6/9/26: Trump Booed At Knicks Game, Sports Gambling Scandal, Chris Rabb On Platner Controversy
51 min
•Jun 9, 2026about 1 month agoSummary
Breaking Points discusses Trump's poor reception at the Knicks game, the NCAA gambling scandal involving QB Brendan Swarsby receiving minimal punishment, and interviews PA state rep Chris Rabb about progressive politics and the Maine gubernatorial race involving Jared Golden.
Insights
- Sports gambling normalization has created a system where even betting on one's own games faces minimal consequences, undermining decades of sports integrity standards
- Ticket price inflation at major sporting events has transformed them from accessible middle-class experiences into exclusive luxury goods for the wealthy
- Progressive politicians like NYC Mayor Zoran Mamdani demonstrate that small, personalized acts of governance (affordable ticket lotteries) can be more politically effective than large policy announcements
- The NCAA's monopoly power over college athletes prevents meaningful rule enforcement; unionization could create better accountability through negotiation rather than top-down mandates
- Media outlets covering sports gambling while simultaneously promoting betting through promo codes and live odds are complicit in normalizing the very problem they critique
Trends
Erosion of institutional rule enforcement in sports due to legal challenges and profit incentives from gambling partnershipsWealth-driven exclusion of working and middle-class families from live sports experiences through extreme ticket pricingGrowing disconnect between Trump's public claims and documented reality (booing at MSG vs. claimed cheers)State-level tax incentives for NIL earnings creating competitive arms race among states to attract college athletesProgressive movement candidates (Rabb, Golden) challenging establishment Democratic leadership while maintaining party engagementJudicial intervention in NCAA disciplinary matters based on NCAA's own financial entanglement with gambling companiesIncreased scrutiny of progressive male candidates compared to establishment figures on personal conduct issuesMovement-based organizing outperforming establishment money in Democratic primary races
Topics
Sports Gambling Regulation and IntegrityNCAA Athlete Compensation and UnionizationCollege Sports Betting AddictionTicket Price Inflation in Professional SportsDemocratic Party Leadership and Progressive ChallengesPolitical Accountability and Restorative JusticeMedia Complicity in Sports Gambling NormalizationState Tax Incentives for NIL EarningsJudicial Review of NCAA Disciplinary ActionsProgressive vs. Establishment Democratic PoliticsRacial Double Standards in Political ScrutinyPersonalized Leadership and Public EngagementSports as Political SymbolismWorking Class Access to EntertainmentMovement Organizing vs. Institutional Politics
Companies
Madison Square Garden
Venue where Trump attended Knicks-Spurs game; charged $8,000-$30,000+ tickets, creating accessibility crisis
New York Knicks
NBA team that lost to Spurs after 13-game winning streak; Trump's attendance blamed for curse by hosts
San Antonio Spurs
NBA team that defeated Knicks in game Trump attended at Madison Square Garden
ESPN
Criticized for promoting sports gambling through live odds displays while covering gambling's harms
NCAA
College sports governing body facing legal challenges to gambling penalties; seeking congressional action on integrity
Texas Tech
University where QB Brendan Swarsby played; allowed him to play after court injunction overturned NCAA ban
Indiana University
Swarsby placed 40 bets on Indiana football games while freshman there in 2022
New York Times
Unable to confirm allegations against Maine gubernatorial candidate Jared Golden
iHeart Media
Podcast network distributing Breaking Points
People
Krystal Ball
Co-hosts Breaking Points; discusses sports gambling scandal and Democratic politics
Saagar Enjeti
Co-hosts Breaking Points; analyzes Trump's MSG appearance and NCAA gambling case
Chris Rabb
PA state rep and Democratic nominee for PA-3; discusses progressive movement strategy and Jared Golden controversy
Donald Trump
Attended Knicks game at MSG; claimed mostly cheers despite being booed by crowd during national anthem
Zoran Mamdani
NYC mayor praised for affordable World Cup ticket lottery program; contrasted with Trump's MSG experience
Brendan Swarsby
QB who placed $90,000 in bets including on Indiana games; received 2-game suspension after court injunction
Jared Golden
Maine gubernatorial candidate facing personal conduct allegations; subject of discussion on progressive scrutiny
John Fetterman
Pennsylvania senator attacking Jared Golden; cited as example of fake populist by Rabb
Janet Mills
Maine governor suspended campaign against Jared Golden; criticized for opposing tax hikes on wealthy
Summer Lee
Progressive incumbent supported by Rabb; expected to serve with him in Congress
Hakeem Jeffries
Democratic leadership figure; Rabb discusses potential support for speaker position
Pete Rose
MLB player banned for life for betting on games; cited as precedent for Swarsby case
Stephen A. Smith
Sports commentator who predicted Trump would be blamed if Knicks lose series
Nelson Brands
Iowa wrestler suspended for betting on Iowa football; contrasted with Swarsby's minimal punishment
Quotes
"Independent media just played a truly massive role in this election and we are so excited about what that means for the future of this show."
