Congress To Vote On Internet Gambling This Summer

Sigh…

WASHINGTON, July 3 — While Internet gamblers lay down big money on World Cup soccer this summer, teams of lobbyists are facing off on Capitol Hill in a contest over whether the United States should choke off the growth of wagering on the Web.
Faced with bills to curb online betting, which attracts an estimated $12 billion a year in wagers worldwide, an array of interest groups like casinos here and abroad, as well as sports leagues, antigambling coalitions and even poker players, has dispatched lobbyists to argue what should be legal and what should not.
Major League Baseball wants to make sure that any measures do not diminish fantasy sports games, which it credits for a resurgence in its popularity.
The big Las Vegas casinos, which have been neutral over online betting, have embraced a proposal in the House to establish a study commission. Convenience stores are watching to see whether sales of lottery tickets might be affected, though Powerball seems to be safe for now.
The horse racing industry seems sanguine, but dog tracks are worried. Offshore casinos are fighting any restrictions.
The Justice Department has always considered Internet gambling illegal. But that has not stopped online wagering from flourishing.
Gambling opponents are pushing for bills to put teeth into enforcement. In the House, proponents of a crackdown merged two bills. The majority leader, Representative John A. Boehner, Republican of Ohio, announced a few days ago that the measure would be voted on this summer as part of what the Republicans call their American Values Agenda.
The odds of a bill’s becoming law this year appear long. Beyond that, nearly everyone agrees that online betting may be unstoppable because of the reach of the Internet and the difficulty in regulating its activity.

This is so ridiculous.
Internet gambling is something like a $12 billion/year industry despite the fact that, as the article points out, Internet gambling is already considered illegal by the U.S. Justice Department. Tons of people are doing it. I know people who do it. I’m sure most of you reading this know people who do it (whether you’re aware of it or not). Stopping people from doing it is going to be nearly impossible unless the government gets into the business of locating and blocking online gambling sites from American internet users. Something that would require both the cooperation of every single ISP in America along with a massive bureaucratic agency that would like cost Americans billions of dollars.
So why are we even trying to stop this? Why is this part of a push toward “American Values?” Plenty of Americans gamble. Las Vegas is one of the most popular vacation destination in America. I don’t think there are many people who view gambling as being all that immoral, and banning the activity is going to be costly…if it’s even possible at all.
So why try? Aren’t there better problems for the Republican majority to be tackling? Like, I don’t know, Social Security reform? You know, something that is actually a problem facing this country?

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  • http://Array robert108

    Christian Socialists? That’s a new one for the lefties to smear, I guess.

  • http://blogs.caseysoftware.com/ caseydk

    Did you see this one from Washington state?

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003062386_danny15.html

    The first casualty in the state’s war on Internet gambling is a local Web site where nobody was actually doing any gambling.

    What a Bellingham man did on his site was write about online gambling. He reviewed Internet casinos. He had links to them, and ran ads by them. He fancied himself a guide to an uncharted frontier, even compiling a list of “rogue casinos” that had bilked gamblers.

    All that, says the state — the ads, the linking, even the discussing — violates a new state law barring online wagering or using the Internet to transmit “gambling information.”

  • http://www.standingonthesoapbox.org/ Andrew

    Sigh, indeed. All the problems that need to be addressed in this country, and people are worried about what adults do with thier own money.

  • http://www.fileitunder.com/ Rob B.

    The main reason you see a push against this is because of Vegas. My mom’s company work with security aspects of the Gaming industry and they really hate that people don’t have to come to thier casinos in order to gamble.

    The second is because it’s online and hosted off shore it’s evading taxes that they can place on in casino winnings.

    It’s the age old “follow the money” angle.

  • Dave

    Remember, this is coming from the party that supports (apparently ostensibly) limited government.

  • Natty Dark

    They are more than happy to tax the winnings, whether it be the 40ish percent they rake from the big winners or forcing casinos and gambling sites to report significant payouts and mandating that we report it as taxable income.

    I’ll bet they want to tax the lottery tickets beforehand too. That way they can tax it twice.

    Talk about the lottery being a stupid tax …

  • glenn mcclurg

    been playing with same sportsbook for 7 years bet on sports every day made lots of money cars and house paid for so take your law and stick it

  • robert108

    Dave: I’ll agree with you on one thing: We should severely limit the social spending and attempts at social engineering.

  • http://blog.xtremeramblings.us/ Brandon

    All driven by Christian Socialists.

    *sigh*

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