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Raising on Aces and Eights: The GOP’s Bad Bet Against Online Poker


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Raising on Aces and Eights: The GOP’s Bad Bet Against Online Poker

by Rich Muny

The GOP has historically been the party of limited government and personal responsibility.  President Ronald Reagan said it best in his frequent citations of Thomas Paine’s famous axiom – “the government governs best that governs least.” Unfortunately, the party moved away from the limited government conservatism of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan during the George W.  Bush Administration.  In fact, the 2008 Republican Party Platform regrettably went so far as to advocate a federal prohibition of online poker.

Online-Poker-Large-Cards-Computer

 

Poker is not a crime, nor should it be.  Millions of Americans – including the president and many in Congress – play the game at their kitchen tables, on the Internet, and at their local card rooms.  It is a great American pastime.  During that failed era of big government “conservatism”, however, some big government social conservative groups like Focus on the Family wished to use the power of the federal government to stop Americans from playing online poker in their own homes.......

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Tell Rep. Jason Chaffetz Not to Oppose Online Poker

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by RICH MUNY

On October 28th, the Deseret (Utah) News published a story on Rep. Jason Chaffetz's (R-UT) desire to lead an effort for a big government federal prohibition on online poker.  Rep. Chaffetz states concerns that licensing and regulating online poker will somehow lead to land-based casinos in Utah, but there is no basis for this belief.

Legislation currently in Congress to license and regulate online poker explicitly protects the rights of states.  These bills allow states to opt-out entirely, and they clearly state that nothing in the bills expands Indian gaming.  Rather, requiring licensing of these companies provides a mechanism for enforcement of relevant state and federal law. If Rep. Chaffetz reviewed it further, perhaps he would see the benefits as well.

Let's all tell Rep. Chaffetz that we want Internet freedom.  It takes just a moment of your time.

Contact info for Rep. Jason Chaffetz:
1032 Longworth HOB
Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone: (202) 225-7751
Fax: (202) 225-5629
Twitter: http://twitter.com/jasoninthehouse

Easiest action plan ever:

This alert may be republished, reposted, or emailed providing that the column is copied intact and that full credit is given to the author.
 
*****
Please visit the full blog at http://poker.townhall.com
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Gambling Away the Republican Future?


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Gambling Away the Republican Future?


by RICH MUNY

There have recently been positive developments in the Republican Party’s fortunes.  Polls show increased support for conservatism and the GOP, conservatives are actively protesting for their beliefs, and Congress is starting to take note.  Republicans have a real chance in 2010 — if they can form a cohesive conservative coalition.

The Republican Party was once the party of limited government and personal responsibility. Unfortunately, the GOP has been pushing libertarian-minded conservatives from the party for some time.  2008 was the worst year ever for the traditional GOP coalition.  The party establishment was openly hostile to Rep. Ron Paul’s (R-TX) presidential run and the big government social conservative wing of the party even called for a plank in the party platform advocating federal internet censorship to stop adults from playing online poker.  In essence, the party told poker players, internet freedom supporters, and limited government conservatives that they are no longer welcome in the GOP......

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Poker Player Alliance Files Petition to Delay Online Gaming Law Implementation


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Pokernews.com reports that the million-member Poker Players Alliance has filed a petition with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.  This petition seeks to delay implementation of the regulations enacting the 2006 online gaming law, now set for Dec. 1, 2009:

Poker Player Alliance Files Petition to Delay UIGEA Compliance


October 12, 2009
Matthew Kredell

 

With the date of compliance for the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act less than two months away, and legislation to push back enforcement failing to make progress in Congress, the Poker Players Alliance is trying a new method to delay the deadline.

The PPA filed a petition with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner asking for the date of compliance, which is Dec. 1, to be extended one year under the Administrative Procedure Act. This may seem like a desperate move -- and it is the time to get desperate -- but the PPA recruited powerful allies to make a strong push that should at least get Geithner's attention.

The PPA filed the joint petition along with the National Thoroughbred Racing Association and American Greyhound Track Operators Association. Then 19 Congressmen -- including Finance Services Committee chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.), Homeland Security Committee ranking member Peter King (R-N.Y.), Financial Institutions Subcommittee chairman Luis V. Gutierrez (D-Ill.), Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology Subcommittee chairman Melvin Watt (D-N.C.), Domestic Monetary Policy Subcommittee ranking member Ron Paul (R-Tex.) and Oversight Subcommittee ranking member Judy Biggert (R-Ill.) -- wrote Geithner and Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke to support the petition.....

