« | Home | Recent Comments | Categories | »

Online Gambling Deals Between US And Other Countries Are A Matter Of National Security?

Posted on February 6th, 2008 at 19:37 by John Sinteur in category: ¿ʞɔnɟ ǝɥʇ ʇɐɥʍ -- Write a comment

[Quote:]

Remember back in December, the EU, Canada and Japan suddenly agreed not to side with Antigua in the longstanding dispute over the US’s online gambling ban violating free trade agreements? It was pretty clear that the US had cut some sort of deal with these countries (who had previously indicated they would side with Antigua). In order to understand what happened, a freelance writer named Ed Brayton filed a Freedom of Information Act request to get the actual agreement between the countries. And, as The Agitator points out, the US Trade Representative has denied the request, claiming that the agreement is classified, as it’s a matter of national security. Yes. The US gov’t is actually claiming that an agreement over online gambling between two countries is a matter of national security. Perhaps this really shouldn’t be such a huge surprise. Remember, the law that was past to ban online gambling was hidden as part of a law to protect our ports. Clearly, the EU, Canada and Japan had to side with the US against Antigua to protect our ports.

previous post: Bill Hicks on Marketing

next post: Translation From PR-Speak to English of Selected Portions of Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang’s Company-Wide Memo Regarding the Microsoft Takeover Bid