Krystal Ball / Saagar Enjeti•Opening
"Organized people beat organized money every time"
Chris Rabb•Interview segment
"There are no perfect candidates and we also have to make sure that those candidates acknowledge their faults everyone has them"
Chris Rabb•Jared Golden discussion
"We need your help to build the future of independent news media"
Krystal Ball / Saagar Enjeti•Membership pitch
"It's radically harder to govern as a progressive"
Chris Rabb•Interview segment
Full Transcript
This is an I Heart podcast. Guaranteed human. Hey guys, Sagar and Crystal here. Independent media just played a truly massive role in this election and we are so excited about what that means for the future of this show. This is the only place where you can find honest perspectives from the left and the right that simply does not exist anywhere else. So if that is something that's important to you, please go to breakingpoints.com, become a member today and you'll get access to our full shows, unedited, ad free, and all put together for you every morning in your inbox. We need your help to build the future of independent news media and we hope to see you at breakingpoints.com. So President Trump decided to attend the third game of the NBA finals between the New York Knicks, of course, Trump being a native New Yorker himself and the San Antonio Spurs. This happened at Madison Square Garden in New York. I don't know if you guys are aware of this, but Trump is not particularly popular in New York at this point. Unless he claimed after the game that he was met with mostly cheers, that it was very loud and enthusiastic. Let's take a listen to his take on what happened and then we can show you what actually happened. Did you see Mayor Mondani at the game? I did not, no. What did you think of the reception you got in the next fan tonight? I did look great. I mean, I thought it was amazing actually. You mean when they had the camera on me? I thought it was very good. It was certainly amazing. I think mostly cheers. It was loud and it was very enthusiastic. Loud, enthusiastic, mostly cheers, he thinks. Let's take a look at what actually happened both at the game and outside at the watch parties when Trump was put up on the screen during the national anthem. Now, big! What the gas? What's the sound? What was that? I don't know. That doesn't sound like mostly cheers to me. That sounds overwhelmingly like booze. And notably after showing him during the national anthem, which they probably did because they thought, well, maybe people won't boo during the national anthem. They certainly did. Yeah, they did not show him again. That was it. But they did catch him. Cameras caught him. We could put D1B napping towards the end of the game. Or actually, I don't even know what quarter this was in the game. But anyway, he's an old guy. This is up past his bedtime. Looks very high energy in this. I sympathize. I mean, this isn't a Trump defense. You guys are popping off in our group chat. And I'm like, yo, I'm going to bed. I'm like, I had to sign up. But if you were at the game, you would not be sleeping. Especially the game of a team that you supposedly care about. And it's really close. And it's very exciting. And you're just napping. I wouldn't put myself in that position. I would never attend a game after 8.30. Is it called tip off? Is that right? So I'm not an entertainment fan. All right, tip off. Tip off for 8.30 PM. Yeah, it was an interesting little, I have no idea why I did it, especially because if you think about it for Trump, especially whenever it came to UFC, when we would watch those entry videos that he would do around 2024, especially during the campaign and immediately after that, what really was, I mean, look, I don't know how indicative because UFC is generally probably the fan base is going to be a little bit more right wing. But it was evidence of like public acclimation and there was a vibe to it. I think it was definitely part of the kind of vibes around Donald Trump in 2024, especially also, I think immediately after his inauguration, obviously the UFC is returning to the White House, South Lawn this time around for his birthday, technically, part of America's 250th anniversary celebrations. But why I think that this matters beyond being funny is, I'm not sure if you noticed, do you remember we did that long segment from the New York Times about Trump and JD Vance, where Trump keeps bringing up that JD like dropped the Ohio State trophy, I think at something, he's like, oh, well, you know, he just can't have that. I'm like, well, dude, you just showed up to, you know, it's national sporting at Madison Square Garden. Willingly, I will add and got booed by the entire crowd. I don't think it's the first time either that he's had at least some booze, even at the Super Bowl. I'm trying to recall, maybe it wasn't the Super Bowl. There was some major NFL game where, you know, there had been mixed things, but he literally put himself in this position. I maybe I guess is some sort of like, because he is a major New York fan. But look, these things, these symbols are actually the exact type of thing that Trump himself is obsessed with when it happens to other politicians. That's why I think it's important because maybe it's starting to process for him. Yeah, that's sleeping too. I mean, you scarcely have a White House meeting now, where Trump does not fall asleep at some point. And so, you know, I mean, he's he's old and it's starting to really show. And I think the way that it shows most clearly is how he just nods off all the time or what the White House says are long blinks. Here's the other thing is he completely cursed the team. So the Knicks have been on an amazing 13 game winning streak until this Joker showed up. And then they, you know, the officiating also was terrible. But anyway, they lose to the Spurs. Trump is there. There were all kinds of like Epstein affiliated criminals who were in the crowd as well. You had Howard Lutnick was there as well and like the front row. The whole thing just felt cursed. And it did from the beginning of D3 up on the screen. The lines that the fans had to go through to get into this event at all were insane. I mean, they had to wait their hours to go through security because of the president being there. And these are people who paid $10,000, you know, plus for these ticks. I think the cheapest ticket to get in was around $8,000. And so they had to go through these long lines. You can see most of the NYPD was apparently a Madison Square Garden to help to secure the event. You know, I will say it looked like there was a lot of concerns that it tip off. Half the crowd wouldn't even be in the building, but it looks like people, you know, showed up early into what they needed to do to get inside. The whole area here around Midtown Manhattan was closed off, which I'm sure was a nightmare for the restaurants and bars that expect to make a lot of money because of their, you know, location next to Madison Square Garden. So not great there as well. But, you know, your point about like the optics of it getting food in his hometown, cursing the team, you had Stephen A. Smith and others say, even PBD said, he's going to get blamed if they lose, which they lost. So congratulations, sir. And