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masterfins
Uber Member
    
Posts: 5617

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« Reply #6 on: May 15, 2018, 12:25:32 pm » |
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Let's say your State legalizes gambling, and it is as easy as clicking an app on your phone. Does this make you more likely to gamble on sports?? IMO this isn't going to greatly increase the amounting of betting on sports that is already occurring, both legally and illegally. There has already been some betting with Fan Duel and other similar sites, and there was certainly a large initial amount of betting, but after a while their revenues dropped down. There would certainly be more betting for Super Bowls, World Series, & the like. I think this is all about government getting tax revenues & the leagues/teams getting a cut of the action they are missing out on. I'd probably occasionally bet, no different than buying a lottery ticket a few times a year, but I'm not going to be betting every week as it takes the enjoyment away from watching the games. As it is I find myself watching the Super Bowl and constantly thinking what scores need to be made so my pool numbers will payoff.
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Sunstroke
YJFF Member
Uber Member
    
Posts: 22903
Stop your bloodclot cryin'!
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« Reply #9 on: May 16, 2018, 01:21:48 pm » |
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When I was younger, I ghost-wrote NFL analysis for a Vegas handicapper, and I got to see, up close, how gambling can be as addictive as any drug. As a result of that stretch, I really don't gamble much at all. An occasional Super Bowl square or something, but I usually only bet when it is my 49ers playing one of my friends' teams, and then it's a beer or dinner bet.
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"There's no such thing as objectivity. We're all just interpreting signals from the universe and trying to make sense of them. Dim, shaky, weak, staticky little signals that only hint at the complexity of a universe that we cannot begin to comprehend." ~ Micah Leggat
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