stratagem, liberals employ the two wiles of \u201cdamning the origin\u201d<\/em> and \u201cpoisoning the well\u201d<\/em> in tandem. More specifically, they aim to discredit the authority of both past and present opponents, among other things, by using distortionary and derogatory labels evoking negative mental associations (such as unfavorable stereotypes).\u00a0<\/p>\n To start with, permissive liberal connivers intent on promoting gambling are presenting a genetic account, arguing that the distaste for wagering has deep and unpleasant historical roots. In particular, they trace such negative attitudes back to the much-loathed Puritans, discrediting this Protestant group as allegedly being authoritative, fanatic, and driven by extreme asceticism. The liberal schemers insinuate that these purists condemn all pleasure and consider it their life\u2019s only purpose to prevent others from enjoying themselves.\u00a0In this context, it is worth noting that \u201cpuritan\u201d<\/em> nowadays is often used as an emotionally laden derogatory label.<\/p>\n As an example of genetic discreditation, the liberal magazine Economist<\/em>, in an article that hails gambling deregulation<\/a>, laments that America\u2019s stance regarding intercourse, alcohol, narcotics and wagering have been molded by its puritanical heritage. Its journalist is utterly bewildered by some US states barring vendors from selling alcohol before the end of Sunday church services and Hollywood prohibiting the picturing of illegal drugs, morally offending nudity and sympathy-arousing criminals \u2013 even though all of these prohibitions are morally desirable and sensible. In this context it is worth noticing that the very terms \u201csin\u201d<\/em> and \u201cvice\u201d<\/em> are being portrayed by religious deniers in many liberal quarters, who are intent on whitewashing their disordered desires and social deviancy, as old-fashioned relicts from a by-gone moralist stone age. This comes despite the fact that the occurrence of these aberrations is a sad empirical reality, occurring as a constant throughout human history.<\/p>\n1. Appealing to higher-order good\u00a0<\/h2>\n
2. Delegitimizing and discrediting authority\u00a0<\/h2>\n