S
Smber2c
Guest
I’ve always had worries about gambling and the lotto, I’ll put up my question, then my answers, and you love to hear your answers…or your opinion of my and other answer. (I think I just explained exactly what a message board is…
…well now the few who didn’t know that do and knowing is half the battle)
My questions:
You can tell who buys them just from where they sell best. Gas stations in nice areas usually have a couple forms of lotto tucked back behind the counter out of view. Low class areas - they have 32 sorts of scratch off lottery completely framing the outline of both cash registers.
No, the lotto doesn’t make them buy. But that doesn’t make it good or acceptable. These people are not in a position to make an objective/logically sound judgement - it would be nice for the government to then help keep them from errant and 99.9999% of the time useless purchases.
My questions:
- Is any gambling at all immoral? (like even just betting your brother $2 you will crush his next fast ball)
- In theory, is casino style gambling immoral?
- In theory, Is the lotto immoral?
- With the reality that many abuse casino gambling, is it immoral?
- With the reality that the vast majority abuse lotto, is it immoral?
- No.
- No.
- No. Like at the Church fair or for the Boy scouts.
- This has concerned me because many of the families I know who don’t have the money to be wasting on this go blow thousands at Casinos every year.
I think that some people I know really do use Gambling as entertainment. They take 50 or 100 buck and spend an evening at the Casino. They aren’t looking to make the rent money, they are willing to accept losing it all (and stats say they’ll lose more than win) and would consider those nights as “no more expensive than if I’d gone and watched a NFL or NBA game.”
Still, there are many that abuse the system and it concerns me. But people abuse driving and we don’t outlaw cars.
In the end, I think casinos are acceptable, but with all the $$$ they make casinos should have to help those who are addicted by also funding some counciling or maybe run ads like the beer companies do about not driving drunk. “Don’t come gamble here if you are using the grocery money.”
- The lotto, as it works in society. The big money lotto. I don’t mean the church raffle or the Boy Scouts. I’m talking about the $155 million Power Ball stuff. I think this isn’t moral at all.
You can tell who buys them just from where they sell best. Gas stations in nice areas usually have a couple forms of lotto tucked back behind the counter out of view. Low class areas - they have 32 sorts of scratch off lottery completely framing the outline of both cash registers.
No, the lotto doesn’t make them buy. But that doesn’t make it good or acceptable. These people are not in a position to make an objective/logically sound judgement - it would be nice for the government to then help keep them from errant and 99.9999% of the time useless purchases.