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Integrity faces a critical moment of peril

Prediction markets are creating a digital Wild West, where well-placed opportunists can win big by betting on real-world events — from the capture of Nicolás Maduro to a surprise Super Bowl cameo.

  • What may strike everyday people as blatant insider trading is defended as legal based on the letter of the law.

Why it matters: The spectacle of people profiting off privileged knowledge is accelerating a broader erosion of trust in a society where confidence and good faith were already in retreat.


The big picture: Across markets, media, sports, and politics, the incentives increasingly reward those who push ethical boundaries — and penalize those who don't.

🤖 Reality has become easier to manufacture. AI advancements are training people to doubt the authenticity of what they read, watch and listen to online.

  • Any person can now share coherent, well-constructed views that don't reflect their true ideas or beliefs — or that they barely understand themselves.
  • Large majorities of students now use generative AI for schoolwork, leaving educators to wrestle with how much of it facilitates learning versus helps cut corners.

🏀 Fair competition is increasingly in doubt. Gambling and perverse incentives now make sports fans question the integrity of the games they're watching.

  • The NBA is battling a crisis of confidence as bad teams embrace increasingly brazen tactics to improve their draft odds. Last week, the 18–38 Utah Jazz benched their best players in the fourth quarter of a game they had been winning — and lost.
  • The MLB and NBA have been rocked by betting scandals in which players are accused of rigging their play in order to make money off specific performance-based bets.

🏛️ Politics has de-valued shame. The last decade has shown that major players have little incentive to own up to bad behavior or exercise restraint when there's a chance to exploit power.

The big picture: These trends converge with polling that shows many Americans — especially Gen Z — already feel like the deck is stacked against them.

  • Just 13% of respondents polled in the most recent Harvard Youth Poll said the country is headed in the right direction, while 43% said they're struggling or barely getting by.
  • A whopping 39% said political violence is acceptable in certain circumstances.

The bottom line: As more Americans feel locked out of opportunity, the temptation grows to game the system — and to justify doing whatever it takes to get ahead.

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