Political Attacks on Press Freedom Are on the Rise

Originally published by CNBNews on May 2, 2024

GLOUCESTER CITY, NJ (May 2, 2024)(CNBNews)–On Friday, May 3, 2024 countries worldwide celebrated World Press Freedom Day. In 1993, the United Nations declared a special day to highlight the significance of journalism in free societies. This day is celebrated every year on May 3rd. Its purpose is to emphasize the essential role of journalism in promoting transparency and democracy.

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National Weather Service Update for NJ

The National Weather Service (NWS) is forecasting a significant winter storm for New Jersey on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, bringing a mix of snow, sleet, and heavy rain across the state. A state of emergency has been declared for Northwestern NJ due to potential snow and ice impacts. 

Statewide Overview

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Philadelphia Police Report Overnight Incident

The following information is preliminary and subject to change. Updates will be provided as they become available.

At approximately 2:00 am, a shooting occurred in the 9th District in the area of the 8XX block of Spring Garden Street. A 24-year-old male was struck in the upper arm area while on the highway. He was transported to Nazareth Hospital by private vehicle at 7:19 a.m., where he was listed in stable condition. The circumstances surrounding the incident remain under investigation by the Shooting Investigation Group.

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THE GRINCH DESTROYS THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT AT GLOUCESTER TOWNE; WHY?

GLOUCESTER CITY, NJ (November 23, 2025) CNBNews Editor’s Note--Today, we received a complaint from a resident of Gloucester Towne who was upset about the destruction of Christmas decorations that the local community had put up. According to this individual, employees from the Public Works Department arrived at the site on November 21 and dismantled the holiday display. The resident claimed that the employees informed her that the order to remove the decorations came from Brian Morrell, the Chief of Police and City Administrator, as well as Mayor Dayl Baile. The resident expressed confusion over why such an order was given and noted that there had been no prior communication with the property managers or the residents regarding the removal of the decorations. “The people living here used their Social Security checks to pay for these ornaments and trimmings,” she stated. Additionally, she mentioned that the mayor and city council members were contacted on Friday, November 21, but as of today, Sunday, they had yet to receive a response.

Cleary’s Notebook News has submitted an OPRA request to the City’s Custodian of Records in order to seek transparency regarding the puzzling removal of festive decorations at Gloucester Towne. The resident we spoke with is a concerned resident who contacted us to share that for the past three years, residents have been allowed to adorn the area with holiday displays. The pressing question for city officials is: why are residents now prohibited from setting up their cherished Christmas decorations? What led to this unexpected change, and why were residents not notified of the new rules?

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How Volatility Affects Slot Outcomes

Every slot machine, whether played online or in a land-based casino, is built around volatility—a measurable factor that determines how often and how much a game pays. Volatility does not change the theoretical return to player (RTP), but it directly influences a player’s short-term experience, bankroll flow and emotional rhythm. Understanding volatility allows players to choose games that align with their playing style and expectations.

Defining Slot Volatility

At Spinago Casino and other licensed sites, slot volatility represents the level of risk associated with a particular game. In simple terms, it tells players whether they can expect frequent small wins or rare large payouts.

Developers calculate volatility through simulations of millions of spins. Games with low volatility tend to distribute prizes regularly, while high-volatility titles concentrate value in infrequent but potentially massive wins.

Software providers like NetEnt, Play’n GO and Pragmatic Play disclose volatility levels as part of their game information sheets, helping players make informed decisions. For example, Starburst is classified as low volatility, whereas Dead or Alive II and Sweet Bonanza fall into the high-volatility range.

How Volatility Differs from RTP

Volatility and RTP often get confused but serve different purposes. RTP measures the long-term theoretical payout percentage—typically between 94% and 97%. Volatility, however, determines the payout distribution pattern.

For example, two slots might share a 96% RTP, yet one pays steadily while the other delivers rare but explosive wins.

Slot Type RTP Volatility Typical Session Result
Starburst 96.1% Low Frequent small wins
Book of Dead 96.2% High Long dry spells, large rewards
Gonzo’s Quest Megaways 96.0% Medium Balanced payouts

By separating RTP and volatility, players gain insight into both long-term fairness and short-term dynamics.

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ClearysNoteBook Rated Number 1 by BlogNetNews

BlogNetNews weekly ratings released October 4th ranks ClearysNoteBook as the number one Most Influential Political blog in the state of New Jersey for the week of September 27 through October 3.

Only the top 20 blogs are ranked, and each week a new list is published. ClearysNoteBook has remained among the top 20 blogs in the state of New Jersey since joining BlogNetNews two years ago. The blog editor is Bill Cleary, Gloucester City News Publisher Emeritus.

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AI Runs on Power But Power Isn’t Moving Fast Enough

By Christian Bonilla

Artificial intelligence is booming — and America’s power grid is struggling to keep up. 

At the World Economic Forum, President Trump recently warned that “We need double the energy we currently have in the United States for AI to be as big as we want to have it.” Elon Musk has echoed similar concerns, predicting that AI data centers could overwhelm the electricity supply next year. The Department of Energy predicts that AI-driven electricity demand could increase sixfold by 2030.

They’re right about the scale of AI’s electricity needs. But they’re wrong about the diagnosis. 

America doesn’t suffer from a lack of energy resources. We have vast oil and gas reserves, plus growing solar and wind energy capacity. The real problem is getting the electricity that’s already, or soon could be, generated from these energy sources to the data centers where it’s needed.

