Comments on: Legalizing Net gambling? There's a chance
Opponents are leaning on arguments from the alcohol and drug legalization movements to try to repeal a law aimed at wiping out online gambling.
Opponents are leaning on arguments from the alcohol and drug legalization movements to try to repeal a law aimed at wiping out online gambling.
December 30, 2009 5:38 PM PST
December 30, 2009 4:57 PM PST
December 30, 2009 4:14 PM PST
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they spend the money they earn themselves," said Rep. Barney
Frank, the Democratic chairman of the House Financial Services
committee
So he believes I should be able to gamble my money away and let
the government squander it as well.
And with President Bush still in office, this bill was dead on arrival, so your story provides no justification for the "There's a chance" headline.
This story is also really stale - what has changed since Frank's bill was introduced some months ago?
Even if Frank's bill was passed in a future Democratic administration, it has exemptions that allow individual states to opt-out, which would make any online casino here in the States impractical.
Here's a more specific analysis of Frank's bill, on Online Gambling News: http://www.ogpaper.com/news/news-0283.html
Note that the linked article was written back in April. You're almost two months late on this story, CNET.
Second, the reason we published this story today is because the hearing was today.
Third, we also covered Frank's bill back in April, when it was introduced, and there's a link to it in the story that you would have seen if you had read it more carefully:
http://news.com.com/Democrat+proposes+lifting+federal+ban+on+Net+gambling/2100-1028_3-6179525.html
Perhaps, "huidafa," you should stick to not trying to comment on posts when you're getting your facts wrong.
It would be grooving and we woulden't know what the problem was with life anymore.
And you know the sites won't give your money back if your kids used your credit card. They just have to say, "We have no garentee that it wasn't you who lost the $30,000." And the courts will have to side with them, even if it was your kid did it.
This is a financial nightmare waiting to happen!
loose $30,000, maybe YOU, as a parent, should be spending more
time monitoring what exactly YOUR child is doing on the internet!
Gambling should probably be the least of your worries.
It should not be the Government's job to protect people from possible ways of losing their money online, especially when the avenue exists offline. The problem for government officials in legalizing and regulating online gambling is that it provides a viable alternative to the most ridiculous gambling occurring daily that is directly funded by government: The Lottery.
The ban to me seemed more out of a fear of attempting to tackle regulation than it was any kind of moral victory against the gambling demons.
It could be argued they are even safer than the legal casinos dotted about, which attract criminals like honey attract bears.
- by docsharp01 April 27, 2009 6:31 PM PDT
- Gambling on the internet should be legalized. The US government has no right telling US citizens what they can or can't do online. Freedom of speech and liberty have be incringed.
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