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TAKE ACTION: Send the all new (as of 9/30) PPA letter to Obama. Tell him to end the DoJ's attacks on poker!

The all new Poker Players Alliance letter to President Obama is up on the PPA website. It focuses on the actions of Obama's DoJ against online poker players and demands that these actions stop. It takes just 60 seconds to send, so please send it now and please have your friends and family sent letters as well.


-----------------------------------------------
Dear President Obama;

As a voter and a poker player, I am writing to ask you to oppose seizures of poker players' funds by the Justice Department. I do not believe any federal law restricts my right to play poker online, and I believe poker players are being unfairly and improperly targeted in these actions.

For many years, the Justice Department has attempted to enforce its very broad interpretation of the Wire Act (18 USC 1084), a bill first passed in 1948 and revised in 1961. The Wire Act was passed to control the transmission of sports bets and sports betting information via telephone, not to stop Americans from playing online poker. This was affirmed in the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court's landmark 2002 ruling affirming that the Wire Act pertains only to sports betting [see re In MasterCard]. Unfortunately, despite this federal court ruling the Justice Department continues to stand by its own interpretation of the Wire Act.

This issue is not lost on the American public. We made our desire for this liberty known through your Citizen's Briefing Book website. Of the thousands of proposals submitted, support for Internet poker rights was the top technology issue. We have also made our desires known via an online petition addressed to you at www.pokerpetition.com that now has over 375,000 signatures.

This issue is not lost on Capitol Hill, either. In the House, H.R. 2267, the Internet Gambling Regulation, Consumer Protection and Enforcement Act, has been introduced by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank and already has close to 60 cosponsors. In the Senate, S. 1597, the Internet Poker and Games of Skill Regulation, Consumer Protection, and Enforcement Act, was recently introduced by Sen. Robert Menendez. These bills mandate rigorous, verifiable safeguards against underage participation while providing consumer protections for the millions of Americans who play online poker every day. They also include dedicated funding to establish and implement programs for prevention and treatment of those with excessive gaming habits. These bills also allow American companies to participate in the world's Internet poker market, bringing needed jobs and revenue to our great nation. An unenforceable, unpopular prohibition provides none of these benefits. All prohibition can do is drive players underground or overseas while limiting my personal freedom.

What's most important to me is your support for my rights. Please respond to this letter and let me know you will support my freedoms. I hope that I, along with my over one million fellow Poker Players Alliance members, can count on your support.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,

[your name]

-----------------------------------------------

Here's a handy way to ask your friends and family to send the PPA letters.  Simply cut and paste the following and send it to them:
Dear _________,

Please take a few moments to help me and fellow American poker players fight for our right to play Internet poker. Although it is currently still legal in most of the U.S. for anyone to play poker online, the current policy of our federal government is to interfere with our access to the sites and to attempt to block all related financial transactions.

Please help us lobby our federal and state government leaders and representatives to pass legislation to license and regulate Internet poker so all U.S. citizens will have unhindered access to the sites, as well as needed consumer protections. By using the links below, you can send pre-formatted e-mail letters through the Poker Players Alliance. It should take you only a minute or less for each of the three forms, and only requires that you enter your name, address, e-mail and phone.

To send a letter to your federal Congressional representatives:
http://www.capwiz.com/pokerplayersalliance/issues/alert/?alertid=13690391

To send a letter to your state Governor and legislators:
http://www.capwiz.com/pokerplayersalliance/issues/alert/?alertid=14005591

To send a letter to President Obama:
http://www.capwiz.com/pokerplayersalliance/issues/alert/?alertid=12601836

Thanks so much!

Best,

[your name]

P.S. Please forward this message to anyone else you can think of who might help out.