if the nicks go on to lose the whole series when they started up to nothing, and they, you know, if they go on a losing streak after Trump comes and curses them at their game, then I think everyone is going to blame him for that as well. I think so. And I mean, people are, sports fans are very, very superstitious. You know, I do want to, I don't want to harp on this. Maybe I have too much. I do think what's happening here with MSG is really bad and sad for the country whenever it comes to the ticket prices. And I have been stuck on it for a while because I do think it's one of those lat, like if you think about it, what the nicks have not been to finals in several years, right? Like almost 30 years. It was the 90s. I believe that the last time they were there. So there's probably an entire generation of people who grew up and who were rooting for the team, stuck with the team, let's say, in the bad times. And then all of a sudden Madison Square Garden becomes like the hot it plays to be. And look, I'm not naive. New York has always been a playground for the rich. But you could generally, I assume, expect that you could, if you splurge a little bit, be able to sit in the nosebleeds or standing room only type seat. But when tickets are going for six, seven, eight, nine, 20, 30, apparently, some report, Madison Square Garden sold two courtside tickets for a million dollars each. It just becomes completely out of reach for everyone. Nobody expects that average Joe can sit courtside. I generally expect that a middle class person would be able to afford a slight splurge. Like if they saved up and have something in savings in their lifelong fan would be able to go. Maybe again, maybe I'm very naive. That's kind of what I expect. I don't expect people to go to the US Open final per se, which is like a little bit smaller. But I'm thinking, OK, you should be able to go maybe to a game. That's just not it's not going to happen anymore. And I genuinely think that's tragic. Like I'm watching it happen for all of these major sporting events from the NBA finals. To obviously the Super Bowl has been like this for years. It's always been like a status symbol. But I think it's going to happen at the everyday level, especially if the Knicks are good now. In the future, many of the die hard fans, maybe if they're not season tickets, I bet you next year it'll become like a vibey thing for New Yorkers with a lot of extra money. As I mentioned with the US Open, it's literally happening with the US Open. And every year, stuff starts to go viral inside of these stadiums about, oh, this is the viral $100 hot dog that everybody has to have. Or this is the $80 cocktail everybody is drinking. You're like, yeah, like how how are everyday people supposed to just be able to go and to have just a good time for one? And I don't know that there's something about that. I'm watching this happen across all sporting hotels, everything, flights. And it just seems tragic for anybody who's just well, everyday working person. Let me tell you where you can still get a good deal on an NBA basketball ticket right here in Washington, Zagreb, the Wizards. They'll practically pay you to go to those games. Although they should be a little bit better this year. So maybe the ticket price is going to go up. But yeah, Kyle and I like to go to those games, especially when we actually went and watched when the San Antonio Spurs came to town because we wanted to see Wendy, which was really cool to get to see him. And you get tickets for like nothing. But you know, it's not going to be the most competitive game because the Wizards were literally the worst team in the entire league. But yeah, we went to one game at MSG this year. It was during the NBA Cup, which then extended up winning the in-season tournament. And even for a regular season game, the tickets were crazy expensive. And I think the Knicks are a bit of an outlier because it is the New York market, etc. But baseball games, football games, same deal. What used to be like an attainable luxury outing for a working class or middle class family is increasingly just like everything else in our economy, a playground for the rich. You know, while Trump was snoozing in his luxury box there, the mayor of the city, Zoran Mamdani, had a slightly different experience. Apparently he paid a thousand bucks to get a standing room only ticket, which I actually didn't even know was a thing. In any case, let's take a listen to Zoran for a moment. I'm going to pay $10,000 per million from the House of Sport Park. I'll be going to the United States to drink and I'll be standing for the duration of the game. And I saw a selfie of him with the people that he went with from somewhere up in the nose, please, friends, a very different experience for him. And he did something to the World Cup, you know, he's coming to New York and he did something cool, which I think is just emblematic of his style of leadership, which, you know, really does try to look for little ways to make life nicer for people in the city or even for tourists coming to the city. They published this whole map and schedule of different free events in the city, either for residents or people who are coming in from out of town. This is the kind of things that he pays attention to. And so they had a lottery for affordable World Cup tickets that people could sign up for. And he actually called some of the people who won the tickets to inform them. And Zoran himself is like a gigantic soccer fan, which comes through in this video. So this shows both like his approach to governance and his approach to communication, which I just think is like the most effective, genuinely, I can't think of a politician that does it better in the entire country. Let's go ahead and take a look at that. Hi, this is Cindy. You signed up for our affordable World Cup ticket program. And I just wanted to personally let you know you got a ticket. This is incredible. The best news ever. I'm so blessed. Have you ever been to a match before? No, I have not. I try to go so bad, but then tickets were so expensive. Who are you going to take to the game? My husband. My brother-in-law. So now I'm going to have to. I'm going to let you pick between your dad and your fiance. So it's the sort of thing like, is this world changing? No. Although for those people, it's very exciting, but it's at least nice to see a mayor or a politician who's looking out for not just like your material needs, but also your desire to live an enjoyable life that has these little experiences and luxuries in it as well. Look, yeah, I mean, you know, got a lot of differences with Zoran, but I'm not going to deny these are the types of things which back in the day, we would fantasize about Trump or any of these other types of politicians doing. I mean, Trump had some version of this in 2024, if you recall, no tax on tips, the McDonald's famous, you know, Norman Rockwell, like leaning out of the window. These were iconic moments. And look, the truth is we're just a long, long way away from that. And I do think. I thought I did think in 2016, not so much this time around or 2020 or whatever, but I did think Trump would be more of this type of leader. Me too. Yeah. Where, and I remember very