Newsweek Article on “Gambling Ban”
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Prohibition II: Good Grief
When government restricts Americans’ choices, ostensibly for their own good, someone is going to profit from the paternalism.
By George F. Will
Oct. 23, 2006 issue – Perhaps Prohibition II is being launched because Prohibition I worked so well at getting rid of gin. Or maybe the point is to reassure social conservatives that Republicans remain resolved to purify Americans’ behavior. Incorrigible cynics will say Prohibition II is being undertaken because someone stands to make money from interfering with other people making money.
For whatever reason, last Friday the president signed into law Prohibition II. You almost have to admire the government’s plucky refusal to heed history’s warnings about the probable futility of this adventure. This time the government is prohibiting Internet gambling by making it illegal for banks or credit-card companies to process payments to online gambling operations on a list the government will prepare.
Last year about 12 million Americans wagered $6 billion online. But after Congress, 32 minutes before adjourning, passed its ban, the stock of the largest online-gambling business, Gibraltar-based PartyGaming, which gets 85 percent of its $1 billion annual revenue from Americans, declined 58 percent in one day, wiping out about $5 billion in market value. The stock of a British company, World Gaming PLC, which gets about 95 percent of its revenue from Americans, plunged 88 percent. The industry, which has some 2,300 Web sites and did half of its business last year with Americans, has lost $8 billion in market value because of the new law. And you thought the 109th Congress did not accomplish anything.
Supporters of the new law say it merely strengthens enforcement; they claim that Internet gambling is illegal under the Wire Act enacted in 1961, before Al Gore, who was then 13, had invented the Internet. But not all courts agree. Supporters of the new law say online gambling sends billions of dollars overseas. But the way to keep the money here is to decriminalize the activity.
The number of online American gamblers, although just one sixth the number of Americans who visit real casinos annually, doubled in the last year. This competition alarms the nation’s biggest gambling interests – state governments.
It is an iron law: When government uses laws, tariffs and regulations to restrict the choices of Americans, ostensibly for their own good, someone is going to make money from the paternalism. One of the big winners from the government’s action against online gambling will be the state governments that are America’s most relentless promoters of gambling. Forty-eight states (all but Hawaii and Utah) have some form of legalized gambling. Forty-two states have lottery monopolies. Thirty-four states rake in part of the take from casino gambling, slot machines or video poker.
The new law actually legalizes online betting on horse racing, Internet state lotteries and some fantasy sports. The horse-racing industry is a powerful interest. The solidarity of the political class prevents the federal officials from interfering with state officials’ lucrative gambling. And woe unto the politicians who get between a sports fan and his fun.
In the private sector, where realism prevails, casino operators are not hot for criminalizing Internet gambling. This is so for two reasons: It is not in their interest for government to wax censorious. And online gambling might whet the appetites of millions for the real casino experience.
Granted, some people gamble too much. And some people eat too many cheeseburgers. But who wants to live in a society that protects the weak-willed by criminalizing cheeseburgers? Besides, the problems (frequently exaggerated) of criminal involvement in gambling, and of underage and addictive gamblers, can be best dealt with by legalization and regulation utilizing new software solutions. Furthermore, taxation of online poker and other gambling could generate billions for governments.
Prohibition I was a porous wall between Americans and their martinis, giving rise to bad gin supplied by bad people. Prohibition II will provoke imaginative evasions as the market supplies what gamblers will demand – payment methods beyond the reach of Congress.
But governments and sundry busybodies seem affronted by the Internet, as they are by any unregulated sphere of life. The speech police are itching to bring bloggers under campaign-finance laws that control the quantity, content and timing of political discourse. And now, by banning a particular behavior – the entertainment some people choose, using their own money – government has advanced its mother-hen agenda of putting a saddle and bridle on the Internet.
Gambling is, however, as American as the Gold Rush or, for that matter, Wall Street. George Washington deplored the rampant gambling at Valley Forge, but lotteries helped fund his army as well as Harvard, Princeton and Dartmouth. And Washington endorsed the lottery that helped fund construction of the city that now bears his name, and from which has come a stern – but interestingly selective – disapproval of gambling.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15265338/site/newsweek/page/2/

























joanne h garcia said
am October 21 2006 @ 3:09 am
dear JHON EDWARDS….. can you please help me i have a gran father pass when i was young but he was my heart i felt emty inside now i have two identical boys that remind me of him becuase they take after him. I “ve had a very hard life been on my own sence 13yrs from house to house . So i was hoping if you cane help me too see jf he has been looking over me please try too ease my mind ………. ALWAY”S JOANNE H GARCIA
John Edwards said
am October 21 2006 @ 9:55 am
Joanne, I sympathize with your loss. You seem like a nice person, albeit a bit mistaken in your choice of websites.
Perhaps human consciousness as an energy form does survive past the point of physical death. Not likely, but possible. However, one thing is certain: John Edward doesn’t speak to anyone who might be there. To learn more, go here:
http://www.re-quest.net/entertainment/movies-and-tv/tv/john-edward/
The best person to look out for you, Joanne, is yourself. Find strength in the love of your sons and I’m sure they will grow up to be fine men. Find truth in learning and reading. Explore your world. I’ll bet that’s what your grandfather would want you to do.
“The man who invented the telescope found out more about heaven than the closed eyes of prayer ever discovered.”
– Robert G. Ingersoll, “The Great Agnostic” (1833-1899)
Lauren said
am December 1 2009 @ 7:33 pm
JOANNE- ARE YOU OR HAVE YOU RESIDED IN THE CALIFORNIA AREA?