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    Explore "saudi arabia golf" with insightful episodes like "Sweden Set To Join NATO; Congress Tees off on Controversial Golf Merger", "The PGA LIV Golf Deal Is All About The Green" and "Saudi Arabia: The Golf State?" from podcasts like ""Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition", "Consider This from NPR" and "The News Agents"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    The PGA LIV Golf Deal Is All About The Green

    The PGA LIV Golf Deal Is All About The Green
    For more than a year the PGA, the world's leading pro golf league, has basically been at war with the upstart Saudi-funded LIV Golf league. Lawsuits and countersuits were filed as the the leagues competed for marquee golfers and control of the narrative around the game. Some PGA players resisted big paydays to join LIV because they were critical of the Saudi Public Investment Fund, the source of the league's seemingly endless supply of money. But last week, the two leagues announced a plan to join forces.

    Though the deal has yet to be finalized, it's already faced backlash from players who remain loyal to the tour, and from human rights activists who see this as an attempt by the Saudi government to use sports to draw attention away from their record of human rights abuses.

    NPR's Susan Davis speaks with Sally Jenkins, a sports columnist for the Washington Post, who wrote a column critical of the merger, and Terry Strada, who chairs the group 9/11 Families United, which represents thousands of surviving family members of those killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks. Strada has been one of the most vocal critics of the plan.

    We also hear from Doug Greenberg, a writer for the sports news site Front Office Sports, who says the Saudi-backed league has actually been good for golf.

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    Saudi Arabia: The Golf State?

    Saudi Arabia: The Golf State?

    Golf as we know it has just been sold, kind of wholesale, to Saudi Arabia.

    The gulf state is acquiring lots of high end sports brands right now. And it's using sportswashing to reposition itself as a diplomat on the world stage.

    Meanwhile, Keir Starmer has run into trouble with the unions by promising an end to new oil fields in the North Sea. He wants his own Inflation Reduction Act creating green jobs for the future. But can we afford it?

    And UFOs are no longer the stuff of conspiracy nutters - Congress has now promised protection to whistleblowers who will come forward to tell us what alien aeriel sightings they've spotted in our skies. Why is this happening now?