early on, remember that whole thing with the carrier factory, that was moving overseas and they showed up, he paid personal attention to it. And again, it was like a small number of jobs, but for those people, it means everything. And the signal of it really mattered. And I thought, oh, if he does this a lot, like Democrats will never win again. I know. It's going to be tremendously popular because of what it shows about the type of things that he pays attention to. And it's a different type of, you know, he has personalized the White House, but it's all personalized around him and his nepo kids and whoever's in his inner circle, making ungodly amounts of money and doing whatever hell they want, getting away with crimes left and right. I thought he could go in the direction of that style of personalized leadership, where he is in a position to sort of dole out these gifts to the public and look very magnanimous. And he cares so much about them and their lives. And obviously, that's not the path that he's Well, they haven't had that. With the Iran War, really from the beginning, a lot of it in terms of the way that they've gotten, it's been so opposite. I mean, part of the reason I do things on one was not just social media. I mean, look, I also think that these small things, not just even just speaking very cynically, it's like, look, by the way, rent prices in New York has gone up in case anybody's noticing. But guess what? If you start doing all this World Cup, FIFA, organizing watch parties, some people will forgive you, right? They're not going to pay as close of attention. And I'm not saying it's just bread and circus. I think it does genuinely care. But there is something to putting on at least an enjoyable circus. Right now, I wouldn't say that the Trump circus is all that enjoyable. And so when you... It's a circus. It's just a dark one. Right. So in this case, I mean, these are the types of things where you should be focused on everyday, you know, normal experiences. And, you know, in an absence, like for example, Trump cares a lot about Washington, D.C. beautification, which by the way, I actually think is cool. Like it's good to have a nice capital city with fountains and all of that. It gets zero public attention because of the Iran. By the way, rightfully, because the war is a lot more important. But that's kind of my point is that if you had a situation where, I don't know, let's say even the feds preempt something in Los Angeles. Yeah, we have the immigration raise, but you also have the feds coming in and preempting, maybe the Palisades fire is a good example. Preempting, passing some sort of law and being like every single thing is going to be rebuilt at cost. I mean, a lot of people would be like, listen, I don't like Trump, but hey, got my house built. That's the type of stuff which people really remember. You could go... No tax on tips was one initially, which people cared a lot about. However, unfortunately with inflation, grocery price, et cetera, I don't think it's worked out to as much for their overall pocketbook. But these are the individual types of things. If I think especially to a lot of the politicians, things that I respect, some of them are really famous programs in US history, the New Deal era, the CCC, work the WPA, those types of administrative projects. It's not that people necessarily... It's not that people were like, wow, these rest stops are great, although they are great, by the way. But it gave people a job. Everybody, you can read the books about how people for years, they would put pictures of FDR up in their house. They would literally put them up next to pictures of Jesus Christ. This is a very religious population. You never really had that before in US history. That style of leadership, it really matters. This is a long way away from the next, but it's kind of bringing up, I think, a lot of the ways that we've seen this administration go. And they had a lot of promise. They had a lot of ability. I really do think, as you said, there were so many signs from Carrier, especially in 2024, when I think back, when you win households under 100,000 as a Republican, that's a huge event. You really could. And in the feds can do a lot for a household making under 100,000 to make your life materially better. We just haven't really moved in that direction, unfortunately. Well, it relates to the block we just did on North Korea and the Chinese approach to growth and development, which with all of these large construction projects really creates a visible manifestation of the government's positive impact on your town and your life. And it was not just the jobs that were created by the WPA. I mean, you and I both love the national parks that many of which go back to that time period, which don't get recreated anymore, which we're still enjoying and living off the fruits of. So in any case, interesting look at dueling styles of leadership will leave out there. There you go. Okay, let's get to Swarsby. Turning now to the NCAA, I think people who watch the show know that I absolutely hate sports gambling. What it's doing to the integrity of the sport, how it's massively impoverishing an entire generation of young men here in America. And one of those people, whose life it appeared to have been ruined, was Brendan Swarsby. Let's go and put this up here on the screen. Brendan Swarsby, some of you will recall the quarterback for Texas Tech, had placed tens of thousands of dollars in wagers, some $90,000 on professional and college sports, over a four year period, including 40 bets involving Indiana football when he was a freshman with Indiana in 2022. Now, immediately, everybody assumed Swarsby will never play again for Texas. Say in fact, it should ruin his career. And instead, he actually appealed his case to a judge in Texas and has now been granted an injunction versus the NCAA after they ruled that he could no longer play. And he will be eligible to play in 2026 after serving a mere two game suspension. The reason why, Crystal, that this is unbelievably scandalous is it shows that there is now basically no punishment for violating the internal rules as long as some judge will allow you to do so. Now, I don't want to just focus here on the judge. I want to focus on the totality of how gambling is completely ruining this and how the amount of money that is sloshing around is violating the integrity of the sport. It is creating entire cottage industries and black money of NIL and sketchy deals. It has basically created this entire system in which you really cannot trust almost anything that is really going on. Because if you compare this to the way that previous regulations were there, for example, let's put E2 up here on the screen, here was in Ohio, an Iowa wrestler, Nelson Brands, he actually reacted very negatively in response to this, who was had a suspension actually for betting. He had announced that he could come back in 2024 after he was suspended actually for placing bets. Penalties from resulting the state investigation into sports wagering the spring of 2023. He never even faced criminal charges, but was suspended for the NCAA for wagering on Iowa's football team. So he wasn't even wagering on the team that he was in, but he was still suspended. Yet