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Casinos
Indian Gaming & Tribal Sovereignty: The Casino Compromise
Published in Paperback by University Press of Kansas (2007-10-15)
Authors: Steven Andrew Light and Kathryn R. L. Rand
List price: $17.95
New price: $16.13
Used price: $14.55

Average review score:

Casinos unlimited
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04

A recent search of the Mid-Hudson Library System for books on Indian casinos yielded "Indian Gaming and Tribal Sovereignty, The Casino Compromise," (2005), University of Kansas Press, which promises much according to a back cover blurb: "Staying above the emotional fray usually surrounding this controversial subject, (the authors) succeed in making a comprehensive, balanced, and even entertaining analysis of the complex issues relating to gaming on Indian reservations."

The co-authors are Steven Andrew Light, Associate Professor of Political Science and Public Administration at the University of North Dakota and his frequent collaborator, Kathryn R. L. Rand, Associate Professor and Associate Dean in the university's School of Law. They are co-directors of the Institute for the Study of Tribal Gaming Law and Policy, a component of the Northern Plains Indian Law Center at the School of Law, and are active writers, speakers, bloggers on casino issues, consulting with federal, state, and local governments and interested groups. The Institute is said to be the only university-affiliated research institute dedicated to the study of Indian gaming.

So here is another academic, non-industry examination of casino gambling, one, as might be expected by their use of the word "gaming" instead of "casinos" or "gambling", by scholars inclined to be sympathetic to the industry. And sympathetic they are, seeing gaming as an exercise of tribal sovereignty which enhances tribal self-determination and is an overall boon to the social, economic, and cultural life of tribes, as well to states and surrounding communities. It comes as a surprise to me to see this point of view from an academic source and I was particularly interested in examining their positions and arguments in the light of Earl Grinols' decidedly critical posture. ("Gambling in America, Costs and Benefits," 2004)

Their discussion of "gaming" is prefaced by a brief history of Indian-non Native relations, with swings of empowering tribes and assimilationist policies, and an overall neglect of Indian interests. The Supreme Court in the "California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians" case in 1987 permitted a tribe to operate free of state (civil not criminal) regulatory control, lending legal support for the growing number of gambling operations of Indian tribes. This decision helped set the stage for the passage of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 which created a framework of tribal-state compacts to regulate casinos. The 1996 "Seminole Tribe v. Florida" weakened the hand of the tribes by making states immune from suits charging them with failing to negotiate compacts in good faith.

While recognizing complexity and tradeoffs, Light and Rand broadly endorse the positive economic benefits of Indian casinos. "Although most obviously and directly affecting tribes, Indian gaming's economic impacts
extend beyond reservation borders. For nontribal communities the economic benefits derived from Indian gaming range from the tribal revenue sharing with state and local governments to the ripple effects generated by job creation and increased business and consumer spending." They particularly emphasize the positive economic effects on Indian reservations themselves, distinguishing the vast riches of the "outlier" Mashantucket Pequots from the modest successes of tribes without access to nearby metropolitan markets.

I confess an attraction for the argument that casinos can serve as springboards for further economic development which rescue tribes from welfare dependency, poverty, backwardness. This is especially true if reservation lands lie close to metropolitan areas or main interstate roads which are suitable for developments such as hotels, shopping malls, industries. The casino serves as a means of "primitive accumulation of capital" (which was historically associated with harms, such as the enclosures in England which forced peasants off the land) so that even if social harms outweigh the immediate benefits (my idea, not the authors') eventually other economic development (conscientiously pursued) can bring about a net positive picture.

The New York Times (11/14/07) reported on such a scenario on the Tulalip Indian Reservation next to a busy highway between Seattle (35 miles away) and Vancouver (100 miles away). Starting with a casino in 1992, the Tulalips have leveraged their profits into constructing a major shopping mall, an amphitheater, a second larger casino, a resort hotel and are seeking to build a bio-gas plant and develop an industrial and business property. I note that all this is on reservation land (not off-reservation taken into trust), taxes are paid ( Washington collected $30 million in mostly sales tax last year), the tribe members benefit (unemployment rate on reservation 10% today, compared to 65 % in 1995 and countywide rate of 4.5%.) The glowing newspaper report omits a discussion of harms but in this instance possibly a casino can be justified in the long run.

