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General Poker Discussion >> Poker Legislation

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ProsperousOne
enthusiast


Reged: 05/22/05
Posts: 236
Loc: Ancient Politician Dig
Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R)
      #10846021 - 06/19/07 08:15 AM

I'm very disappointed in his reply... He's obviously trying to send out a letter that will work for both PPA members and Focus on the Family...

The one thing that stands out is the following:

Quote:

Gambling on the Internet has become an extremely lucrative business, particularly for criminals. The U.S. department of Justice and the F.B.I. have testified that Internet gambling serves as a vehicle for money laundering activities that can be exploited by terrorists and organized crime rings.




I thought that another site I visited (something to do with Myths and online gambling) stated that there was no evidence to support this. Then why is the FBI testifying that that it serves as a vehicle?

I guess it's possible, but is it actually being done? I suspect if at all, it's miniscule. Probably just more Jack Booted Thugs flexing their muscle and trying to limit Anything that MAY be used for criminal activity....


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jay1313
addict


Reged: 09/03/04
Posts: 408
Loc: Frozen North
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: ProsperousOne]
      #10846050 - 06/19/07 08:19 AM

You may want to reply this way:


The Stock Market and Private Businesses have become an extremely lucrative business, particularly for criminals. The U.S. department of Justice and the F.B.I. have testified that the stock market and private business serve as a vehicles for money laundering activities that can be exploited by terrorists and organized crime rings.

Just a thought.


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Legislurker
old hand


Reged: 05/05/07
Posts: 728
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: ProsperousOne]
      #10846094 - 06/19/07 08:27 AM

A lot of organized crimes rings that make book are hybrid operations. Lines, settlement, and the placing of bets do occur on websites, often hosted outside the US. They can make those claims with a straight face, but casting those aspersions to all internet sites with a broad brush is political bs.

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JavaNut
Tea Drinker


Reged: 05/11/07
Posts: 471
Loc: Permanent downswing
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: ProsperousOne]
      #10846129 - 06/19/07 08:30 AM

Politicians never lie, they bend the truth according to their own beliefs.

This can easily be countered by requiring sites to be able to identify the people playing at the sites in a much more rigorish fashion than today. That would also make it much easier to prosecute botters/colluders by other means than repossesing their current online funds, ie. prosecute them in the countries where they live, 'banning' them from having bank accounts, credit cards, home loans etc, as they would turn up as fraudsters on credit evaluations.


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BluffTHIS!
censor stultorum


Reged: 11/22/04
Posts: 10311
Loc: I can hold my breath longer th...
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: ProsperousOne]
      #10846489 - 06/19/07 09:20 AM

This situation illustrates again why we need to make clear the distinction between poker and sports betting. Any ties to crime have totally to do with sports betting, and any use of online gambling for money laundering for very large sums again is mostly tied to sports betting.

So when you write your congressman, or get a negative reply like this and intend to write again, stress that you recognize the potential problems with other forms of gambling, but that poker is a skill game played by people directly against other people, and mostly for aggregate sums much smaller than that involved in sports betting. And that thus you as a constituent expect your congressman to be smart enough to recognize this difference and in fact treat poker differently, and more favorably.

Don't let sports betting sink poker is the bottom line. And if you fail to make the distinction to your representatives in Congress then you are letting that happen.


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Nairb
addict


Reged: 03/08/07
Posts: 407
Loc: KnoxVegas
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: BluffTHIS!]
      #10849459 - 06/19/07 01:42 PM

The Marijuana legalization lobby has been held down for years by the use of one term, "Drug Legalization". It makes me cringe when I hear a proponent or an opponent of marijuana legalization refer to it as legalizing drugs. When you lump a relatively harmless substance in the same group as substances that can take your life the first time you try it it plays right into the hand of the opponents of said legislation. It is much the same here, although I will probably get flamed for this analogy. If we poker players do not distance ourselves from other forms of gambling our cause will always have that cloud over it of being lumped into one category and it is not that simple.

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yahboohoo
enthusiast


Reged: 03/06/07
Posts: 206
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: ProsperousOne]
      #10851618 - 06/19/07 04:17 PM

Quote:

Gambling on the Internet has become an extremely lucrative business, particularly for criminals. The U.S. department of Justice and the F.B.I. have testified that Internet gambling serves as a vehicle for money laundering activities that can be exploited by terrorists and organized crime rings.