in this case, you have a person, a quarterback, who was literally gambling on the very games of a team, which he was a part of, and now facing a two game suspension. Just to give you an example of how it's saying this, let's put E3 up here on the screen. This is instances of active players that were caught betting on their own team. You have Pete Rose in the MLB, banned for life, eight White Sox players, banned for life, John T. Porter, banned for life. I'm not going to try and pronounce this baseball player, banned for life. Brennan Storesby now, college football, suspended for two games. I'm not going to confess, I'm not some big NCAA college football guy, but when I watch zero consequences like this happen, and a legal system and a school which wants to defend him, which wants to allow him to play, and no architecture of rules, what is the logical conclusion that all of these now multi-millionaire college athletes can draw whenever they look at a case that is happening like this? It's that there are no rules, you can violate them, you can pay big money, you can do what you want, you can even gamble on your own games, the one last taboo. And I blame all of the leagues, the NCAA, all of these other people for getting into bed with these gambling companies, specifically for normalizing this in our society. The only thing that's shocking to me is how quickly that we start to see things like this happen. Legalized sports gambling, but it's not even a decade old at this point, and we're already nearing worst case scenarios. So let me ask you a couple questions about those because I don't know anything about it except the couple articles I read in preparation for this. So he claims that he has genuine gambling addiction and in fact went to rehab for that gambling addiction. I mean, I presume you think that gambling addiction is a real thing. I certainly do. I've seen people absolutely ruin their lives as he appears to have attempted to do over that. Do you think that there should be some consideration made for people who have a genuine addiction that they're struggling with? Because it does seem plausible to me, given the fact again, the number of bets that he placed and the profoundly, I mean, he genuinely has come very close to ruining his entire life over this gambling scandal. Do you think there should be some consideration made for people who genuinely have a problem? Well, the thing was, again, as I'm not a total expert, but as I understand it, he is still being allowed to declare, I think, for the NFL supplemental draft. So it's not like his entire ability to play was over. It was specifically here in the NCAA, but rules are rules. And while yes, I believe that gambling addiction is real and that people should have recourse and the ability to seek treatment. In fact, I encourage it for anybody who's watching this show. And if you have a problem, that's what you need and you should do. But there needs to be consequences and integrity for the sport, especially with a long held tradition of any violation will result in a genuine ban from being able to play. And I think by the way, it's not just me. It's really a lot of the other people who are even involved. So I am not sure if we have this story, for example, but we've had multiple actually instances of other athletic directors who are apparently considering not even playing Texas Tech or scheduling games against them because they see how what kind of precedent and problem that this is going to set, not only Texas Tech allowing this play, but also actually creating a situation where they're going to normalize this throughout all of college athletics. I also want to highlight E6 now, for example, and that's really why I wanted to do the segment is this is one of the few times I would be on the NCAA side who obviously look they've conducted themselves ridiculously, even I as a casual fan am aware of this. But what they show is they're trying to leverage this situation into congressional action. As they say, the NCAA strongly disagrees with the courts ruling the stores be case and is deeply concerned about the damaging far reaching and broadly destabilizing ramifications of this outcome, which undermines and corrupts the integrity of sport. The NCAA is committed to supporting student athlete mental health, but must continue to aggressively defend against actions that defraud college athletics and threaten competitive integrity such as betting on one's own sport. And they're using it or at least trying to to push for some sort of regulatory, you know, mechanism which would stop so much of the genuine chaos where we have people and students and coaches being paid and leaving midseason and nobody has any idea what their team is going to look like and the tens and millions hundreds of millions of dollars of money that are moving through all of these bank accounts. And the reason why I highlight about corruption and craziness is like the level of insanity that we're getting at is let's put E5 for example here on the screen. You now have states which are now trying to pass laws which would exempt income tax for NIL earnings for their top college athletes. This is a proposal by multiple different states simply to remain more competitive in drawing these top college athletes where already the coaches and the players now are drawing insane salaries. The coaches always have but now the players themselves also earning. I have no problem with college students earning money but what you are watching is basically a total free-for-all in the system which again I'm from a college sports town like this is a religion and it has thrown it into such chaos that there is no governing authority body no set of rules no even real standards that is outside and then you have judges in some of these cases apparently you know they're looking at the area a lot of Texas tech fans who are ruling on behalf of their own sports team and setting a really horrible precedent I think. Oh that's an interesting point that the judge may be self-interested here and many of the judges in the appeal are all Texas Tech graduates just for the record. Yeah that NBC sports piece that you had up earlier that was talking about congressional action the author of that piece actually makes an interesting case of you know the real answer here may not be in like congressional regulation although that may be required as well but if you had the players in a union where you had a negotiation between the union and between the NCAA to establish these rules establish an arbitration process you know establish even rules regarding how payments work to these athletes then you would have a much more established system with buy-in from both sides versus you know the way the NCAA operates right now and you know it's changed somewhat but I was an NCAA athlete at one point is they come up with their own rules just from on high and because there are monopoly like you have no other option if you're going to be a college athlete you're going to be under the NCAA you default must subscribe to the rules that they lay down you have no power in that situation and so it does seem like a better approach would be for the players to be unionized so you know as you do in other professional sports leagues so that