For their assessment of casinos' impact on surrounding communities, the authors heavily cite the 1999 report of the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago which examined the impact of
casinos between 1980 and 1997 on one hundred sample communities within a fifty mile range as well as a 2000 study (the Harvard Study) reexamining the same data, by Taylor, Krepps, and Wang, "National Evidence for the Socioeconomic Impact of American Indian Gaming on Non-Indian Communities," In 1980 only five of the sample communities were near casinos; by 1997 forty-five were, thus offering the opportunity to assess the impact of casinos. The NORC study "found consistent and substantial net benefits and few if any aggregate harms accruing to communities with casinos." The Harvard Study concluded that overall, the introduction of a tribal casino produced "substantial beneficial economic and social impacts on surrounding communities" especially in poor, isolated rural areas.

I note the apparent greater sophistication and originality of Grinols' economic analyses and his cautions about glowing assessments. "(There is) a tendency to state an industry's impact on regional jobs as an economic benefit without computing its significance in terms of value to area residents. Other common mistakes are to confuse business profitability with social profitability; to focus on the profits of the industry being added to the economy and to neglect to account for lost profits of other businesses;.....to make unsubstantiated claims about unemployment; and to neglect to consider externality costs."

"Externalities" are social and economic costs associated with gambling which don't show up on balance sheets of casinos, such as costs of problem and pathological gambling, crime, competition with local businesses, traffic, loss of real estate and sales tax from land under Indian sovereignty, etc. While providing a table listing possible harmful externalities, Light and Rand examine in detail only three areas: pathological and problem gambling. crime, reservation quality of life. This restricted examination in itself defuses the impact of harms.

Let's look at the first two. The NORC study concluded that the presence of a casino in or near a community did not significantly increase crime. To the contrary, it appeared that crime rates were reduced, "but not in an overwhelming way." The Harvard study, however, showed a substantial decrease in auto theft and robbery associated with proximity to a tribal casino, and other indications of decreased social ills (reduced welfare payments) perhaps relating to alleviation of poverty. Other authors are cited who cast doubt on the commonly perceived relation of casinos to crime.

But crime is also a byproduct of pathological and problem gambling and should also be considered in that context. A South Carolina study of video-poker players cited by Grinols showed that the percentages of pathological gamblers who engage in criminal behavior (without complicating other disorders such as alcoholism or depression) were as follows: wrote bad checks, 54.4 %; stole, 37.1 %; arrested 41 %.

Pathological and problem gambling are associated with a wide range of ills - crime, debt, unemployment, bankruptcy, marital discord, divorce, drug abuse, mental and physical problems, suicide, etc. In its
1999 report the National Gambling Impact Study Commission (NGISC ) reported that some 1.2 to 1.5 % of the population (3 million people) were pathological gamblers at some point during their lives while another 1.5 to 3.9 % of adults (between 3 and 7.8 million) were problem gamblers. Citing the NORC study Light and Rand give the economic cost of each pathological gambler at $10,550 over his or her lifetime and a lesser figure for problem gamblers. That comes to a $4 billion societal cost for pathological and problem gamblers. (If the construction of a new casino stimulates the development of pathological or problem gamblers in its region those new cases can be attributed to the casino.)

Now that's a lot of money but I kept thinking about the $10,550 for a lifetime of someone with a serious gambling problem. It doesn't seem high enough. I checked Grinols, welcoming a possible point of direct comparison on the issue. On page 167, Grinols estimates the average cost off a pathological gambler is $11,304 each year (2003 dollars). Each year! Compared to a similar figure in Light and Rand's book for a lifetime. I looked into it further.

