Sunday, October 8, 2023

Are We Lottery Players or Unsuspecting Crowdfunders? Follow the Money...


Full disclosure, yes, I sparingly play the lottery but even sparingly adds up, so I am owning up front that I am part of the problem...

As many of you already know, I am bothered by the whole premise of the modern lottery because "running numbers", as it was called, was a means of survival for Black and other marginalized communities. The government, as often it does when Black prosperity is being realized, decided to make it illegal, citing it organized gambling. 


Folks were incarcerated for involvement in said criminal/predatory activity, it was taken over by the states, miraculously deemed legal, renamed  "lottery", and now governments across the nation, through private entities, own and/or sanction this "illegal" activity, and make fortunes on selling other people hopes and dreams for which they will be heavily taxed if they are ever so fortunate to win what seemingly turns out to be an insignificant slice of a very large pie, as is evidenced in the photo below depicting more than an $87,000,000 dollar spread between the "estimated jackpot" and the "cash value" of the current Powerball game. Who's gaming who? To whom and where does the $87M go?  This inquiring mind wants to know...


The other thing, however, that has come to mind for me recently about the lottery, particularly the national lotteries, is the question of crowdfunding. What are we doing when we play the lottery? Who are we funding? Are we raising money for rich folks, corporations or our government, to fund whatever is their next endeavor or their next dream? Are we funding continued exploitation of us or gentry-fication of our communities? 


I dare ask the questions because it seems less and less unusual that we see these huge jackpots, built on elusive numbers that no one can seem to guess or correctly choose for weeks on end as the jackpot wildly grows right before our eyes and is posted on billboards, television and radio commercials, all over social media, especially in poor and Black spaces, fueling the deepest and most latent part of our "what if?" imagination, catching even the attention, hopes, and dollars of folks who don't usually play. Not by accident as very little is...


Huge jackpots, which used to be rare, are so often now that it raises suspicion. Follow the dollars folks. Who owns these operations and where does the money really go? $87M is not chump change.


We are told that the money from the lottery goes to fund education. So then why are our schools in such disarray? Why are teachers and tax paying parents spending money on school supplies? Why aren't our teachers better paid? Why is college tuition so unaffordable? Are students awarded scholarships? And why all the fuss about forgiving student loans? The lottery could handle wiping out that debt in a heartbeat. Instead, the lottery probably funds Sallie, last name Mae... I'm being coy with that last remark, but honestly, where does the money raised by the lottery go? 


I'm pretty sure that there's a  lottery in almost every state, and I don't know how many national lotteries exist. Powerball and Megamillions are two huge national lotteries, played three and two times weekly respectively, and if I'm not mistaken, are owned or managed by the same party or corporation. Who's minding them and the[ir] store? I seriously ask...


It is popularly believed that whatever money raised and supposedly given to schools, is removed from the school budget at the same rate received, leaving the school right where it started, inadequate funding of insufficient institutions with poorly paid teachers, a truly vicious cycle...


I don't know what actually happens with budget dollars, but somethin', somethin, just ain't right. Certainly they can stop trying to sell us that lottery dollars fund education because it's just not so, which leaves me to beg the question of crowdfunding. 


I have shared the definition of crowdfunding below. Who's following the money? Who gets the money and for what purpose? Salaries? Nebulous administrative fees? Paid to whom? Projects? Whose? Private or public entities? Who? What?


There are lots of questions that our government(s) should be asking. They should be readily able to tell us who is minding the candy store, readily able to ensure us that the current people or entities "running numbers" is legit. 


It smells like something funky is going on and we are contributing to it and/or ignoring what seems like a very visible elephant trampling about the room. This type of crowdfunding, aka lottery, can be used to do good. Enslaved Denmark Vesey bought his freedom and that of his family through a lottery system. Look it up. dylan roof did... 


There is good that can be derived from the concept or proclaimed premise of today's lottery but We The People, as concerned citizens, in the interest of good government, and protection of ourselves, need to demand an accounting of what "good" this modern day lottery is doing. I'm Just Askin' the question(s),  and so should you.


Definition:

Crowdfunding is a way to raise money for an individual or organization by collecting donations through family, friends, friends of friends, strangers, businesses, and more. By using social media, people can reach more potential donors than traditional forms of fundraising.


Ask yourself, are we crowdfunding?  For whom and for what purpose?


~ Miss Higgi Really Wants to Know...




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