there is a negotiation there is a buy-in process you have representatives for the players you have representatives for management and you know for the league itself that come to decisions and have an arbitration process to figure these things out that seems to me like a better situation than what exists currently you're totally right I also want to put up this post from Van Leithen who apparently is a fan of the show and he uh he had some good analysis I'm going to read some of it here the judge set a very interesting precedent here in the Storesby case part of Storesby's argument was that the NCAA's hard and fast no gambling rules are BS because of the close ties between college sports and gambling companies the judge bought that at least in part which softens the argument for strict penalties for gambling on games even games your team is playing in as long as the NCAA maintains any type of relationship even through broadcast partners with gambling essentially the judge has said the NCAA can't really tell you to get not to gamble anymore because they are also making of so much money off of it tangentially via these broadcast rights which are worth hundreds of millions of dollars that's not the entirety of the judge's reasoning as he says this is just an injunction but that certainly is an interesting development now he's right obviously this can go to appeal but I think his point is so so important and that's why yesterday I was criticizing a lot of these sports podcasters who will you know come out and be like oh this is ruining the integrity of the game and literally in the middle of it and they'll be like by the way use my promo code you know idiot to bet five dollars and win potential 200 and they were like well we don't play in the games I'm like yes but you have created this entire ecosystem where gambling itself underwrites why so many people watch the games so many people are betting on the games massively impoverishing it funds everything normalized how do you think Brennan Storesby even found out about sports gambling you think he really would have had the ability to place these types of wagers when sports gambling was not legal no we all know this these crazy ass parlays and other things literally didn't exist would he be found a bookie maybe to bet to bet the spread possible but this level of insanity 90 thousand dollars and the number of bets he was making it simply isn't possible and that was normalized created and is propped up by a lot of these same sports podcasters the broadcasters you have ESPN analysts who are out there talking about how bad it is meanwhile they're still shilling and show the live odds down in their chyrons I mean this is exactly why you have to fight so hard against the normalization and this creation of these types of standards when not even a decade ago they would have testified before congress and said that betting itself would be ruinous to the integrity of the sport and now they're literally in league with them so I apologize if I got any specific details on college football wrong like I'm not a big college football person but I do know many people in my life who are and all of them including many of the athletic directors as I'm reading and others are out here saying what a disaster this type of decision is and what the precedent of this will set just to show the absolute like jungle mentality of all of this with literally billions of dollars that are moving around it's only a matter of time before something even worse happens like this like that FBI case that we saw with the with the NBA there's going to be so many more in the future and and there's no reason for it we just we didn't have to be here there was no reason to be one to deep depersonalize it from those specifics of source because I don't think accused of like fixing games or anything like that but if you just told people like okay we're gonna have the system where you can bet on you know little tiny things that happen and how many points whether a player gets injured whether they sit down the game you know all these like tiny little prop bets and all of these insane parlays there's going to be tons of money at stake everyone's going to be in on it from you know the leagues and the the journalists and you know all the big players are going to be in on it and making tons of cash you're going to have players some of whom come from not a lot of money who are going to be you know have people throwing money at them to oh just like play a little bit not quite as hard in the second quarter you don't have to change the whole result of the game but just do a little bit less than you would have done get a few like get a get fewer rebounds in this you know particular moment are you going to have players who are going to do that yes of course you are and so that's where that doesn't excuse it like those players are still responsible for their own actions just as so as be responsible for his actions in this instance but is that going to be a surprise to anyone that that is what this system generates and creates of course not so obviously it's going to undermine the integrity of the game yep absolutely right all right we uh got chris rabb standing by let's get to it so to discuss the future of the democratic party this morning we are very fortunate to be joined by pennsylvania state representative chris rabb he is the democratic nominee for pennsylvania's third congressional district welcome sir and congratulations thank you so much yeah of course we followed your election with interest um you had a lot of powerful forces going against you a lot of interesting things that happened there what do you think is the message that your um pretty you know clear cut fairly overwhelming victory in this primary sense to the party yeah it was a stunning defeat of entrenched politics here in in philadelphia in the bluest congressional district in the entire nation where we had not had an open seat no incumbent on the ballot first time in 35 years against a political class that was united against uh this progressive uh and it was a 15 point win and i think it it's a resounding affirmation that organized people beat organized money every time and you seem to be taking a very i don't know that it's a novel approach but you've gone out of your way to go and campaign for other candidates both incumbents who you support like summer lee who you're likely to serve with in congress others who you know are challenging incumbents and are running sort of upstart campaigns across the country why has that been important to you what role do you feel like you are serving and that you want to serve well to be clear i'm a movement candidate and that means the movement has allowed me to have a collective victory and that means that whatever political capital whatever momentum i have as the presumptive next member of congress for the city of philadelphia means i gotta pay it forward and i and it's also in my best interest i want to come in with this largest boldest progressive class of members in us history so the only way you can do that is by showing up for others who are viable substantive candidates and i'm i'm really excited about our not just taking back the house i mean there's a big difference between having a