Grinols uses cost figures based on nine studies (everyone agrees that more studies need to be done and estimates are not accurate) which he cites in detail, one of which is the NORC study. The NORC study (on which Light and Rand rely) can be found on the web as an appendix to the report of the 1999 NGISC cited previously. Page 63 shows a table listing types of costs (i.e. unemployment benefits and the like) and past year and lifetime cost estimates. No estimates are included -none (they are too difficult to estimate) - for lifetime costs relating to job loss, unemployment or welfare benefits, poor physical or mental health, treatment of gambling addiction. Nor are any costs attributed to family costs (costs of divorce, separation, spousal abuse, child neglect and abuse) or "abused dollars" (gambling money acquired form family, friends under false pretenses, "loans" that are never repaid.)

Obviously the $10, 550 figure is a gross underestimate of lifetime costs. Our authors should know better than to pass it off as an estimate; it is only a step in constructing an estimate. Taking Grinol's figures for costs of problem and pathological gamblers, the total lifetime costs come to not $ 4 billion but an order of magnitude higher, perhaps to hazard a guess, $80 billion to $100 billion.

In addition to downplaying costs, Light and Rand throw cold water on the idea that casinos actually increase the numbers of pathological and problem gamblers. "As one study puts it `in the light of the large extent to which gambling has been legalized in America over the past few decades, the failure to find an obvious pattern of increasing prevalence of pathological gambling should raise serious doubts about just how likely the disorder is to be triggered by increasing opportunities to gamble.'"

Citing (not quoting) the NORC report, they go on to say "more Americans have been exposed to gambling...Between the national commission reviews -1975 and 1998-the proportion of Americans who had gambled at least once in their lives jumped from 68% to 86%. However, the percentage of Americans gambling in the past year increased only slightly, from 61 percent to 63 percent, in spite of increased availability of gambling opportunities. Together these finding suggest that while people are experimenting with gambling, this has not turned people into habitual or problem gamblers. Other have suggested that the availability of gambling has little or no impact on problem or pathological gambling prevalence rates because the origins of gambling addiction are tangled with other addictive behaviors unrelated to gaming."

Now this is interesting because the NORC report clearly states: "The availability of a casino within 50 miles (versus 50-250 miles) is associated with about double the prevalence of problem and pathological gamblers...This finding is similar to the overall level of past-year casino gambling (40% of adults living close to casinos versus 23 % of adults living 50-250 miles away)...." Grinols extrapolates social costs from these extra problem and pathological gamblers which in his view exceed the extra benefits to a region by a ratio of more than 3:1.

A chapter "Indian Gaming in Context" examines "stereotypes...newly manifested prejudice and backlash," mistaken ideas characterizing public discussion of Indian casinos. They criticize such notions as: "Tribes are composed of `casino Indians'", "Tribes should pay their `fair share'"; "Tribal government cannot be trusted." Anti-casino activists should look at these rebuttals to common arguments against Indian casinos. On the whole, the rebuttals are weak and rely heavily on ad hominem rhetoric (...tribes face substantial obstacles rooted at best in misinformation and ignorance and at worst in prejudice and ethnocentrism in their efforts to realize the promise of tribal sovereignty."

They rebut "Tribes are composed of `casino Indians'" by quoting the harshest critics who equate tribes' search for federal recognition and casino-building ("Bet by bet, the Indians are scalping customers for millions"), asking us to respond to the "scalping" innuendo. They offer in rebuttal a single quotation from a chief (....it will never be all about gaming.") There is no objective examination of the relation between tribes seeking recognition and their casino-building ambitions. Regarding "Tribal Sovereignty is simply an unfair advantage", Light and Rand, approvingly state:" Indian gaming is an exercise of sovereign governmental authority by Indian tribes." Throughout the book this theme is repeatedly sounded, the authors clearly leaning to an expansive view of sovereignty favored by tribes (with broader casino building powers), rather than the "compromised nature of tribal sovereignty as defined by federal Indian law." Can sovereignty, I wonder, be anything but "compromised" with small entities living in the midst of a large populous country? What does sovereignty mean when tribes are sovereign and their members can vote and lobby and run for office in U.S. elections ? If tribes are sovereign can they also grow and sell marijuana? Conduct foreign relations?