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Gambling with Free Speech on the Net


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I wrote an article on the situation in Kentucky for NewMajority.com. It will be the featured article for the day, so I hope you all like it:


Gambling with Free Speech on the Net

http://www.newmajority.com/gambling-...ech-on-the-net

Upset at what he saw as competition to the state lottery and to state-taxed parimutuel betting, last year Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear (D) initiated efforts to seize the internet domain names of 141 offshore online poker, sports betting, and casino gaming sites. This action was undertaken despite the fact that these sites are operating legally in their home nations and have no physical presence in Kentucky.

With his plan in place, Beshear hired an out-of-state contingency-fee only law firm to assist him with his scheme. The governor and his team of hired guns went to a state circuit court to initiate the seizure and forfeiture of the domain names in question. His stated intention was to release the domain names to their rightful owners only after they paid a large cash settlement and agreed to use blocking technology to prohibit Kentucky residents from viewing content the governor found objectionable. In other words, Beshear sought to assess a non-existent tax on foreign companies and unilaterally establish trade policies while censoring the world’s Internet sites to control content accessible to Kentuckians.

Beshear moved his case through the state circuit court, but lost 2-1 on appeal. The Kentucky Supreme Court will hear Beshear’s appeal of that loss next month, and supporters of internet freedom are lining up to tell the court where they stand. eBay, Network Solutions, the Poker Players Alliance, the Interactive Media Entertainment and Gaming Association, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, the Bluegrass Institute, the Center for Democracy and Technology, and many others are demanding that the Kentucky Supreme Court uphold the appeals court ruling.

Beshear’s contention that any court in the world should be permitted to seize domain names of internet sites operating legally in their home jurisdictions is deeply disturbing to those who value internet freedom and U.S. sovereignty, and with good reason. For example, under this scheme CNN’s internet domain name could be at risk if they were to run an article critical of Cuba or China. Similarly, the Family Research Council’s domain name could be seized by a court in a small town in Syria if FRC were to run an article critical of Islam........
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It's Time for Focus on the Family to Focus on the Finances

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by RICH MUNY

Continuing financial problems at Focus on the Family have resulted in more job cutbacks within the social conservative organization. The group recently announced a new round of layoffs, this latest one affecting 75 employees. This is expected to bring the number of employees down to 860 employees, from a high of about 1400 in 2002. However, the organization apparently still has plenty of cash to fund an expensive Washington lobbying effort, including a major Focus initiative to try to stop adults from playing online poker in their own homes with their own money.

Focus on the Family typically utilizes a two-pronged approach to achieving its goals. The first prong is the group's ministry.  The ministry assists people in choosing of their own free will the path Focus recommends.  The second prong is Focus' Congressional and state lobbying, where Focus seeks laws restricting behaviors the group deems immoral, thus using the power of the state to achieve its ends. Sadly, the fact that Focus is laying employees off while doubling-down on lobbying shows a disturbing shift in the direction of the organization.  It seems the group now prefers forcing the changes they seek through the power of the federal government over encouraging people to choose the appropriate path.

Regarding the latest round of layoffs, Focus on the Family spokesman Gary Schneeberger said, "Managers are meeting with their employees, praying with employees. We want to make sure that even after this process, they have a transition package and that's not just about money, but helping them find a new job." This is somewhat kind of Focus, perhaps, but I imagine it’s cold comfort to the families of the laid-off employees who know those salaries are now going to Washington lobbying. One wonders how many would have voluntarily given up their jobs to ensure that Focus had sufficient funding to continue their all-encompassing fight against poker players.  As poker players are showing no signs of giving up, one wonders how many years and how much donated money Focus is planning to put into this fight.

Anyone who believes Focus on the Family should focus on ministering to those in need while keeping the lobbying -- especially on issues like online poker -- on the back burner during lean times like these ought to write to Focus now. Let them know that you want your money to go to ministering and that you will not donate if they plan to use the bulk of your money on Capitol Hill lobbying. You can contact them at http://family.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/family.cfg/php/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=14190.


© Rich Muny
Rich Muny’s commentaries are copyrighted and may be republished, reposted, or emailed providing that the column is copied intact and that full credit is given to the author.

Please visit the full blog at http://poker.townhall.com
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BIGGEST "TAKE ACTION FOR POKER RIGHTS" YET!: Make Your Voice Heard at the State Level

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Dear Fellow Poker Player,

The PPA's efforts are paying off in Washington, DC!  Legislation has been introduced in both the U.S. House and the Senate that will affirmatively license and regulate Internet poker.

