Will Online Gambling Become Legal in the U.S.?

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Will Online Gambling Become Legal in the U.S.?


Politicians in the U.S. are making noise about legalizing and taxing online gambling in order to take some pressure off of depleted government coffers, but the idea is facing strong opposition from Republicans, conservative groups and pro sports leagues.

Democratic Representatives Barney Frank of Massachusetts and Jim McDermott ofWashington are leading an effort to repeal the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAFE_Port_Act], which is set to go into effect on June 1, and instead make online gambling legal so it can be taxed. Their bill would impose a six percent tax on all deposits made to online gambling sites that go to the state of the player's residence, while another two percent would be taken by the federal government. Over the next ten years the bill would bring in roughly $30 billion for state and tribal governments and $42 billion for the federal government, according to an estimate by the Joint Committee on Taxation.

"This is a huge boon to the state governments," McDermott said. "If you look across the country you're seeing programs cut. In Arizona, they just cut out a program for children's health for 40,000 kids. Here's a source of money."

"American adults want to be able to do what they want with their own money without the government interfering," added Frank.

Supporters of the bill have a fight on their hands, however; Republicans have begun circulating a memo tying jailed former lobbyist Focus on the Family [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Abramoff] expressed concerns that legalization would lead to rampant abuse. "This basically creates a national casino and there's no time they won't be operating," said Focus on the Family policy and research analysis Chad Hills. "We already have between 15 and 20 million people in the U.S. with a pathological gambling problem."

The casino industry, which originally opposed the idea, has now thrown its support behind the bill; professional sports leagues, on the other hand, are against it because of worries that it will "expand wagers placed on their games," which is apparently problematic for some reason.

A "scheduling overload" delayed the bill's consideration but Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said he plans to have a vote held this spring and is confident it will pass. There is no "companion bill" in the Senate but Democrat Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey introduced a bill in August 2009 that seeks to legalize and tax online poker games and "games of chance."

Source: MiamiHerald.com [http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/25/1595400/is-online-gambling-a-win-win.html]



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Poomanchu745

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Sep 11, 2009
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Man thats a tough call. But honestly it really seems hypocritical of the republicans who say that democrats are taking away their freedoms. So now the democrats want to let people gamble if they want and repubs want to take away that freedom? Sounds like I smell some hypocrites. I bet that if dems tried to ban cigarettes repubs would claim it was peoples right to smoke and die from it if they got cancer from smoking. Honestly, I say anything that raises taxes should be given the thumbs up when our debt is this high. Once the debt comes down, then maybe illegalize gambling...
 

Pimppeter2

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Dec 31, 2008
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Kind off divided on this, from one angle, not only does it reap benefits, and does make sense. Plus sites like Centsports already take advantage of using advertising as a means of providing free and legal betting. Its only a matter of time until that idea evolves.


On the other hand, Internet Gambling is much more effective than betting in real life. I mean, handing over money hurts, but as long as its just a number on screen its not as bad.
 

samsonguy920

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Mar 24, 2009
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Well, considering there are already a lot of things on the internet being abused, a lot that take money with zero return, Focus on the Family are once again talking out of their ass. And you know that when the Republicans are using Jack Abramoff as an example really have nothing else to use.
Gambling has as much risk of addiction as alcohol, and yet we still keep that legal. What's one more thing on the people's plate to have?
Besides, I'd rather have that as a source of tax revenue than something that really is self-defeating and punishing of the common public as a taxable source.
 

Woem

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May 28, 2009
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"American adults want to be able to do what they want with their own money without the government interfering," added Frank.
But they still won't be able to buy a jiggle-them-boobs app for the iPhone.
 

Scabadus

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Jul 16, 2009
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Wait, online gambling is illegal in the US? Stuff like online poker and online roulette? I never knew that.

Does this mean you can't gamble online from Vegas? Don't ask me why you'd want to but.... oh the irony.
 

Heretic95

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Mar 27, 2010
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I'm surprised this is an issue, considering that last time I checked, the US could use all the money it could get its hands on. Then again, I'm Canadian, so if I'm wrong or my opinion is outdated then enlighten me if you please.
 

Billion Backs

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Apr 20, 2010
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Freedom is the most important thing, one of the few things to be idealistic about, if not the only one.

So, yeah, legalize it.
 

GL2814E

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Feb 16, 2010
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Eh... I think US Lawmakers need to focus on real problems right now, such as Wall-Street reform, immigration reform, and oh I don't know; anything else other than online gambling.
 

jeff02x2

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Jul 8, 2009
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is gambling online really illegal in the U.S. are there ways of them stopping you or is it the same way downloading the odd song is illegal?
 

oppp7

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Aug 29, 2009
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I don't really like the idea of gambling. All it does is prey on the weak-minded and attract crime(although the latter wouldn't occur with online gambling).
 

Vampire cat

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Apr 21, 2010
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Maybe in Vegas? =3

rekabdarb said:
sure and if you get into debt all the money goes to the US government
I'm sensing a lot of it goes to private people too. Wealthy private people that doesn't actually need more money but want's it for the very simple reason that they CAN have more... Fucking humans...
 

Enigmers

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Dec 14, 2008
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Gambling is a personal choice anyway and I can't think of any reason for it to be illegal anyway.
 

Low Key

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May 7, 2009
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Scabadus said:
Wait, online gambling is illegal in the US? Stuff like online poker and online roulette? I never knew that.

Does this mean you can't gamble online from Vegas? Don't ask me why you'd want to but.... oh the irony.
No, there are online poker sites where you can play with real money. I know people who have won some cash with them. What it seems they are trying to do is legalize placing wagers on sports and the like, which for the most part, is illegal even offline unless it's in Vegas or at casinos on indian reservations.
 

heyheysg

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Jul 13, 2009
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Well, if you don't get any money soon, your Chinese overlords will ban it anyway after they take over the world