1. Online gaming is lucrative for criminals because online gaming is illegal; ergo, anyone profiting from online gaming is a criminal. This is circular and fallacious logic.

2. Simply because "terrorists and organized crime rings" can exploit online gaming for nepharious purposes does not mean they are exploiting it. If the FBI or DOJ had evidence, you can be damn sure that they'd be parading it up and down the streets of D.C.

3. All the arguments against online gaming -- fraud, terrorists, money laundering, etc. -- can be solved simply by making it legal and regulating it. But they say it can't be legalized and regulated because it is rife with opportunities for terrorists to launder money. More circular and fallacious logic.

This phraseology is the kind of language manipulation that savvy marketers and politicians employ. Ridiculous.

Here's my sarcastic reply: "So you're saying you can't make online gaming legal and regulate it because it's illegal and unregulated?"

Has anyone read "Catch 22?"


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flafishy
addict


Reged: 08/31/04
Posts: 674
Loc: Broward County, FL
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: BluffTHIS!]
      #10852251 - 06/19/07 05:01 PM

Quote:

This situation illustrates again why we need to make clear the distinction between poker and sports betting. Any ties to crime have totally to do with sports betting, and any use of online gambling for money laundering for very large sums again is mostly tied to sports betting.

So when you write your congressman, or get a negative reply like this and intend to write again, stress that you recognize the potential problems with other forms of gambling, but that poker is a skill game played by people directly against other people, and mostly for aggregate sums much smaller than that involved in sports betting. And that thus you as a constituent expect your congressman to be smart enough to recognize this difference and in fact treat poker differently, and more favorably.






I call bs on this. I am a poker player and do not indulge in casino gambling or sports betting. But this distinction is malarkey, no more a valid argument than Rep. Knollenberg was making.


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JavaNut
Tea Drinker


Reged: 05/11/07
Posts: 471
Loc: Permanent downswing
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: Nairb]
      #10852277 - 06/19/07 05:03 PM

Quote:

a relatively harmless substance




Not that relatively harmless, it has been confirmed to cause severe mental illnesses. I do agree though that ecstacy and other drugs can be lethal or harmfull in a much shorter term.

You shouldn't consider Marijuana a 'fun drug' which just happens to be currently illegal.

Why not throw in alcohol, well alcohol can cause diseases, but these diseases can be cured at a rather late stage, paranoid schizofrenia can be medicated, only in rare cases cured.

I will probably be flamed for this, but I will gladly throw in tobacco as a drug to be outlawed asap.

I hope that I haven't been to flamey, but I have a friend who was very close to topping himself due to marijuanna abuse. And I have family who are schizophrenic, not due to marijuanna, but that does not make it pretty, anybody seen A beautiful Mind? Forget it, try thinking of a person sitting in a room screaming for 10 hours straight, just because it is dark outside.

So stay off drugs, including marijuanna and cigs as well.


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WarmonkEd
enthusiast


Reged: 10/12/03
Posts: 312
Loc: Los Angeles , CA
Re: Reply from Michigan Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) [Re: yahboohoo]
      #10852511 - 06/19/07 05:20 PM

Quote:

Quote:

Gambling on the Internet has become an extremely lucrative business, particularly for criminals. The U.S. department of Justice and the F.B.I. have testified that Internet gambling serves as a vehicle for money laundering activities that can be exploited by terrorists and organized crime rings.




1. Online gaming is lucrative for criminals because online gaming is illegal; ergo, anyone profiting from online gaming is a criminal. This is circular and fallacious logic.

2. Simply because "terrorists and organized crime rings" can exploit online gaming for nepharious purposes does not mean they are exploiting it. If the FBI or DOJ had evidence, you can be damn sure that they'd be parading it up and down the streets of D.C.

3. All the arguments against online gaming -- fraud, terrorists, money laundering, etc. -- can be solved simply by making it legal and regulating it. But they say it can't be legalized and regulated because it is rife with opportunities for terrorists to launder money. More circular and fallacious logic.

This phraseology is the kind of language manipulation that savvy marketers and politicians employ. Ridiculous.

Here's my sarcastic reply: "So you're saying you can't make online gaming legal and regulate it because it's illegal and unregulated?"

Has anyone read "Catch 22?"




You're distorting what he means to say. He is not saying online gaming should be illegal because anyone profiting from online gaming is a criminal because it is illegal. That would be circular logic, like you say. He is just saying it should be illegal because organized crime can use it to launder money.


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