Showing posts with label gambling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gambling. Show all posts
John Stossel: Gambling And Government
Did you fill out a March Madness bracket this year? In many states, if you put money in a pool, that's illegal! The NCAA website warns, "Fans should enjoy ... filling out a bracket just for the fun of it, not ... the amount of money they could possibly win." Give me a break. Americans bet more money on March Madness this year than on the Super ... MORE
Labels:
freedom,
gambling,
government,
politics,
prohibition,
regulation,
restrictions,
risk,
sports
Matt Rousu: Time For Feds To Legalize Internet Gambling
A nanny state is no friend of liberty. While Americans love to wager money, our country has an interesting relationship with legalized gambling. Though it’s legal in Las Vegas, Atlantic City, many Indian Reservations, and other places in the US, it is illegal elsewhere. Further, the legality of online gambling sites has also been questioned. ... MORE
John Stossel: Banning The Things That Make Us Happy
People say America is a free country. But what if you want to drink, have a cigarette or make a bet? Government often says "no" to protect us from ourselves. It's as if the government is still run by the Puritans who settled this land four centuries ago. They said pleasure and luxury are sinful. Today's government has a better argument ... MORE
Labels:
drunk driving,
gambling,
government,
police,
prohibition,
regulation,
restrictions,
video games
Barry Farber On The Perils Of Making On-Air Bets
A debt paid and a lesson learned. It may have been the best magazine cartoon – ever! Penguins are the only animals in tuxedos. Imagine an Antarctic ice cap with hundreds of tuxedoed penguins, and one penguin wearing a natty beret, a gold chain, sunglasses and a checkered vest while sporting a rhinestone-studded cigarette holder. A curious gaggle ... MORE
Paul Lilly: Florida Bans Internet Cafes
There was too much freedom going on. Well, it's official. Florida governor Rick Scott signed into legislation the "Internet Cafe Ban," which effectively closed down around 1,000 such establishments in the state. The ban went into effect immediately, though some cafes shut their doors a week ago under the assumption that the ban would go through. ... MORE
John Stossel: Ban This! Ban That! Ban This And That!
I like to bet on sports. Having a stake in the game, even if it's just five bucks, makes it more exciting. I also like playing poker. "Unacceptable!" say politicians in much of America. "Gambling sometimes leads to 'addiction,' destitute families!" Well, it can. So politicians ban it. It's why we no longer see a poker game in the back of bars. Half ... MORE
A. Barton Hinkle: Everything Fun Is Illegal In Virginia
Warning: no fornication allowed. Only one or two centuries late, Virginia lawmakers have decided it is none of their business if unmarried couples share a roof. So the legislators are now working diligently to repeal the state’s law against “lewd and lascivious cohabitation.” Huzzahs all ’round for that. But do not unclutch thy bodice yet. Virginia law ... MORE
Bill Would OK Internet Gambling Across State Lines
by Hannah Dreier. The nation's gambling capital is taking steps to make sure it is not dealt out of the lucrative online poker market as more states enter the bourgeoning industry. Soon after the Nevada Legislature begins its four-month session on Monday, lawmakers are expected to begin debating a bill that would let companies ... MORE
Labels:
gambling,
government,
individual liberty,
Internet,
politics,
regulation,
restrictions,
revenue
EBT Abuse: Government's Cash-For-Drunkards Program
by Michelle Malkin. From New York to New Mexico and across the dependent plains, welfare recipients are getting sauced on the public dime. Drunk, besotted, bombed. But while politicians pay lip service to cutting government waste, fraud and abuse, they're doing very little in practice to stop the EBT party excesses. Where's the compassion for taxpayers? ... MORE
New Jersey Puts Money On Legalizing Sports Betting
by Colton Totland. Sports fans who have longed to back their favorite teams with their gambling dollars — legally — may soon get their chance as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie leads a challenge to laws that have limited legal betting on sports to a small handful of states. The long-running, high-stakes battle over betting on sports in America is coming to a ... MORE
Labels:
federalism,
gambling,
government,
individual liberty,
legalize,
revenue,
sports,
states' rights
Ben Wolfgang: Online Poker Fans Ready To Deal
A comeback deal. The Obama administration may have called off the game more than a year ago, but the nation’s poker partisans are still looking for a deal. Card sharks are ramping up pressure on the federal government to remove a cloud of uncertainty hanging over Internet poker, caused by a patchwork of federal laws that has left the game in a ... MORE
Labels:
freedom,
gambling,
government,
individual liberty,
Internet,
Obama,
online,
poker,
restrictions
Michael Suede: Jury Nullification Becomes Reality in N.H.
Judging the law as well as the facts. For those of you who don’t know much about jury nullification, basically it’s when the jury finds a defendant innocent because of their dislike of the law. For example, a jury might refuse to convict a non-violent drug offender because they disagree with the fundamental premise of drug laws themselves. ... MORE
Labels:
court,
drug war,
fairness,
free speech,
gambling,
individual liberty,
jury nullification,
justice
John Stossel: Creating A Risk-Free World
A child leaving home alone for the first time takes a risk. So does the entrepreneur who opens a new business. I no more want government to prevent us from doing these things than I want it to keep us in padded cells. Everyone has a different tolerance for risk. One person takes out a second mortgage to start a business. Another thinks that ... MORE
Labels:
business,
consumer,
drugs,
gambling,
government,
medicine,
regulation,
risk,
safety,
seat belt
Michelle Minton: Let States Regulate Internet Gambling
Government should protect, not restrict, freedom. This country has many serious problems to address, but an activity that millions of people around the world voluntarily enjoy, mostly without incident, is not one of them and it certainly does not warrant a big new federal regulatory agency. In a recent op-ed in The Washington Examiner, former Pennsylvania ... MORE
Labels:
gambling,
government,
individual liberty,
Internet,
law enforcement,
police,
politics,
rights,
tax
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