Solving this coordination challenge will require a new approach to energy infrastructure — one with an eye toward future needs.

This distinction between coordination and total capacity matters. If the problem were simply about generating more electricity overall, the solution would be straightforward: build more power plants and transmission lines to bring power to all the new data centers. But that would — and will — take years, if not decades. New transmission lines alone often take years to complete.

Instead, we need to build new data centers next to existing energy deposits — such as natural gas fields in places like West Texas, Oklahoma, North Dakota, and elsewhere — so that power-hungry data centers can build on-site generating plants and obtain the electricity they need, without having to connect to the broader grid. Using standardized data center designs and prefabricated components could further accelerate construction timelines and get data centers up and running years faster than previous generations of data centers built in traditional hubs like Northern Virginia or Silicon Valley.

Data center developers already recognize the advantages of this coordinated approach. A recent KPMG survey revealed that 77% of data center stakeholders consider it key to build alongside energy generation.

But in practice, data center developers often struggle to understand and vet energy producers. And in turn, those producers often misunderstand the needs of data center operators. 

This is a challenge even for the largest AI developers. The Stargate project, a $500 billion AI data center investment backed by OpenAI and SoftBank, chose Abilene, Texas, as its flagship site after fielding interest from sixteen different states — largely for Abilene’s energy availability, alongside other land and regulatory advantages. Despite the initial fanfare, practical challenges quickly tempered aspirations, and the initiative has mostly stalled. As a result, Stargate has quietly scaled back its 2025 ambitions to building a single data center — in Ohio.

To lead in the AI age, America will need more than chips and capital. It needs clearer rules, faster transactions between energy producers and AI developers, and a system that rewards coordination just as much as production.

If we solve this coordination challenge, America can lead the AI revolution and improve everything from health care to education to national security. But if we fail, we’ll be left with plenty of power — just not where it matters.

Christian Bonilla is the Co-Founder and Co-CEO of DMARK Energy Solutions. 

Same Doctor, Same Office, 800% Higher Bill

By David Eagle

Imagine ordering your favorite entree at the neighborhood restaurant you’ve gone to for years. It’s the same dish, off the same menu, delivered by the same server. But suddenly, it costs 800% more – because the place just got new owners.

Few diners would accept such naked price-gouging.

Unfortunately, what’s unthinkable in the restaurant industry is standard fare in health care. Federal law and regulations allow hospitals to charge Medicare much more than independent physicians charge Medicare for the exact same procedures and health care services.

This structural inequity costs taxpayers and patients billions of dollars each year – and it will only get worse if Congress doesn’t act.

Hospitals have spent much of the last decade buying up independent physician practices. Between 2019 and 2024, they acquired some 7,600 physician practices nationwide, allowing them to reclassify those practices as hospital outpatient departments, according to the Physicians Advocacy Institute.

For hospitals, acquiring physician practices is a smart financial move. On the flip side, such hospital-driven consolidation is a raw deal for patients and taxpayers.

Routine services such as echocardiograms and colonoscopies are much more expensive when performed in a hospital rather than in a physician’s office or an ambulatory surgery center.

A peer-reviewed study that I co-authored this year in the Journal of Market Access and Health Policy proves as much – and shows just how costly those hospital referrals can be. We found that Medicare beneficiaries treated by hospital-affiliated physicians had just a 37% chance of receiving care in the lowest-cost setting.

The cost implications are massive. Consider a cystoscopy, a procedure used to diagnose and treat problems in a person’s urinary tract. In a hospital setting, Medicare pays $731 for the procedure. In a doctor’s office, Medicare pays just $239.

For some procedures, total Medicare reimbursement was eight times higher in a hospital outpatient department than in an ambulatory surgery center or doctor’s office.

This disparity imposes a hefty burden on federal taxpayers who bear the burden of paying for Medicare, and it also drives up premiums and cost-sharing for Medicare beneficiaries themselves.

The high payments give hospitals more revenue, which they are using to buy up additional physician practices and consolidate their markets even more, exacerbating the problem.

Congress and regulators have previously taken small steps to make Medicare payments more equal across different sites of care and to eliminate some of the perverse incentives that encourage hospitals to acquire independent physician practices.

For example, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 directed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to stop using the higher hospital payment system for services furnished in physician practices that were acquired by hospitals and became part of the hospitals’ off-campus provider departments after the law’s effective date. Unfortunately, the rule doesn’t apply to any other services, such as diagnostic tests and procedures.

What Congress should do now is to embrace reforms that would require Medicare to pay the same price not just for clinic visits but also for services – regardless of where they’re performed.

Enacting payment reform would yield significant savings for Medicare – to the tune of more than $200 billion over 10 years, according to a 2023 study.

If Congress demands that Medicare standardize reimbursements for health care services and procedures – regardless of where or from whom patients receive them – private health insurance companies would follow suit.

Restaurant-goers wouldn’t accept it if a neighborhood cafe started charging higher prices for the same dishes under new ownership. Likewise, when hospitals buy up medical practices, patients and taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay more for the same diagnostic tests, procedures and other healthcare services either.

David Eagle, M.D., is a board-certified hematologist-oncologist and president of the American Independent Medical Practice AssociationThis piece originally ran in U.S. News & World Report.