A case can be made that this book overplays successes and downplays harms. Toward what end? The authors seek a reform of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) of 1998, one that strengthens the hand of tribes, reduces the power of states, and puts the federal government in a stronger regulatory position so that it can better carry out its responsibility to the tribes. Thus, Congress could cap the percentage of gambling revenues that states can demand and empower the Secretary of the Interior to "consider whether both tribal and state sovereignty are adequately protected, that is, whether the terms of the compact appear fair and reasonable, taking into account tribal self-determination." With their strongly positive view of gaming and expansive Indian sovereignty nothing stands in the way of facilitating as much a possible the unimpeded growth of the Indian casino industry.


Arnold Lieber
arnlieb@yahoo.com
Saugerties, NY

Casinos
Las Vegas: The Best of Glitter City: The Ten Best Casino Resorts and Gaming Areas, "Big Room" and Cabaret Shows, Restaurants, Cafes and Buffets, Cocktail ... and Much More ("Best of . . ." City Series)
Published in Paperback by DiscoverGuides (2006-01-17)
Authors: Don W. Martin and Betty Woo Martin
List price: $17.95
New price: $6.00
Used price: $4.72

Average review score:

Pass on this one....
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-18
First of all, never trust a guide book to Vegas which states "we don't gamble" (p. 31) and then tries to tell you which casinos are the best. This book is full of opinionated "top ten" lists which only appeal to a certain demographic. (Namely, the demographic which would drive all over town to find the number one 99-cent shrimp cocktail, and then would look for the number one spot to park the RV. Lucky for them, both lists are provided.)

Every traveler to Vegas should see Sehlinger's Unofficial Guide to Las Vegas, which would appeal to a wide variety of tourists. The younger crowd needs to check out Frommer's Irreverant Guide to Las Vegas.

Casinos
Wedding Cakes (Victoria Magazine)
Published in Hardcover by Hearst (2003-10-28)
Author: Kathleen Hackett
List price: $19.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $9.92
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

THIS??? Is the book I ordered???
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-20
I have been buying from Amazon for years, and this is the first review I have written... and NOT to rave about this purchase, but to convey my disappointment. I was expecting a more professional book... this is certainly not it... I also decorate cakes, and was confused as to how this one got the description it did.... and yes... WHY IS THE COVER OF THE BOOK NOT PROVIDED??? The picture here is located way in the back of the book, and is much smaller... I also thought I received the wrong book... I have to say, that the picture they did choose to advertise the book was the best of the bunch.... so just look at this picture and forget the book.

Come on...is not so bad!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-21
The cover of this book does not match the one above...but does that really matters?????!!!!!!!! Is a nice cover anyway. The pictures inside???....I dont see anything wrong in them!!!!!!!
Give this book a chance. The designs of the cakes could have been better but the bakers featured are not british..at the end of the day the book shows the kind of work american bakers do.

Take it for what it is
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-20
First of all, this is not a book for those of you who want to learn how to decorate cakes. This is a book for the bride who wants to learn about the right cake to ORDER. My cover matched the one shown so, maybe the book has a couple different covers, not a big deal. Anyway, I enjoyed the book but, if you are looking for a how-to on how to bake and decorate your own cake, this is not for you.

Worst book on cake decorating I've ever seen
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-23
The pictures are sloppy and amateurish. The editorial is very inaccurate. The author/editor appears to have done little or no research and clearly does not know the first thing about cake decorating. There are so many great cake decorating books out there. Don't waste your money on this one.

