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Old 06-23-2007, 09:37 PM
oldbookguy oldbookguy is offline
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Join Date: May 2007
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Default Re: Suggested plan to leverage the WTO issue in the senate

you forgot option number 4: Negotiate a limited agreement, perhaps allowing poker / card games only and regulate them as other 'SKILL' card games are already.

see worldwinner.com, AOL Games, MSN Games & YAHOO! Games for cash based 'SKILL' card games.

This seems a likely outcome if any real negotiated deal is made.

obg


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Jay,

In this NYT story on the issue, note the following quote from the USTR:

"Gretchen Hamel, a spokeswoman for the United States trade representative in Washington, said that the office would continue to try to find a mutually satisfactory resolution to the dispute."

Now of course that is BS, as from what I have read of the issue, including your postings here, the US hasn't in fact tried to compromise. Of course it may now, but there is no "continue" because they haven't been trying in the past.

You have posted in the past that the US has 3 options to comply:

1) allow Antigua based companies total access the US remote gaming market;

2) outlaw all domestic remote gaming;

3) negotiate a bi-lateral treaty.


Now #3 basically seems like #1. If it isn't the same, then what difference would there be exactly? And wouldn't it mean also that any other country, even though they didn't join Antigua's case directly, could initiate their own case before the WTO and demand similar treatment? Which again means not just #1, but a super #1 where all foreign companies have access.

What I am saying is that I don't see a negotiated resolution of the situation that basically doesn't involve just wholesale repeal of not only the IUGEA but also the Wire Act as it pertains to foreign companies at least. Or do you envision some other type of trade concessions being given while Antiguan companies still can't access the US remote gaming market?

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