democratic majority and having a party that knows how to lead uh in the belly of the beast and in the most adverse times in modern history those are two different things um on the venn diagram of of national politics so i want to make sure that we have a critical subset of democrats who are going to vote uh in furtherance of shared prosperity and fighting fascism and taxing the ultra wealthy um and having structural changes that the base is demanding but corporate democrats refuse to uh acknowledge or commit to you were critical of democratic leader hekim jeffreys which became a campaign issue actually for you one of your opponents had some pretty interesting things to say about that but i'm just curious since you have won the democratic nomination just so people know pennsylvania's third congressional district is one of the most democratic in the entire country so very much expected that you will be sworn in with the next class of members of congress how has the party responded to your victory have you had any outreach from um you know the the sort of establishment leaders of the democratic party oh absolutely they've all reached out to me um quickly and i i appreciate that outreach i think we got to build relationships we got to figure out how we can work together but i would i would push back a little bit i wouldn't say i was critical of hekim jeffreys per se but it's just when someone tries to you know say will you support him my answer is um what is any candidate for uh majority leader for speaker the house um how are they how is their leadership going to resonate with how i got elected to office and who else is running i don't know who's running um so you know i think that's important this it's not about the individual it's about who seeks that position to what end and that has to be aligned with um the electorate and the constituents i seek to represent um on january third um but i also know that um it's a body of 435 you need 218 votes to get anything done and we have to figure out what we can agree on and the things we can't agree on how those of us who are left um of the party to move the party forward and those are things that have to happen simultaneously so you say you're not a no on hekim jeffreys's potential speaker but you're a we'll see yeah i mean i need to know who's running right i mean reality is he could be the only one on the ballot right so it's it's a non issue there but that's not to me that is not as important as how we hold whomever is running and whoever wins to account and that's not based on my personal preferences or uh it's based on how i got elected if if those leaders work for the members the members put them in those positions of power how do we hold them to account and how do they express their willingness to do the things that a larger subset of of democrats in congress want and you know that is going to be a back back and forth you know we also have to understand too that for the folks we may not prefer in leadership or in office at all but who are going to be there serving in whatever capacity for those of us who are there with them our responsibility between election cycles is holding our own colleagues to account and moving them towards the moral center not the political center and that is something that people should want their newly elected incumbents to do because listen we have a clear villain here you know it's it's trump it's mag extremism it's fascism it's late stage capitalism it's any number of things but we can't make our colleagues the enemy they may be not on the same page with us but it's our responsibility to make them do better and we have seen some progress when we have not myself quite yet but others in congress get some of their colleagues to stop taking a pack money that's a win and we need to respect that and we also need to understand that that comes with certain risks for the people who have been funded by folks we don't believe they should be funded by which also means we need to support them if they are truly understanding of why that dynamic is so problematic i wanted to get you to weigh in on what's going on right now with grand platter up in main because i do think it has some important fissures here in terms of the direction of the democratic party you know his ideological program in years not exactly the same but you're more or less in the same lane and have you know similar views of the world and certainly you know i've been clear cut clear throated opponents of genocide of apac funding and and the influence of the israel lobby he has faced a number of allegations some of which he's you know acknowledged that he had a very rough go of it after serving in the military that he had a drinking problem he has ptsd um that he engaged in toxic behavior and relationships other aspects of which he's completely denied there was an allegation from a republican political operative that he had grabbed her by the shoulders forcefully that he had yanked her by the hand out of a cab that he had put her arm behind her back and pushed her inside of a room again she says this occurred he denies it and the new york times was unable to um confirm it i wonder what you make of the allegations and also what has been seen as extreme scrutiny into his life that doesn't seem to be matched with a level of scrutiny into others who do not challenge the oligarchy and do not challenge you know apac and the status quo on israel as aggressively as he does yeah you know this is uh this is challenging for me because um i've felt that um uh folks who have been identified as hard-scrabbled populist left-of-center white guys get far more leeway than folks like me black progressives um and that's a double standard that is largely based on race and i think that's a conversation we need to have if i had some um uh problematic tattoo that related to white folk i don't think i would be um viable uh even in in the majority black district because i think uh the money would not be there for me to run the campaign i needed i think there's a clear double standard um that the left has to has to talk about as it relates to our racial politics and what is acceptable um and you know i also have ptsd i have actual ptsd and i also have political ptsd because in this state um we elected um a fake populist in fetterman and um when i feel fetterman vibes i get very very nervous i don't know platner i've not followed his race closely i've had you know a a grueling 10 month campaign i'm just coming out of um so now i'm i'm really seeing what's on the landscape of opportunity in the house in the senate but i i do think we need to hold space for folks with genuine grievances and we need to have a process um for those folks who are expressing legitimate concerns about the behaviors and choices of candidates but to do so in a way that is um uh in the spirit of restorative justice as opposed to uh the spirit of uh the politics of personal destruction and i think um that is something that is really really necessary because what we don't want to do is to silence or erase the voices of people who have felt real harm particularly women um but we also have to make sure that we do not feel that there's a a class of candidate that has to be perfect there are no perfect candidates and