These federal bills respect states' rights by allowing each state to choose whether its citizens can participate.  With Congressional action on these bills expected in the near future, we must start now to let your state's elected officials know we demand the right to play poker on the Internet.

In just 60 seconds, you can send a letter to your governor and lawmakers.  It is critical that your governor, state senator, and state representative hear from you TODAY. Your state officials need to know that passing up the opportunity to license and regulate online poker would limit your freedom while ignoring the needed revenue the program would bring to your state.

Please take a moment and send the following letter.  By doing so, you will help us to achieve our shared goal of protecting poker wherever it is played.  

Proud to Play Poker,
Alfonse D'Amato, Chairman
Poker Players Alliance


The Poker Players Alliance

Dedicated to Protecting America's Favorite Card Game

The Poker Players Alliance is a nonprofit membership organization comprised of poker players and enthusiasts from around the United States who have joined together to speak with one voice to promote the game and to protect poker players' rights.


Here's the letter:

The U.S. Congress is considering legislation to license, regulate, and tax online games of skill like poker. The legislation contains a provision that allows states to opt out of the federal licensing program, and the choice for our state to stay in or opt out will come shortly after implementation of the legislation. As a constituent, voter, and proud poker player, I ask that you support keeping our state in this important program.

U.S. House Bill H.R. 2267 and U.S. Senate Bill S. 1597 provide for sensible licensing, regulation, and taxation of Internet poker. They mandate rigorous, verifiable safeguards against underage participation while providing consumer protections for the millions, including many in our state, who play online poker every day. These bills also include dedicated funding to establish and implement programs for prevention and treatment of those with excessive gaming habits.

Both bills benefit our state economically. According to an economic study conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers in April, tax revenues from these bills will provide billions of dollars to the U.S. Treasury and to the states in the program. Additionally, the Senate bill provides for revenue-sharing with participating states, bringing even more much-needed funds into our state's coffers. Both bills allow American companies to participate in the world's Internet poker market, bringing needed jobs to our state as well.

Solutions like H.R. 2267 and S. 1597 provide the most rational approach to controlling this industry and preserving it for adults who choose to engage in games of skill like poker. An unenforceable, unpopular prohibition provides none of these benefits. All prohibition can do is drive players underground or overseas while limiting my personal freedom.

What's most important to me is your support for my rights. Please respond to this letter and let me know if you will support keeping our state in this important program. I will be watching your actions on this issue closely. I hope that I, along with my over one million fellow Poker Players Alliance members can count on your support.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely, 

[sender's name]

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Hey GOP: It's Time to Focus on the Future

The Republican Party was once the party of limited government and personal responsibility. Unfortunately, the GOP has been pushing libertarian-minded conservatives from the party for some time, going as far as to push for federal Internet censorship to stop online poker . It's time for the party to rediscover its limited government roots.
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TAKE ACTION: Send the ALL NEW Poker Rights Letter to Congress

I just updated the Senate letter on the PPA Action Site.  Let's all send it and make ourselves heard!  It takes just 60 seconds to send.

Click here to send PPA's latest letter to Congress



As a constituent, voter, and poker player, I am asking you to support S. 1597, the Internet Poker and Games of Skill Regulation, Consumer Protection, and Enforcement Act of 2009. This legislation, authored by Sen. Robert Menendez, would license and regulate Internet poker and other games of skill.

Poker is a proud American tradition. Our nation's citizens have enjoyed poker for more than 150 years. It is an honorable game that I am proud to play. The simple fact that some choose to play it on the Internet should not make it unlawful.

S. 1597 provides for sensible regulation of Internet poker and puts the U.S. in charge of safeguarding its citizens. This bill mandates rigorous, verifiable safeguards against underage participation while providing consumer protections for the millions of Americans who play online poker every day. It also includes dedicated funding to establish and implement programs for prevention and treatment of those with excessive gaming habits. This bill will also allow American companies to participate in the world's Internet poker market, bringing needed jobs and revenue to our nation. An unenforceable, unpopular prohibition provides none of these benefits. All prohibition can do is drive players underground or overseas while limiting my personal freedom.

