WCKnight - You make some excellent points. You are correct that there are some individuals that can handle gambling in a responsible manner.
I am not convinced, however, that the majority of gamblers can control their urges. It would be interesting to see what the academics studies say about addiction and gambling. I personally think gambling is about as dangerous a vice as any. (But then again, I don’t drink, do drugs, or gamble.)
Gambling is incrementally and deliberately designed to be addictive. I firmly believe that only the Devil himself could create a town like Las Vegas. It is the most corrupt, vile, and despicable place I have ever visited. It reeks of greed, prostitution, con artists, etc. It has to be the most decadent place on the planet.
Like illegal drugs, a small minority of individuals can take them and face no harm. Most people, however, that start using drugs can’t stop, and end up wreaking havoc in their family, their career, and their life in general. Why even start? If you never start, you don’t have to worry about the dangers of gambling.
Just as I would never advocate someone to just “try” cocaine, I would never encourage anyone to try gambling. It’s just too risky, and the downsides far outweigh the upsides.
Gambling looks like fun. It looks exciting. It looks like you could win a ton of money. It’s deliberately designed to entice and attract people in that way. The problem is that gambling is the exact opposite: It leads people to despair, cheap thrills, a fast crash, monetary losses, etc. The games are deliberately rigged in the house’s favor.
Yes, gambling is entertainment. But unlike sports and going to the beach, you are much more apt to face dire consequences if you fall into an addictive pattern of gambling. I suppose some people are addicted to sports - that is true, but the only people you hear that lose their shirt in sporting events are those individuals that gamble on the events themselves.
It’s also the kind of addiction that a person can pursue without anyone knowing about it. Just gamble online, head to the racetracks, or take a trip to Vegas. Unlike drug and alcohol addiction which have obvious visual symptoms, family members are slower to recognize gambling addictions until sometimes it’s too late. Money is lost, finances are ruined, debts are accumulated, and it’s a downward spiral from there.