Will brings up the seldom-addressed point that, in passing the UIGEA, Congress not just curried favor with church groups, but in addition protected state government revenues derived from lottery gambling. By passing the net casino ban, the government acted to verify gaming patrons could be limited to choices that fed state revenue.
But, he notes, by government accepting gambling as part of its business, the ethical ground is lost.
"Having turned gambling, which once was treated as a sin, right into a social policy, government looks unusually silly criminalizing online sorts of it," says Will. He notes that "gambling is productive of enjoyment for millions of usa citizens for whom this is a frequent pastime," and wonders "whether government should attempt to tightly circumscribe a ubiquitous human activity that generally harms nobody."
Will goes directly to state a good stronger case for online poker, noting that the sport of skill doesn't should be lumped in a class with games of chance.
"Congress probably should fold its interference with Internet gambling, and definitely should get its 10 thumbs off Americans' freedom to exercise their poker skills online," Will concludes.
Published on August 17, 2009 by JoshuaMcCarthy
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Read More... [Source: Religious Gambling News]
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