According to an economic study conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers in April, tax revenue from licensing will add billions to the U.S. Treasury. Solutions like S. 1597 provide the most rational approach to controlling this industry and preserving it for adults who choose to engage in this skillful activity.

Our right to play poker online was inadvertently restricted with the passage of UIGEA. While it is clear that the Act should not affect online poker nationwide (UIGEA only enforces other federal gaming laws...federal case law has consistently held that the Wire Act applies only to sports betting, and very few states have any laws against Internet poker), this legislation has nonetheless had a chilling effect on my ability to access and patronize these legal businesses. I ask for your help in rectifying this situation by clarifying the UIGEA and supporting S. 1597.

What's most important to me is your support for my rights. Please respond to this letter and let me know if you will support my freedoms. I will be watching your actions on this issue closely. I hope that I, along with my over one million fellow Poker Players Alliance members, can count on your support.

Thank you for your consideration.

*****
Please visit the full blog at http://poker.townhall.com
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George Will: Raising the Stakes on Online Poker

George Will
August 17, 2009

Howard Lederer, aka "the Professor," is a professional poker player, not a gambler. If Congress will acknowledge this distinction, it will rectify one of its recent mistakes.

In 2006, Congress, cloaking cunning with moralizing, effectively outlawed Internet gambling by making it illegal for banks or credit-card companies to process payments to online gambling operations. This was more than moral pork for social conservatives. It also blocked online competitors from poaching gamblers from the nation's most aggressive promoters of gambling -- state governments. They are increasingly addicted to revenues raised by lotteries -- the 42 states that have lotteries spent $520 million in 2007 promoting them -- and from taxation of other legal gambling. The law exempted Internet state lotteries and two powerful and vocal interests -- online betting on horse racing and some fantasy sports betting online.

Having turned gambling, which once was treated as a sin, into a social policy, government looks unusually silly criminalizing online forms of it.

Granted, some people gamble excessively (although not nearly as many people as eat excessively). Granted, gambling becomes addictive to a small minority (although it is not nearly as addictive as smoking and drinking).

Granted, gambling is morally dubious when it is only the unproductive pursuit of wealth without work (although gambling is productive of pleasure for tens of millions of Americans for whom it is a frequent pastime). But never mind whether government should try to tightly circumscribe a ubiquitous human activity that generally harms nobody.

That is beside the point Lederer and the Poker Players Alliance are toiling to make, which is that by sweeping online poker into its proscription of online gambling, Congress committed a category mistake.

Congress, Lederer thinks, should revisit the work of John von Neumann (1903-57), the Hungarian-born mathematician who, after working for the Manhattan Project on implosion design for the atomic bomb, became a defense intellectual specializing in the relevance of game theory to strategic thinking. Chess involves logic; roulette involves probability theory. Poker involves logic, probability and something pertinent to military and diplomatic strategy -- bluffing.

"Theory of Parlor Games" (1928) and, with Oskar Morgenstern, "Theory of Games and Economic Behavior" (1944) established the field of game theory. Another of today's leading professional poker players, Chris Ferguson, is the son of a mother who is a mathematician and a father who teaches game theory at UCLA.

When you play chess, Lederer says, there is symmetry of information:

Both players have all the information provided by the location of the pieces on the board, and both are equally ignorant of the opponent's intentions. A computer can be programmed to "play" a powerful game of chess, but not of poker, wherein your opponents' cards are concealed.

Lederer is confident that a brain scan of someone playing poker would reveal a lit-up frontal lobe, but the lobe of someone watching television would show up cool blue. A poker player -- unlike someone playing roulette, a lottery or "video poker" (which Lederer says is a misnomer; it is a game of chance governed by a machine) -- is trying to apply skill, acquired by experience, to increase the probability of winning each hand.

The son of an English teacher at St. Paul's School in New Hampshire, Lederer decided to spend a year studying chess before matriculating at Columbia University. Instead, he discovered poker. He started at Columbia but left, reasoning that he had found his vocation. He has won about $5 million.

But what is his stake in decriminalizing online poker? After all, he plays much more on green felt-covered tables than online. His interest is threefold. First, his libertarian temperament -- he lives in Las Vegas, where almost anything goes -- is offended by mother-hen government. Second, he wants as many people as possible to have access to poker's delights.

