Chief of External Affairs at AECC/AECI. Former Dep Chief of Staff Gov Asa Hutchinson. Former Rep for AR House District 82. Advocate for Missing Children.
@paulickreport If your goal is no injuries, why do you only worry about horses right before a race? Why not check every time a horse goes to the track?
Kentucky Derby betting integrity harmed by computer-assisted wagering
Computer-assisted wagering (CAW) uses algorithms and AI to place large, last-second bets on horse races.
A class-action lawsuit alleges that CAW groups are manipulating betting pools and creating false odds for the average bettor.
Horse racing needs more transparency and to overhaul deals made to give computer-assisted wagering groups such notable advantages.
https://t.co/7S83mOYqJh via @courierjournal
Last Call: Educators are invited to sign up their students for a live virtual hunter education course available for schools!
May 11-15, 12:30-2:30 p.m. daily. Student registrations are due by April 10.
➤ Learn more and register Your Students: https://t.co/cSJbqR3F5S
@WinStarCEO 40,000 Americans die in highway accidents every year. Over 7000 pedestrians are killed each year. 48,000 America’s die by unintentional falls per year.
I don’t blame anyone for wanting to get out. Why risk your reputation and financial wellbeing for a sport with a governing body dedicated to killing the game its in charge of. Who in their right mind would think bringing in a new federal agency staffed with a bunch of people divorced from a love of the sport could somehow magically make it better.
@BlakeEddins@TJ_Cleveland Tactical decision to leave you open. Rumor I heard was sometimes your own teammates would guard you to keep you from shooting.
This was a very tough day to be a school teacher, but as they always do, teachers were there as more than just teachers. They were counselors to explain the unexplainable and comfort the heartbreak of millions of students. Almost everyone who was a student that day in 1986 remembers not just the tragedy but the human response of those surrounding them.
On this day in 1986, President Ronald Reagan addressed the nation following the tragic loss of the Space Shuttle Challenger.
President Reagan had been preparing to deliver his annual State of the Union Address, but in the hours after the shuttle exploded just 73 seconds after liftoff, he made the decision to postpone it. Instead, that evening, he spoke candidly from the Oval Office to a grieving nation—millions of whom, including schoolchildren, had watched the launch live.
Listen to his full words that evening here: https://t.co/X4yALfrYNC