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View Full Version : Winning? Online Gambling, Casinos to ‘Sweep’ U.S. in 2012



AndreaGail
28th December 2011, 01:29 PM
Forget the monkey or the rooster, 2012 could be the year of the gambler and experts say that while that would mean more money in states’ pockets, it could also put young people and adults at further risk of addiction.

On Friday, the Justice Department reversed its previous stand on the 1961 Wiring Act — saying that it applied to sports betting but not online gambling — after years of hunting down online casinos like the billion-dollar-plus Full Tilt Poker.

Rick Bronson, chairman of U.S. Digital Gaming, said the change would give states the ability to legally operate online gambling beginning with poker and also sell lottery tickets on the Internet.

He said that poker would likely generate $12 billion a year in revenue for states and that the lottery business — already a $60 billion to $70 billion business — would continue to grow.

According to a 2010 Morgan Stanley report, analysts said that regulating gambling could bring in $5 billion.

I. Nelson Rose, Whittier Law School professor and expert on gaming law, called the Justice Department move a “major Christmas present for the Internet gambling community.”

“We are about to see this explosion of Internet gambling sweep across the nation,” he said especially because of the economic recession.

“Nobody is cutting back,” he said. “All we’re seeing is every single state proposing more and more legal gambling. … Gambling is seen as a painless tax, involuntary tax so it is an easy way to raise revenue without raising real taxes.”

In fact, Washington D.C. and Nevada are already poised to start online gambling, mostly poker. Kentucky’s Gov. Steve Beshear is pushing for expanded gambling in his state. And in Illinois, there are hopes that online tickets will increase sales for the lottery.

“It’s money and [states] can’t raise taxes anymore and they can’t cut services anymore so they need a way to raise money and gambling seems to pay more tax,” Rose said.

Bronson said U.S. Digital Gaming estimated that tax revenue for the states would be about 25 percent. He also said online gaming would likely bring more visitors to casinos.

This would be good news for Florida, where lawmakers are set to consider a measure to bring three casino resorts to the southern part of the state. In New York, the governor is pushing for the legalization of casino gambling.

Regarding Internet gambling, Rose said states would have to require strict regulations to prevent gamblers from becoming addicts and to ensure that minors do not participate.

Keith Whyte, the executive director of the National Council on Problem Gambling, said there were a half a million youth ages 12-17 with gambling problems.

He said that youth were already gambling online and that the industry was not doing a good job preventing it.

“In some ways, we’re concerned that when these existing industries expand [under the new Justice Department rule] they’re going to do the same shoddy job of enforcing that they’re already doing,” Whyte said.

He advised states looking to jump into online gambling to first do a study on the current rate of gambling addiction among youth and gambling adults to see whether there would be a spike.

“States are looking to maximize revenue from gambling, but they also need to minimalize the social costs,” Whyte said.


http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2011/12/winning-online-gambling-casinos-to-sweep-u-s-in-2012/

AndreaGail
28th December 2011, 01:31 PM
btw, when i highlighted the text from the abc page it was pink instead of the normal blue...maybe some subtle programming for breast cancer awareness or feminism

Gaillo
28th December 2011, 02:45 PM
This country is turning into that town in "It's a Wonderful Life" - a thriving industry based on drugs, gambling, prostitution, and corruption.

Not that I have anything against gambling, I've been known to place a few bets myself... but how much of an economy can you realistically create with things like that? Like Ponce says, "no manufacturing = no recovery" - the "services" industry only takes you so far... ESPECIALLY when .gov corruption has allowed the wealthy to plunder and pillage without limits as they have in recent times! :o

dys
28th December 2011, 02:53 PM
This country is turning into that town in "It's a Wonderful Life" - a thriving industry based on drugs, gambling, prostitution, and corruption.

Not that I have anything against gambling, I've been known to place a few bets myself... but how much of an economy can you realistically create with things like that? Like Ponce says, "no manufacturing = no recovery" - the "services" industry only takes you so far... ESPECIALLY when .gov corruption has allowed the wealthy to plunder and pillage without limits as they have in recent times! :o

The only way that it works is if you already have an economy. You know, if enough people actually have disposable income that they can afford to lose. What we have now is more and more vultures chasing fewer and fewer scraps, and it ain't going to work.

dys

Blink
28th December 2011, 05:03 PM
The great depression led to a much greater legalization of gambling. The antigambling mood changed as tremendous financial distress gripped the country, especially after the stock market crash of 1929. Legalized gambling was looked upon as a way to stimulate the economy. Massachusetts decriminalized bingo in 1931 in an attempt to help churches and charitable organizations raise money. Bingo was legal in 11 states by the 1950s, usually only for charity purposes.

Horse racing and parimutuel wagering began to make a comeback. In 1933, Michigan, New Hampshire, Ohio, and California legalized parimutuel betting. The California Legislature adopted a statute in 1933 referred to as the Horse Racing Act. The statutes took effect upon adoption by the voters of an amendment to the Constitution in June of 1933. During the 1930's, 21 states brought back racetracks. New laws and automated systems made horse racing much more honest than during the 1800s.

Coincident with resurgence of legal gambling was a crackdown on illegal gambling, in part because illegal gambling had become so prevalent. A backlash developed and reform candidates were swept into office in New York where Fiorella La Guardia replaced Jimmy Walker and in Chicago where Anton Cermak pushed out "Big" Bill Thompson. Theater-goers were treated to newsreels of Mayor La Guardia taking a sledge hammer to slot machines and pushing them off the barge into the city's ocean dump. District Attorney Thomas Dewey ran an aggressive campaign against mobsters who were involved in gambling.


http://www.library.ca.gov/crb/97/03/Chapt2.html


The expansion of casinos and other gambling halls/online gambling is being put into place (history repeats) just like the last Great Depression showed us..........

osoab
28th December 2011, 08:11 PM
So, they (.gov) got rid of the untaxed competition first.

Strong arming people must be a nice line of work.

Ponce
28th December 2011, 09:41 PM
And guess who will be incharged of the online games?.......yeap........the Zionist "Jews"....... wanna make a bet?