Third, the more poker players there are, the larger will be the ranks of competitors, and the television audiences, for professional poker competitions. Hence the larger will be the potential winnings. This year, Lederer says, there were 6,494 competitors in the World Series of Poker Main Event, down about 1,000 from 2006, largely because more players used to win their $10,000 entry fee in online tournaments.

It is a poker skill to know when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em.

Congress probably should fold its interference with Internet gambling, and certainly should get its 10 thumbs off Americans' freedom to exercise their poker skills online.

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Gamblers and Liberty: Wayne Allyn Root’s Latest Book

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by RICH MUNY

In his new book, “The Conscience of a Libertarian: Empowering the Citizen Revolution with God, Guns, Gambling & Tax Cuts,” Wayne Allyn Root asserts that America is a nation of gamblers and always has been.  Mr. Root, who was the 2008 Libertarian vice presidential nominee and who is now preparing to lead what he calls “a Ross Perot-like third party movement in 2012 for economic and personal freedom,” discusses this in detail in Chapter 29: The End of Prohibition - Why Gamblers Will Empower the Citizen Revolution

Mr. Root starts the chapter by citing gambles that were taken in our nation’s early history.  The brave Pilgrims who took great risks in leaving Europe in search of liberty in the New World, the lotteries that helped fund colonial America, and the daring exploits of George Washington, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin - who risked their fortunes in the Revolutionary War for freedom - are just a few examples of the risk-taking, gambling heritage of the American people. 

Gambling did not end with the founding of our great nation, either.  Immigrants with nothing but a strong will and unshakeable desire to succeed, entrepreneurs, and business owners all gambled that their dreams would come true, and they put all they had at risk to make it happen.  Americans are by nature risk-takers who are leaders and bold dreamers.  This willingness to gamble on success is an essential part of the character of America. 

This risk-taking legacy lives on.  During the last decade, Internet poker and gambling were a global phenomenon.  Still, despite the worldwide appeal of online gaming, 70 percent of money wagered came from Americans - this notwithstanding the fact that the Justice Department asserted that the activity is unlawful.  Americans made 376 million trips to casinos in 2007, and there are now 185,000 places to buy a lottery ticket in America versus only 14,000 McDonald’s.  In fact, more money is spent on gambling in America than is spent on books, movies, videos, and DVDs combined.  The facts are clear - Americans enjoy a good gamble and are proud of it. 

Mr. Root then discusses poker. Party Gaming reported $45 billion in wagering in 2005, for almost $1 billion in revenue.  Online poker was escalating in popularity when the Congress passed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act.  This action outraged poker players.  Since passage of that act, over one million Americans joined the Poker Players Alliance to speak out and demand their right to play poker on the Internet.  Mr. Root believes the power of poker players is being harnessed by the Libertarian movement, as the 10 million to 12 million Americans who play online poker and the 50 million who play in person comprise a very formidable group. 

Mr. Root notes that the proponents of a new Prohibition - a prohibition on online poker - are straight-laced, nanny state busy-bodies who are afraid to take risks.  They want to police what others do, this despite the fact that it does not affect them in any way.  He notes that there are people in the Middle East who think the same way - the Taliban. 

Mr. Root wraps up the chapter by expressing his belief that the government will fail miserably in its attempts to stop online gambling.  The American people have tried online poker and gambling and they like it.  They want their freedom and are demanding it.  It makes far more sense to license, regulate, and tax online gaming than it does to try to enforce an unpopular prohibition. 

The chapter is well-written, and Mr. Root does a fine job in explaining the phenomenon of gambling in American culture and how gambling and freedom are intertwined.  I personally believe government has attacked the very people - people who cherish freedom and liberty - who are most likely to take a strong stand.  In fact, poker players have taken a strong stand against the UIGEA and will continue to do so.  In my opinion, Mr. Root “gets it” in a way that few who have run for national office do.  I wholeheartedly recommend this chapter of the book. 

Amazon.com: The Conscience of a Libertarian: Empowering the Citizen Revolution with God, Guns, Gambling & Tax Cuts 

Wayne Allyn Root’s Libertarian Presidential Candidate Website: “Root for America!