Note to the idiot from Ilford, England whose review suggests that this is a bad book because it only features American bakers instead of British bakers: there are plenty of books that only feature American style cake decorating which are GREAT. There are two different styles: british decorating covers everything with some sort of rolled icing and cement-tasting flowers. American usually uses soft, piped icings. Both styles can be incredibly complex in their own way and require great skill. This reason this book is bad is not because it is a typical example of american skill, as you sugggest. It's bad because it's NOT typical. The author wasn't really interested in showcasing the best examples.

Not very good at all
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-04
I liked the cake on the cover (which happens to be the same cover listed on amazon.com) but the photos inside were horrible. They were very fuzzy and you couldn't see the detail of the cakes that well. The cakes were just okay, nothing fabulous to look at.

Casinos
Casino Poker Without Fear
Published in Paperback by Poker Tips Press (1996-03)
Author: Gary Oliver
List price: $8.95
New price: $8.95
Used price: $3.94

Average review score:

I wish the author would play me headup..johnnyhughes.com
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-01
Nothing much new here. I could beat this guy asleep. If he wants to play me,....johnnyhughes.com

Don't bother
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-09
This is a small, 54 page spiral bound book that is so basic its not worth bothering with. Many better books out there.

Casinos
Casino Keno
Published in Paperback by Chauncey H Shattuck (2000-06-20)
Author: Chauncey H Shattuck
List price: $12.95

Average review score:

Casino Keno
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-11
This book was very basic, had nothing in it that you couldn't find on a pamphlet handed out for free at any casino. There was only one page that had some keno tips on it that may be helpful to some people, especially people new to the game of keno. But for anyone else that has played this game before, there is nothing new in this book that we keno players don't already know.

Casinos
The casino management handbook: A practical guide for increasing casino profits
Published in Paperback by Preston Pub (1995)
Author: Mark Tracy
List price:
Used price: $42.99

Average review score:

A guide to increasing publisher profits
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-18
The way to maximize the profits of a book is to sell the book without placing any useful information in the book. A perfect example of that is "The Casino Management Handbook"

Casinos
Collecting Casino Dice
Published in Paperback by Camelot Pub Co (1998-01)
Author: Donald D. Spencer
List price: $20.00
Used price: $57.02

Average review score:

Marginal quality-not a good product for the price.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-26
This work is little more than an expanded brochure, with far too little detail concerning the types and varieties of dice available to the collector. It looks formula-written, with way too many poorly reproduced photographs of casino postcards. Certainly not worth the price tag. The front cover depicting a pair of dice, with one die showing two sides with four pips, (not exactly something you are going to see when collecting casino dice), is an appropriate warning for this book.

Casinos
Collecting Casino Playing Cards
Published in Paperback by Camelot Pub. Co. (1998-01)
Author: Donald D. Spencer
List price: $25.00

Average review score:

Scanned black and white images
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-28
This is just scanned black and white images of casino playing cards. No verbage whatsoever. Not nearly uptodate.

Casinos
Conquer Casino Craps
Published in Paperback by Heron Pr (1997)
Author: Dutch Miller
List price: $19.95

Average review score:

Overpriced - Just a workbook - Expected more - Nothing New
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-09
I read the review of the book prior to buying the book and I was impressed by the way the review was written. When the "work booklet" came, I was immediately disappointed because I expected, for the price, a "hard bound book" with some real depth of the game including many techniques to try. The booklet was so small that I read everything within an hour. The 24 hour service was to call the casinos around the U.S. I did'nt need that. I felt that I should be able to call the Author or someone associated with the Author and get some real Help, as we say (from the horses mouth). This booklet gave 1 technique and I have known about that from other books. Personally, I wish I didn't buy this book. As far as I am concerned I would not recommend this book.

Casinos
Easy Money! How to Beat 10 Casino Games
Published in Paperback by Cardoza Publishing (2001-08-01)
Author: Avery Cardoza
List price: $7.95
New price: $7.95

Average review score:

Not Worth Your Time or Money
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
This book gives you the basics of 10 casino games but offers absolutely no strategies on how to beat them. It also only gives you common sense tips for money management. A waste of time.


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