we also have to make sure that those candidates acknowledge their faults everyone has them and how we work through them so if he said i have a you know it's i understand when someone says i made a bad choice as a young man and i was struggling with addiction and that sort of thing we need to hold space for that but you also may have intervening years or decades where you did not do any further introspection about what you've done so that you can feel a sense of atonement um that other people value as legitimate long before you ever considered public office we can hold those two truths at the same time so you don't believe he's done sufficient atonement to have sought public office i don't know um i don't know uh but i think that is something that needs to be addressed before november 3rd absolutely isn't that up to the voters to decide was not just voters who decide who's a viable candidate viability is also based on how much money you raise what your platform is how you come into are you a movement candidate or are you a candidate who says the right things in the right political moment to be aligned with uh a movement that shows considerable political um power i don't know i i've not watched his candidacy that closely to to answer those questions but those are conversations that need to happen um within community and not on social media so he um just to be clear he was a movement organizer in main which is how he came to the attention of people to encourage him to to run for office the primary is today in main um his you know opponent main opponent was the former governor or current governor sorry janet mills who has suspended her campaign um you know she is not particularly ideologically aligned with you you know she's uh more much more supportive of our status quo with regard to israel um she has you know done things like veto uh tax hikes on the rich in the state of main she's had an adversarial relationship with labor unions you know if you were looking at this race like do you think that voters would be off better off choosing her because she's had fewer personal controversies than grand platter no it's but it's a matter of how we hold the people who we would prefer an office to account i think that's the issue right because sometimes we mean well sometimes we vote for people right um and sometimes we vote for the person who we have a better chance of holding to account and making sure that the candidate um functions um similarly uh once in office right because you can it's very easy particularly in these moments to campaign as a progressive it's radically harder to uh to govern as a progressive and i speak as someone who is currently in legislative session here in pennsylvania and haresburg in the largest full-time state legislature in the country it is very hard to govern as a progressive and so how we hold anyone to account myself included is by making sure that um they fulfill their promises um that they made um in the campaign on the campaign trail and making sure that they will sit down in earnest with people who have genuine um concerns and priorities that may not be fully aligned by the time um someone wins their primary um one more on this because you mentioned you got you got fetterman vibes from platner i want to explore that a little bit more so fetterman and platter have actually been going back and forth um with each other fetterman's been attacking him grand platter has been responding i think called fetterman and asshole let's go ahead and take a listen to a little bit of how john fetterman uh went after grand platter for me as a democrat i'm never going to carry water for a guy that that calls you know an american hero a dumb m effort or someone that you know smears christ kyle you know the american sniper and claimed that he's he's shooting innocent civilians i mean you've literally lost count um and he also called rural americans as racist and stupid uh it's it's countless it's absolutely is this is a guy that had a problem with me how i dress but he seemed to have no problem posing in a towel at at a disgusting website that consistently has serious problems uh about uh that kinds of depravity so i wonder if you could respond there to center fetterman but also i'm i am curious for you to elaborate when you say that platner you're getting fetterman vibes from him what is it specifically that you're responding to there no i wasn't specifically uh referring to platner regarding fetterman vibes but here in pennsylvania um i get that when people say oh i like what you're saying you know you seem to be right on all the issues but how do i know you're not going to be the next fetterman so i that actually applies to me as well when um people are very traumatized in pennsylvania and beyond when they think that they're uh electing a progressive populist and they get something very different i don't know platner uh enough to to weigh in on that specifically but i can tell you that you know um i don't know how many black folk you're polling we're talking to but um all i can say is we need to have more conversations um about what accountability looks like for folks who are running to the left and making sure that um uh we understand the intersectional nature of progressivism and uh ensure that folks racial politics um uh are aligned with the populist politics that are trending so so well these days that's all yeah i think that's uh that's well understood so last question for you representative is you know when slash if but looking like when you get to washington what will be some of your your first priorities you would like to to work on there how will you operate in a way that you think is is different from how a lot of other members operate sure well just to be clear i'm not an optimist by nature but there's no republican on the ballot and there are more raccoons than republicans in my district so i think it's safe to say that i'll be in congress on january 3rd um so we have to de-trumpify uh washington dc um all the the uh the choices um appointments um uh cuts um all of the structural fissures and such we need to do what we can to restore or prepare for their restoration and we also need to build a bold vision in a post trump world and you know frankly that may happen long before two years um what does that look like so he's been a wonderful villain but you know people are struggling they need to know what democrats envision for a society with people closest to the pain struggling like never before and making sure that we are clear with that message and consistent and make sure that we hit all of those people particularly folks who generally speak in the democratic party um counts out and disregards um who really should be centered the people closest to the pain uh young people poor people um black folk i'm going to keep bringing up black folk if we do not take care of black women we will lose and we do not deserve to lead if we do not understand the primacy of of black women when we help black women we help everybody future congressman chris chris rav thank you so much for joining us and taking the time i appreciate it my pleasure thank you guys so much for watching we appreciate it right in emily tomorrow we'll see you then this is an i heart podcast guaranteed human