© Rich Muny
Rich Muny’s commentaries are copyrighted and may be republished, reposted, or emailed providing that the column is copied intact and that full credit is given to the author.
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Focus on the Family Ought to Learn to Manage Its Money

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Rich Muny
August 13, 2009
Evangelical group faces 'serious' shortfall
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/...C02
By ERIC GORSKI (AP)

DENVER — A "serious budget shortfall" at Focus on the Family has prompted the conservative Christian group to issue a special fundraising plea, and contributed to a decision to cede control of its contentious "Love Won Out" conferences about homosexuality to another religious organization, a spokesman said Tuesday.

Focus on the Family, founded by child psychologist James Dobson, is on pace to fall $6 million short of a $138 million budget for the fiscal year that began last October, spokesman Gary Schneeberger said.

Jim Daly, president and CEO of the Colorado Springs, Colo.-based evangelical ministry, explained the challenges in a letter to approximately 800,000 donors.....

Well, this is really something.  Focus on the Family can afford luxuries like expensive lobbying to stop adults from choosing to play online poker in their own homes with their own money, so surely FoF has enough for its core ministries.  Perhaps they simply need to tighten their belts, like American families are right now, before asking for cash.

Here's my open letter to Focus on the Family
(their email form is at: http://family.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/f...?p_faqid=14190):
Subject: Your request for donations

Dear Sir/Madam,

I read your request for donations to cover a "serious budget shortfall" with interest. I am surprised to hear that you feel your organization is having any financial issues. After all, you have plenty of extra money to lobby for federal legislation to stop adults from choosing to play online poker in their own homes with their own money.

If you have enough money to work to give the federal government even more power over our banks and our lives, I must wonder where you could possibly be running short.

May I recommend that you take a better look at your spending before seeking more money? That's what American families do every day.

Best regards,

Rich

© Rich Muny
Rich Muny’s commentaries are copyrighted and may be republished, reposted, or emailed providing that the column is copied intact and that full credit is given to the author.  

*****
Please visit the full blog at http://poker.townhall.com
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TAKE ACTION: Tell Your Governor and State Representatives to Support Online Poker

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Rich Muny
July 30, 2009

Poker players have been lobbying the federal government for their rights and are getting solid results!  The next phase is to lobby the states.  Let's all write and call.  Fortunately, finding your elected national, state, and local reps is easy.  Simply visit http://www.congress.org/congressorg/dbq/officials and enter your ZIP code.

I wrote the following letter.  Feel free to send it as-is, edit it, or send a unique one:


The U.S. Congress is considering legislation to license and regulate online poker. This legislation allows states to opt-out of the provisions of the bill. As a constituent, voter, and poker player, I ask that you support online poker rights by advocating against an opt-out by our state.

Poker is a proud American tradition and our nation's citizens have enjoyed playing poker for more than 150 years. It is an honorable game that I am proud to play. The simple fact that I choose to play it on the Internet should not make it unlawful.

U.S. House Bill H.R. 2267 provides for sensible regulation of Internet gaming and puts the U.S. in charge of safeguarding its citizens. The bill mandates rigorous safeguards against underage participation and protections for those with excessive gaming habits while providing consumer protections for the millions of Americans who play online poker every day. This bill will also allow American gaming companies to participate in the world's Internet gaming market, bringing needed jobs to our state. Internet censorship and an unenforceable, unpopular prohibition provide none of these benefits. All censorship and prohibition can do is drive players underground or overseas while limiting my personal freedom.

What's most important to me is your support for my rights. Please respond to this letter and let me know you will support my freedoms. I will be watching your actions on this issue closely. I hope that I, along with my over one million fellow Poker Players Alliance members, can count on your support.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,

[Your Name]

Thanks!  We will keep our liberties if we fight for them together.


© Rich Muny
Rich Muny’s commentaries are copyrighted and may be republished, reposted, or emailed providing that the column is copied intact and that full credit is given and that Rich’s website addresses, http://poker.townhall.com, http://theengineer.theppa.org, and www.campaignforliberty.com/user/TheEngineer, are included.  

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Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear's Attack on Internet Freedom Continues

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Rich Muny
July 10, 2009

Despite running for governor on a pro-gaming platform, Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear (D) has unfortunately chosen to lead a protectionist crusade against online poker. Last year, he authorized an out-of-state contingency-fee only law firm to go to court on behalf of the Commonwealth of Kentucky to seize 141 Internet poker and gaming website domain names, this despite the fact that these sites are operating legally in their home jurisdictions.

Beshear’s underlying theory – that domain names of Internet sites operating legally in their home nations can be taken by any court in the world – is deeply troubling. For example, a few years ago a French court ordered Yahoo.com to block French citizens from accessing parts of the site deemed to have content unlawful under French law. Yahoo.com pushed back, citing free speech issues. What if French courts had the authority to seize the domain www.yahoo.com to force compliance? What if other nations could seize Internet domains to force the entire Internet to comply with their local laws? If Beshear succeeds, imagine the chilling impact on Internet freedom.

Attorney General Jack Conway wisely steered clear of this issue. In his absence, Beshear had Secretary of the Justice and Public Safety Cabinet J. Michael Brown initiate the seizure action. Beshear and Brown managed to move this case through a state circuit court, but rightly lost at the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Unfortunately, Beshear and Brown are not done. They appealed their loss to the state Supreme Court. One hopes they not only lose again, but that the justices make it clear that Beshear lacks jurisdiction in the matter.

Following the loss at the Court of Appeals, Brown commented, “the evidence demonstrated that illegal and unregulated activity is occurring in Kentucky, and that millions of dollars are being lost as a result of that activity, a fact that wasn’t disputed in Tuesday’s ruling.” Brown’s statement is very misleading. He says this is an illegal activity. However, the court ruled that sites are not “gambling devices” as defined under Kentucky law, and the Commonwealth conceded during testimony that poker players and casino gaming enthusiasts are breaking no laws by playing online. Brown may think online poker should be unlawful, but the court did not find any laws to have been broken.

Additionally, the Poker Players Alliance – a one million member poker advocacy group – filed a brief with the court proving that poker is a game of skill, not chance. As such, they argued that poker is not “gambling” as defined by Kentucky law. Attorneys made verbal arguments in support of this position at the Court of Appeals hearing as well, and the Commonwealth’s attorneys did not even try to counter those arguments.

Brown also stated that online poker is unregulated in Kentucky. However, online poker is not regulated by the Commonwealth (it is regulated within the sites’ home jurisdictions) because the Commonwealth chooses not to regulate it. Likewise, online poker site revenue is not taxed because Kentucky chooses not to tax it. The Commonwealth is losing money by not creating a legal framework for online poker, but that’s an issue for the legislature, not the Secretary of the Justice and Public Safety Cabinet.

Governor Beshear claimed that, “unlicensed, unregulated, illegal Internet gambling poses a tremendous threat to the citizens of the Commonwealth because of its ease, availability and anonymity.” However, there is no anonymous online poker play. Poker sites track and confirm ages and identities of each participant using authentication systems equal to those used by Twinspires.com, an Internet horse race wagering site owned by Churchill Downs that operates in Kentucky. As Twinspires.com’s business is (rightly) acceptable to Beshear, surely the equivalent systems poker sites employ ought to be acceptable as well.

If Beshear and Brown really wish to help Kentucky’s poker players, they ought to propose legislation creating a legal framework for online poker. Players would naturally gravitate toward Kentucky-based sites and to offshore sites that chose to participate, as these sites would be perceived as being safer. Thus, market forces would drive compliance, rather than some scheme to police the entire Internet from the Kentucky governor's office. This would certainly be preferable to the destruction of Internet freedom and personal liberty. This common sense approach would also provide jobs and revenue to Kentucky while providing strong consumer protections.

Please tell Governor Beshear that it is time for Kentucky to embrace and manage the technologies of the 21st Century while respecting liberty and Internet freedom. Call him at (502) 564-2611, then send him a letter from this easy-to-use PPA letter site and from this similarly easy-to-use FreedomWorks letter site. Let's let Beshear know it’s time for him to fold.


© Rich Muny
Rich Muny's commentaries are copyrighted and may be republished, reposted, or emailed providing that the column is copied intact and that full credit is given and that Rich's website addresses, http://poker.townhall.com and www.campaignforliberty.com/user/TheEngineer, are included. 
 
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